980 resultados para Intraperitoneal metastasis
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RESUMO: O cancro do pulmão (LC), uma das principais causas de mortalidade relacionada com cancro em Portugal, pode levar à formação de metástases hematogénicas. A adesão das células tumorais ao endotélio é considerada um dos passos fundamentais envolvidos na metástase. Em células sanguíneas, esta adesão é mediada por ligandos de E-selectina (E-SL), glicoproteínas ou glicolípidos decorados principalmente com sialyl-Lewis x (sLex) e sialyl-Lewis a (sLea). Tem sido descrito a expressão destes antigénios em LC, contudo o seu papel funcional em permitir a adesão das células de LC ao endotélio é ainda pouco compreendido. Foram analisadas amostras emparelhadas normais e tumorais de pacientes com cancro de pulmão de não-pequenas células (NSCLC) e três linhas celulares de LC. Immunoblotting assays com anti-sLex/sLea e molécula quimérica de E-selectina demonstraram que tecidos tumorais de LC sobreexpressam significativamente E-SL e resultados de citometria de fluxo demonstraram uma expressão elevada de E-SL nas linhas celulares. Para compreender o mecanismo da sobreexpressão de E-SL em tecidos tumorais e linhas celulares de LC, foi analisada a expressão de genes envolvidos na biossíntese de E-SL, nomeadamente FUT3, FUT4, FUT6, FUT7, ST3GAL3, ST3GAL4, ST3GAL6, β4GALT1, GCNT1 e GALNT3. Observou-se a sobreexpressão das fucosiltransferases FUT3, FUT6 e FUT7 em tecidos tumorais de LC e FUT3 em linhas celulares de LC, sendo que neste último, esta expressão é correlacionada com um aumento da adesão das células de LC às selectinas endoteliais. Foi observado que uma baixa expressão de FUT4 em tecidos tumorais está associada com estadios menos avançados de NSCLC. Foram analisadas ainda proteínas decoradas com sLex/sLea, tendo-se identificado como E-SL o antigénio carcinoembrionário em NSCLC. Em resumo, esta tese contribuiu para uma melhor compreensão das alterações glicosídicas e moléculas que podem influenciar a progressão tumoral do LC, podendo permitir identificar futuramente novos biomarcadores de diagnóstico/prognóstico e potenciais alvos terapêuticos para o NSCLC.--------------------------ABSTRACT: Lung cancer (LC), one of the major causes of mortality related to cancer in Portugal, may lead to hematogenous metastasis. Adhesion of cancer cells to endothelium is considered one of the crucial steps involved in metastasis. In blood cells, this adhesion is initiated by endothelial selectin ligands (E-SL) that are glycoproteins or glycolipids decorated mostly with sialyl-Lewis x (sLex) and sialyl-Lewis a (sLea). While LC has been described as expressing these sialyl Lewis antigens, its functional role in allowing LC adhesion to endothelium is still poorly understood. We analyzed paired tumor and normal tissues samples from non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients and three LC cell lines. Immunoblotting assays with anti-sLex/sLea and E-selectin chimera demonstrated that LC tumor tissues significantly overexpress E-SL and flow cytometry results indicated that E-SL are also abundantly expressed in LC cell lines. To understand the mechanism behind the overexpression of E-SL in LC tissues and cell lines, we analyzed the expression of genes involved in its biosynthesis, namely FUT3, FUT4, FUT6, FUT7, ST3GAL3, ST3GAL4, ST3GAL6, β4GALT1, GCNT1 and GALNT3. It was observed the overexpression of fucosyltransferases FUT3, FUT6 and FUT7 in LC tumor tissues and FUT3 in LC cell lines, being this last one correlated with an increased reactivity of the LC cells to endothelial selectins. It was described that low expression of FUT4 in tumor tissues is correlated with early stages of NSCLC. We also analyzed scaffolds proteins of sLex/sLea and it was identified the carcinoembryonic antigen as an E-SL in NSCLC. In summary, this thesis contributed to a better understanding of the glycosidic changes and molecules that can influence tumor progression of LC, allowing identifying in the future new diagnosis/prognosis biomarkers and potential therapeutic targets for NSCLC.
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A rare case of thumb metastasis from small cell lung cancer is presented. The patient underwent local radiotherapy with complete palliation of symptoms. She died 4 months later with disseminated disease. Considerations about incidence, treatment, and physiopathology of this kind of dissemination are made. Conservative treatment of finger metastasis with radiation may be considered due to the poor outcome of these patients.
