929 resultados para advanced gastric cancer


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O câncer gástrico permanece como grave problema de saúde pública, com elevada morbidade e mortalidade. Os diagnósticos ocorrem, na maioria dos casos, em estágios avançados da doença, situação na qual as opções terapêuticas disponíveis apresentam reduzida eficácia. Não obstante o avanço do conhecimento a respeito da carcinogênese do adenocarcinoma gástrico, em especial sobre mecanismos genéticos e epigenéticos envolvidos, a aplicabilitadade clínica destes conhecimentos permanece limitada. Objetivando identificar potenciais biomarcadores no câncer gástricos, foi realizado estudo utilizando microarray, comparando-se expressões gênicas em adenocarcinomas gástricos e amostras pareadas de mucosa gástrica não neoplásica. Os resultados preliminares demonstraram diferenças significativas de expressão em 53 genes. Dentre estes, foram selecionados os genes TFF1 e TFF2 para validação da expressão por PCR em tempo real em 78 amostras adicionais. As expressões de TFF1 e TFF2 foram significativamente reduzidas em amostras de adenocarcinoma gástrico, quando comparas aos tecidos pareados não neoplásicos (p<0,05). Adicionalmente, a expressão do gene TFF2 foi significantemente mais reduzida no tipo intestinal do que no tipo difuso. A expressão dos dois genes apresentou uma forte correlação, o padrão de expressão semelhante sugere que TFF1 e TFF2 podem partilhar elementos reguladores comuns. Essa hipótese é intensificada devido a pequena distancia física entre eles. Os resultados sugerem fortemente a participação de TFF1 e TFF2 na carcinogenese gástrica e demonstram um potencial para utilização clínica dos referidos genes como biomarcadores e eventuais alvos terapêuticos no adenocarcinoma gástrico.

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O câncer do trato gastrointestinal tem sua importância no perfil de mortalidade do Brasil, estando entre os dez mais incidentes do país. A detecção precoce garante uma melhor qualidade de vida para os doentes oncológicos, porém frequentemente estes chegam aos centros de tratamento em fase avançada da doença. O estudo objetiva investigar as dificuldades de acesso ao diagnóstico e tratamento para os pacientes com câncer gastrointestinal atendidos pelo Sistema Único de Saúde. Com este intuito, realizou-se uma pesquisa observacional descritiva e sob a forma de um questionário foram coletados dados de pacientes em tratamento em dois hospitais públicos de Belém, no período de março a junho de 2013. Preencheram os critérios de inclusão 122 pacientes que foram agrupados em diferentes trajetórias de atendimento. Além disso, foram também obtidas informações registradas nos prontuários desses pacientes. A análise dos dados demonstrou que o diagnóstico da doença em 68,1% foi realizado pelo médico generalista; a maior dificuldade, nessa fase, foi o acesso ao diagnóstico gerando gastos com exames, pois a maioria dos pacientes (68,9%) não realizou exames especializados através do Sistema Único de Saúde, mas com recursos próprios. Nos centros/ unidades de referência em oncologia, as dificuldades relatadas por 56 pacientes começam com a marcação da consulta médica, ocorrendo demora do agendamento pela instituição para 94,6% desses doentes. A falta de leito para internação foi apontada como o maior entrave (54.4%) para iniciar a terapêutica cirúrgica, particularmente para o câncer gástrico e de cólon e reto. A análise das trajetórias percorridas pelos doentes, desde o inicio dos sintomas até o atendimento na unidade de referência, revela que o diagnóstico da doença em 50% dos pacientes ocorreu somente após 10 meses do inicio dos sintomas, e o tratamento iniciou só depois de 90 dias do diagnóstico. O tempo que os pacientes permanecem sintomáticos sem um diagnóstico impacta negativamente no prognóstico. Nesta pesquisa, os casos de câncer gástrico e de cólon e reto foram diagnosticados tardiamente (estádio IV e IIIB) e, por conseguinte o tratamento não ocorreu no prazo desejável.

