Search results for "Neoplastic"

showing 10 items of 2901 documents

Concordance of Genomic Alterations between Primary and Recurrent Breast Cancer

2014

Abstract There is growing interest in delivering genomically informed cancer therapy. Our aim was to determine the concordance of genomic alterations between primary and recurrent breast cancer. Targeted next-generation sequencing was performed on formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) samples, profiling 3,320 exons of 182 cancer-related genes plus 37 introns from 14 genes often rearranged in cancer. Point mutations, indels, copy-number alterations (CNA), and select rearrangements were assessed in 74 tumors from 43 patients (36 primary and 38 recurrence/metastases). Alterations potentially targetable with established or investigational therapeutics were considered “actionable.” Alterations…

AdultCancer ResearchARID1AConcordanceBreast NeoplasmsGenomicsArticleExonBreast cancermedicineCluster AnalysisHumansPTENNeoplasm MetastasisAgedNeoplasm StagingAged 80 and overbiologyGene Expression ProfilingPoint mutationGenomicsMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseGene Expression Regulation NeoplasticGene expression profilingOncologyMutationbiology.proteinCancer researchFemaleNeoplasm Recurrence LocalMolecular Cancer Therapeutics
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Blood supply, oxygenation status and metabolic micromilieu of breast cancers: characterization and therapeutic relevance.

2000

The metabolic microenvironment of a tumor is predominantly determined by the efficacy of blood flow, flux parameters (such as diffusion and convective currents in the interstitial space) and metabolic rates. The most important factors in this context include oxygen and nutrient supply, tissue pH and the bioenergetic status. It is now widely accepted that the metabolic microenvironment of a tumor can dramatically influence a range of factors such as proliferation rate, cell cycle position, growth rate and the development of apoptosis and necrosis. At the same time, these parameters can have an impact on tumor detection, therapeutic response to conventional irradiation, some chemotherapy agen…

AdultCancer ResearchMammary glandAntineoplastic AgentsBreast NeoplasmsBiologyRadiation ToleranceMetastasisMicrocirculationOxygen ConsumptionInterstitial spacemedicinePressureHumansAgedOncogeneNeovascularization PathologicMicrocirculationCancerCell cycleHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseMolecular medicineCell HypoxiaBody FluidsOxygenmedicine.anatomical_structureOncologyImmunologyCancer researchFemaleMenopauseEnergy MetabolismBlood Flow VelocityCell DivisionInternational journal of oncology
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Relapse Analysis of Irradiated Patients Within the HD15 Trial of the German Hodgkin Study Group

2015

Purpose To determine, in the setting of advanced-stage of Hodgkin lymphoma (HL), whether relapses occur in the irradiated planning target volume and whether the definition of local radiation therapy (RT) used by the German Hodgkin Study Group (GHSG) is adequate, because there is no harmonization of field and volume definitions among the large cooperative groups in the treatment of advanced-stage HL. Methods and Materials All patients with residual disease of ≥2.5 cm after multiagent chemotherapy (CTX) were evaluated using additional positron emission tomography (PET), and those with a PET-positive result were irradiated with 30 Gy to the site of residual disease. We re-evaluated all sites o…

AdultCancer ResearchNeoplasm Residualmedicine.medical_treatmentPlanning target volumeIrradiated VolumeBleomycinFluorodeoxyglucose F18RecurrenceGermanyAntineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy ProtocolsHumansMedicineCooperative groupRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingRadiation treatment planningCyclophosphamideEtoposideChemotherapyRadiationmedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryRadiotherapy Planning Computer-AssistedRadiotherapy DosageMiddle AgedCombined Modality TherapyHodgkin DiseaseRadiation therapyOncologyDoxorubicinVincristinePositron emission tomographyPositron-Emission TomographyProcarbazinePrednisoneHodgkin lymphomaRadiopharmaceuticalsbusinessNuclear medicineInternational Journal of Radiation Oncology*Biology*Physics
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EGFR and PCNA experession in oral squamous cell carcinomas—a valuable tool in estimating the patient's prognosis

1993

We investigated 100 cases of oral squamous cell carcinomas immunohistologically with respect to the expression of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and the proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA). The results were correlated with a new malignancy grading of the invasive tumour areas and the clinical outcome of the patients to estimate the individual prognosis. In conclusion, the amount of antigen expression of both antigens increases with the increasing grade of malignancy of the oral squamous cell carcinoma. Furthermore, there is a statistically significant correlation between the amount of antigen expression and the patient's prognosis. An overexpression of EGFR and PCNA is as…