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O câncer gástrico representa um grave problema de saúde pública mundial. A alta incidência de tumores avançados com baixa sobrevida pelas metástases, sobretudo no norte do país, nos fez realizar o estudo comparativo das linhagens de adenocarcinomas gástricos metastáticos (AGP01) com adenocarcinomas gástricos sem metástases (ACP02) através da avaliação proteômica da via de mobilidade celular, que possam ter relação com a formação dessas metástases. Foi realizado estudo proteômico das linhagens AGP01 e ACP02 através da técnica da cromatografia líquida de alta performance 2D Nanoultra (UPLC) em conjunto com nanoESI-MSE (MudPIT) e análise funcional das proteínas diferencialmente expressas no programa Ingenuity Pathways Analysis (IPA). Observamos 19 proteínas com aumento da expressão na linhagem AGP01 em relação a ACP02, as quais apresentam relação com movimento, organização e morfologia celular, onde podemos sugerir que as proteínas ACTB, ANXA1, LGALS1, IQGAP1, EZR, MSN, MYH9 e S100A11, de acordo com nossos achados e corroborados pela literatura pesquisada, tem associação com a metástase de adenocarcinomas gástricos. Outras proteínas se mostraram em forte expressão em nosso estudo, mas na literatura pesquisada sua expressão tem relação com as vias de disseminação apenas de outros tumores, como: mama (RAB5C), pulmão (PLS1 e CAP1), reto (ACTN1) e GIST (SYNE2). Conflitantes com nosso estudo, as expressões das proteínas CAPZA1, FLNA e FLNC, foram observadas na literatura como um inibidor de avanço tumoral, enquanto que as expressão das proteínas MYL6, MYL6B, e ACTN2, aparecem pela primeira vez como tendo relação com a mobilidade celular, invasão e metástase em câncer.

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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)

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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)

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Pós-graduação em Pesquisa e Desenvolvimento (Biotecnologia Médica) - FMB

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Breast cancer metastasis is a leading cause of death by malignancy in women worldwide. Efforts are being made to further characterize the rate-limiting steps of cancer metastasis, i.e. extravasation of circulating tumor cells and colonization of secondary organs. In this study, we investigated whether angiotensin II, a major vasoactive peptide both produced locally and released in the bloodstream, may trigger activating signals that contribute to cancer cell extravasation and metastasis. We used an experimental in vivo model of cancer metastasis in which bioluminescent breast tumor cells (D3H2LN) were injected intra-cardiacally into nude mice in order to recapitulate the late and essential steps of metastatic dissemination. Real-time intravital imaging studies revealed that angiotensin II accelerates the formation of metastatic foci at secondary sites. Pre-treatment of cancer cells with the peptide increases the number of mice with metastases, as well as the number and size of metastases per mouse. In vitro, angiotensin II contributes to each sequential step of cancer metastasis by promoting cancer cell adhesion to endothelial cells, trans-endothelial migration and tumor cell migration across extracellular matrix. At the molecular level, a total of 102 genes differentially expressed following angiotensin II pretreatment were identified by comparative DNA microarray. Angiotensin II regulates two groups of connected genes related to its precursor angiotensinogen. Among those, up-regulated MMP2/MMP9 and ICAM1 stand at the crossroad of a network of genes involved in cell adhesion, migration and invasion. Our data suggest that targeting angiotensin II production or action may represent a valuable therapeutic option to prevent metastatic progression of invasive breast tumors.

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Non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) represents the leading cause of cancer death worldwide, and 5-year survival is about 16% for patients diagnosed with advanced lung cancer and about 70-90% when the disease is diagnosed and treated at earlier stages. Treatment of NSCLC is changed in the last years with the introduction of targeted agents, such as gefitinib and erlotinib, that have dramatically changed the natural history of NSCLC patients carrying specific mutations in the EGFR gene, or crizotinib, for patients with the EML4-ALK translocation. However, such patients represent only about 15-20% of all NSCLC patients, and for the remaining individuals conventional chemotherapy represents the standard choice yet, but response rate to thise type of treatment is only about 20%. Development of new drugs and new therapeutic approaches are so needed to improve patients outcome. In this project we aimed to analyse the antitumoral activity of two compounds with the ability to inhibit histone deacethylases (ACS 2 and ACS 33), derived from Valproic Acid and conjugated with H2S, in human cancer cell lines derived from NSCLC tissues. We showed that ACS 2 represents the more promising agent. It showed strong antitumoral and pro-apoptotic activities, by inducing membrane depolarization, cytocrome-c release and caspase 3 and 9 activation. It was able to reduce the invasive capacity of cells, through inhibition of metalloproteinases expression, and to induce a reduced chromatin condensation. This last characteristic is probably responsible for the observed high synergistic activity in combination with cisplatin. In conclusion our results highlight the potential role of the ACS 2 compound as new therapeutic option for NSCLC patients, especially in combination with cisplatin. If validated in in vivo models, this compound should be worthy for phase I clinical trials.

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PURPOSE: Tumor stage and nuclear grade are the most important prognostic parameters of clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC). The progression risk of ccRCC remains difficult to predict particularly for tumors with organ-confined stage and intermediate differentiation grade. Elucidating molecular pathways deregulated in ccRCC may point to novel prognostic parameters that facilitate planning of therapeutic approaches. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: Using tissue microarrays, expression patterns of 15 different proteins were evaluated in over 800 ccRCC patients to analyze pathways reported to be physiologically controlled by the tumor suppressors von Hippel-Lindau protein and phosphatase and tensin homologue (PTEN). Tumor staging and grading were improved by performing variable selection using Cox regression and a recursive bootstrap elimination scheme. RESULTS: Patients with pT2 and pT3 tumors that were p27 and CAIX positive had a better outcome than those with all remaining marker combinations. A prolonged survival among patients with intermediate grade (grade 2) correlated with both nuclear p27 and cytoplasmic PTEN expression, as well as with inactive, nonphosphorylated ribosomal protein S6. By applying graphical log-linear modeling for over 700 ccRCC for which the molecular parameters were available, only a weak conditional dependence existed between the expression of p27, PTEN, CAIX, and p-S6, suggesting that the dysregulation of several independent pathways are crucial for tumor progression. CONCLUSIONS: The use of recursive bootstrap elimination, as well as graphical log-linear modeling for comprehensive tissue microarray (TMA) data analysis allows the unraveling of complex molecular contexts and may improve predictive evaluations for patients with advanced renal cancer.

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Metastatic progression of advanced prostate cancer is a major clinical problem. Identifying the cell(s) of origin in prostate cancer and its distant metastases may permit the development of more effective treatment and preventive therapies. In this study, aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH) activity was used as a basis to isolate and compare subpopulations of primary human prostate cancer cells and cell lines. ALDH-high prostate cancer cells displayed strongly elevated clonogenicity and migratory behavior in vitro. More strikingly, ALDH-high cells readily formed distant metastases with strongly enhanced tumor progression at both orthotopic and metastatic sites in preclinical models. Several ALDH isoforms were expressed in human prostate cancer cells and clinical specimens of primary prostate tumors with matched bone metastases. Our findings suggest that ALDH-based viable cell sorting can be used to identify and characterize tumor-initiating and, more importantly perhaps, metastasis-initiating cells in human prostate cancer.

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The standard of care for locally advanced anal cancer has been concurrent chemoradiation. However, conventional treatment with 3-dimensional radiotherapy is associated with significant toxicity. The feasibility of new radiotherapy techniques such as image-guided radiotherapy (IGRT) in combination with chemotherapy for the treatment of this malignancy was assessed.