AdultCancer ResearchPathologymedicine.medical_specialtyMalignancyAntigenPredictive Value of TestsEpidermal growth factorProliferating Cell Nuclear AntigenBiomarkers TumormedicineHumansNeoplasm InvasivenessProspective StudiesEpidermal growth factor receptorSurvival analysisNeoplasm StagingMouth neoplasmbiologyPrognosismedicine.diseaseImmunohistochemistrySurvival AnalysisProliferating cell nuclear antigenErbB ReceptorsGene Expression Regulation Neoplasticstomatognathic diseasesTreatment OutcomeOncologyCarcinoma Squamous CellCancer researchbiology.proteinImmunohistochemistryMouth NeoplasmsEuropean Journal of Cancer Part B: Oral Oncology
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Multidirectional differentiation in a newly established human epithelioid sarcoma cell line (GRU-1) with co-expression of vimentin, cytokeratins and …

1990

A new permanent cell line (GRU-1) derived from the lymph-node metastasis of a human epithelioid sarcoma was established in tissue culture. Immunohistochemically, the original tumor had exhibited an intriguing potential for multidirectional differentiation with features of mesenchymal, epithelial and neural differentiation, evidenced by the co-expression of vimentin, cytokeratins and neurofilament proteins, respectively. This capability for multidirectional differentiation was fully preserved in the cultured cells. GRU-1 tumor cells proved to be uniformly positive for vimentin and a considerable proportion of the tumor cells exhibited a positive reaction for cytokeratins and neurofilament pr…

AdultCancer ResearchPathologymedicine.medical_specialtyNeurofilamentEpithelioid sarcomaMice NudeVimentinCell LineCytokeratinMiceIntermediate Filament ProteinsNeurofilament ProteinsmedicineTumor Cells CulturedAnimalsHumansVimentinbiologyMesenchymal stem cellSarcomaDNA Neoplasmmedicine.diseaseFlow CytometryImmunohistochemistryGene Expression Regulation NeoplasticMicroscopy ElectronCell Transformation NeoplasticOncologyCell cultureLymphatic Metastasisbiology.proteinSynaptophysinKeratinsFemaleSarcomaNeoplasm TransplantationInternational journal of cancer
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Combination of the mTOR inhibitor ridaforolimus and the anti-IGF1R monoclonal antibody dalotuzumab: preclinical characterization and phase I clinical…

2014

Abstract Purpose: Mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) inhibition activates compensatory insulin–like growth factor receptor (IGFR) signaling. We evaluated the ridaforolimus (mTOR inhibitor) and dalotuzumab (anti-IGF1R antibody) combination. Experimental Design: In vitro and in vivo models, and a phase I study in which patients with advanced cancer received ridaforolimus (10–40 mg/day every day × 5/week) and dalotuzumab (10 mg/kg/week or 7.5 mg/kg/every other week) were explored. Results: Preclinical studies demonstrated enhanced pathway inhibition with ridaforolimus and dalotuzumab. With 87 patients treated in the phase I study, main dose-limiting toxicities (DLT) of the combination were p…

AdultCancer ResearchPhases of clinical researchBreast NeoplasmsPharmacologyAntibodies Monoclonal HumanizedArticleReceptor IGF Type 1Ridaforolimuschemistry.chemical_compoundBreast cancerIn vivoAntineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy ProtocolsMedicineAnimalsHumansPI3K/AKT/mTOR pathwayInsulin-like growth factor 1 receptorAgedSirolimusDalotuzumabbusiness.industryTOR Serine-Threonine KinasesAntibodies MonoclonalReceptors SomatomedinMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseXenograft Model Antitumor AssaysOncologychemistryMonoclonalbusinessSignal TransductionClinical cancer research : an official journal of the American Association for Cancer Research
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A randomised factorial trial of sequential doxorubicin and CMF vs CMF and chemotherapy alone vs chemotherapy followed by goserelin plus tamoxifen as …

2005

The sequential doxorubicin → CMF (CMF = cyclophosphamide, methotrexate, fluorouracil) regimen has never been compared to CMF in a randomised trial. The role of adding goserelin and tamoxifen after chemotherapy is unclear. In all, 466 premenopausal node-positive patients were randomised to: (a) CMF × 6 cycles (CMF); (b) doxorubicin × 4 cycles followed by CMF × 6 cycles (A → CMF); (c) CMF × 6 cycles followed by goserelin plus tamoxifen × 2 years (CMF → GT); and (d) doxorubicin × 4 cycles followed by CMF × 6 cycles followed by goserelin plus tamoxifen × 2 years (A → CMF → GT). The study used a 2 × 2 factorial experimental design to assess: (1) the effect of the chemotherapy regimens (CMF vs A …

AdultCancer Researchmedicine.medical_specialtyCyclophosphamidemedicine.medical_treatmentUrologyBreast NeoplasmsDisease-Free SurvivalDrug Administration Schedulebreast cancerchemoendocrine treatmentAntineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy ProtocolsClinical StudiesmedicineAdjuvant therapyHumansDoxorubicinCyclophosphamideanthracyclinesGynecologyChemotherapypremenopausalbusiness.industryGoserelinadjuvant therapyMiddle AgedCombined Modality TherapyTamoxifenRegimenMethotrexateOncologyChemotherapy AdjuvantDoxorubicinFluorouracilLymphatic MetastasisGoserelinFemaleFluorouracilbusinessTamoxifenFollow-Up Studiesmedicine.drugBritish Journal of Cancer
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Nonpegylated Liposomal Doxorubicin (TLC-D99), Paclitaxel, and Trastuzumab in HER-2-Overexpressing Breast Cancer: A Multicenter Phase I/II Study

2008

Abstract Purpose: To determine the recommended dose, cardiac safety, and antitumor activity of nonpegylated liposomal doxorubicin (TLC-D99), paclitaxel, and the anti-HER-2 monoclonal antibody trastuzumab in patients with HER-2-overexpressing locally advanced nonoperable breast cancer (LABC) and metastatic breast cancer (MBC). Experimental Design: Women with measurable, previously untreated, HER-2-overexpressing LABC and MBC with a baseline left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) >50% received weekly trastuzumab in combination with escalating doses of weekly paclitaxel and TLC-D99 every 3 weeks for 6 cycles. LVEF monitoring was done every 3 weeks for the first 18 weeks and every 8 w…

AdultCancer Researchmedicine.medical_specialtyHeart DiseasesPaclitaxelUrologyBreast NeoplasmsAntibodies Monoclonal HumanizedAsymptomaticDisease-Free Survivalchemistry.chemical_compoundBreast cancerTrastuzumabAntineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy ProtocolsmedicineHumansDoxorubicinNeoplasm Metastasisskin and connective tissue diseasesAgedEjection fractionbusiness.industryAntibodies MonoclonalGenes erbB-2Middle AgedTrastuzumabmedicine.diseaseMetastatic breast cancerUp-RegulationSurgeryOncologyPaclitaxelchemistryDoxorubicinHeart failureFemalemedicine.symptombusinessmedicine.drug
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Weekly administration of gemcitabine plus docetaxel in patients with advanced breast cancer: a phase 1 study.

2002

<i>Objective:</i> This study was designed to determine the maximum tolerable dose (MTD) of gemcitabine plus docetaxel, both given on a weekly schedule, in patients with pretreated metastatic breast cancer (MBC). <i>Methods:</i> Heavily pretreated patients with MBC, aged 18–75 years with World Health Organization performance status of 0–2 were enrolled. Three escalating weekly doses of docetaxel (30, 35 and 40 mg/m<sup>2</sup>) followed by a weekly fixed dose of gemcitabine, 800 mg/m<sup>2</sup>, were administered on days 1, 8 and 15 of a 28-day cycle. Dose-limiting toxicity (DLT) included grade >3 hematologic toxicity and grade >2 stomat…

AdultCancer Researchmedicine.medical_specialtyLung NeoplasmsPaclitaxelmedicine.drug_classmedicine.medical_treatmentBone NeoplasmsBreast NeoplasmsDocetaxelWorld Health OrganizationAntimetaboliteGastroenterologyDeoxycytidineInternal medicineAntineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy ProtocolsmedicineHumansNeoplasm MetastasisAgedChemotherapyPerformance statusDose-Response Relationship Drugbusiness.industryLiver NeoplasmsGeneral MedicineMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseMetastatic breast cancerGemcitabineGemcitabineSurgeryRegimenTreatment OutcomeOncologyDocetaxelLymphatic MetastasisToxicityFemaleTaxoidsbusinessmedicine.drugOncology
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Epoetin alfa improves anemia and anemia-related, patient-reported outcomes in patients with breast cancer receiving myelotoxic chemotherapy: results …

2010

This study evaluated the effects of epoetin alfa on patient-reported outcomes in patients with breast cancer receiving myelotoxic chemotherapy. Early intervention with epoetin alfa was well tolerated and improved anemia-related patient-reported outcomes.

AdultCancer Researchmedicine.medical_specialtySurvivalAnemiaPopulationAntineoplastic AgentsBreast NeoplasmsAcademia–Pharma Intersectlaw.inventionbreast cancer; anemia; erythropoietin; hemoglobin; survival; fatigueHemoglobinsBreast cancerRandomized controlled trialstomatognathic systemlawInternal medicinehemic and lymphatic diseasesBreast CancermedicineClinical endpointHumansBlood TransfusionHemoglobinProspective StudieseducationSurvival rateErythropoietinFatigueAgededucation.field_of_studybusiness.industryEpoetin alfavirus diseasesAnemiaMiddle Agedmedicine.diseasedigestive system diseasesRecombinant ProteinsSurgeryEpoetin AlfaOncologyErythropoietinHematinicsFemalebusinesstherapeuticsmedicine.drug
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