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We have developed a multifactorial histopathological prognostic score (PRSC) for patients with gastric cancer treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy before surgery for the accurate discrimination of patient subgroups with differing outcomes.

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Chemotherapy for advanced colorectal cancer leads to improved survival; however, predictors of response to systemic treatment are not available. Genomic and epigenetic alterations of the gene encoding transcription factor AP-2 epsilon (TFAP2E) are common in human cancers. The gene encoding dickkopf homolog 4 protein (DKK4) is a potential downstream target of TFAP2E and has been implicated in chemotherapy resistance. We aimed to further evaluate the role of TFAP2E and DKK4 as predictors of the response of colorectal cancer to chemotherapy.

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Castration is the standard therapy for advanced prostate cancer (PC). Although this treatment is initially effective, tumors invariably relapse as incurable, castration-resistant PC (CRPC). Adaptation of androgen-dependent PC cells to an androgen-depleted environment or selection of pre-existing, CRPC cells have been proposed as mechanisms of CRPC development. Stem cell (SC)-like PC cells have been implicated not only as tumor initiating/maintaining in PC but also as tumor-reinitiating cells in CRPC. Recently, castration-resistant cells expressing the NK3 homeobox 1 (Nkx3-1) (CARNs), the other luminal markers cytokeratin 18 (CK18) and androgen receptor (AR), and possessing SC properties, have been found in castrated mouse prostate and proposed as the cell-of-origin of CRPC. However, the human counterpart of CARNs has not been identified yet. Here, we demonstrate that in the human PC xenograft BM18, pre-existing SC-like and neuroendocrine (NE) PC cells are selected by castration and survive as totally quiescent. SC-like BM18 cells, displaying the SC markers aldehyde dehydrogenase 1A1 or NANOG, coexpress the luminal markers NKX3-1, CK18, and a low level of AR (AR(low)) but not basal or NE markers. These CR luminal SC-like cells, but not NE cells, reinitiate BM18 tumor growth after androgen replacement. The AR(low) seems to mediate directly both castration survival and tumor reinitiation. This study identifies for the first time in human PC SC-/CARN-like cells that may represent the cell-of-origin of tumor reinitiation as CRPC. This finding will be fundamental for refining the hierarchy among human PC cancer cells and may have important clinical implications.

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PURPOSE: Integration of high-risk papillomavirus DNA has been considered an important step in oncogenic progression to cervical carcinoma. Disruption of the human papillomavirus (HPV) genome within the E2 gene is frequently a consequence. This study investigated the influence of episomal viral DNA on outcome in patients with advanced cervical cancer treated with primary radiotherapy. METHODS AND MATERIALS: Paraffin-embedded biopsies of 82 women with locally advanced cervical cancer could be analyzed for HPV infection by multiplex polymerase chain reaction (PCR) by use of SPF1/2 primers. E2-gene intactness of HPV-16-positive samples was analyzed in 3 separate amplification reactions by use of the E2A, E2B, E2C primers. Statistical analyses (Kaplan-Meier method; log-rank test) were performed for overall survival (OS), disease-free survival (DFS), local progression-free survival (LPFS), and distant metastases-free survival (DMFS). RESULTS: Sixty-one (75%) of 82 carcinomas were HPV positive, 44 of them for HPV-16 (72%). Seventeen of the 44 HPV-16-positive tumors (39%) had an intact E2 gene. Patients with a HPV-16-positive tumor and an intact E2 gene showed a trend for a better DFS (58% vs. 38%, p = 0.06) compared with those with a disrupted E2 gene. A nonsignificant difference occurred regarding OS (87% vs. 66%, p = 0.16) and DMFS (57% vs. 48%, p = 0.15). CONCLUSION: E2-gene status may be a promising new target, but more studies are required to elucidate the effect of the viral E2 gene on outcome after radiotherapy in HPV-positive tumors.