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PURPOSE: To report the case of a woman with a diagnosis of grade II (low grade) parosteal osteosarcoma with the occurrence of myocardial metastasis 13 years after resection, and to present a review of the existing literature on the subject. METHODS: Description of the case and review of the literature. CONCLUSION: The review leads to the conclusion that the occurrence of metastasis from parosteal osteosarcoma can occur in up to 38% of the cases, in spite of its relatively low aggressiveness. However, myocardial metastasis of a parosteal osteosarcoma is an event that was not found in the literature.
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Colorectal cancer is one of the most common malignancies and a leading cause of cancer death worldwide. Molecular markers may improve clinicopathologic staging and provide a basis to guide novel therapeutic strategies which target specific tumourassociated molecules according to individual tumour biology; however, so far, no ideal molecular marker has been found to predict disease progression. We tested Ki-67 proliferation marker in primary and lymph node metastasis of CRC. We observed a statistical significant difference between the positive rates of neoplastic cells positively stained byKi-67 in both sites, with remarkable increased number of Ki-67 positive cells in primary tumor cells compared to cancer cells that invaded lymph nodes. We can speculate that the metastatic CRC in lymph node can be more resistant to the drugs that target cellular division.
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Dissertação de mestrado integrado em Engenharia Biomédica (área de especialização em Informática Médica)
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La Esclerosis Múltiple es una de las enfermedades autoinmunes del Sistema Nervioso Central más frecuentes en adultos jóvenes. Un modelo experimental de la misma es la Encefalomielitis Autoinmune Experimental (EAE). Numerosos trabajos demuestran que en EAE, los clones patogénicos capaces de transferir la enfermedad son células T cooperadoras tipo 1 (Th1), mientras que las células T cooperadoras tipo 2 (Th2) actuarían como clones protectivos. Debido a las funciones opuestas de estas dos poblaciones existe la posibilidad de que la desregulación inmune asociada a Esclerosis Múltiple y su modelo experimental EAE se relacione a un desbalance Th1-Th2. La célula presentadora de antígeno (CPA), la dosis de antígeno, su ruta de entrada, el tipo de interleuquina presente en el medio, las moléculas co-estimulatorias de la CPA, etc., son fundamentales para la inducción de poblaciones Th1 ó Th2. Las estrategias terapéuticas actuales intentan suprimir la enfermedad administrando el autoantígeno por distintas vías, como por ejemplo la vía oral, intragástrica, endovenosa, etc. La inducción de tolerancia utilizando la vía intraperitoneal (ip) no ha sido muy explorada. Recientemente hemos iniciado una nueva línea de trabajo en la cual se suprimió la EAE inyectando i.p. antígenos de mielina en días previos a la inmunización. El objetivo de este proyecto será estudiar la vía i.p. y las CPA peritoneales en la inducción de supresión de la EAE. Se analizará: 1) El mecanismo inmunológico por el cual se induce supresión al inyectar antígenos de mielina por la vía i.p., estudiando si en los animales suprimidos se genera un estado de anergia al autoantígeno y/o células capaces de regular negativamente la respuesta autoinmune. 2) Si las CPA peritoneales pulsadas in vivo con antígenos de mielina al ser transferidas a animales receptores singénicos en días previos a la inmunización con mielina bovina son capaces de inducir supresión de la respuesta autoinmune en los animales receptores. 3) El fenotipo de las CPA peritoneales ya que se sabe que CPA que expresen determinadas moléculas de superficie tales como antígenos del Complejo Mayor de Histocompatibilidad, moléculas de adhesión, moléculas coestimulatorias, etc., participan activamente en el destino final de la respuesta inducida.
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INTRODUCTION: Solid tumors are known to have an abnormal vasculature that limits the distribution of chemotherapy. We have recently shown that tumor vessel modulation by low-dose photodynamic therapy (L-PDT) could improve the uptake of macromolecular chemotherapeutic agents such as liposomal doxorubicin (Liporubicin) administered subsequently. However, how this occurs is unknown. Convection, the main mechanism for drug transport between the intravascular and extravascular spaces, is mostly related to interstitial fluid pressure (IFP) and tumor blood flow (TBF). Here, we determined the changes of tumor and surrounding lung IFP and TBF before, during, and after vascular L-PDT. We also evaluated the effect of these changes on the distribution of Liporubicin administered intravenously (IV) in a lung sarcoma metastasis model. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A syngeneic methylcholanthrene-induced sarcoma cell line was implanted subpleurally in the lung of Fischer rats. Tumor/surrounding lung IFP and TBF changes induced by L-PDT were determined using the wick-in-needle technique and laser Doppler flowmetry, respectively. The spatial distribution of Liporubicin in tumor and lung tissues following IV drug administration was then assessed in L-PDT-pretreated animals and controls (no L-PDT) by epifluorescence microscopy. RESULTS: L-PDT significantly decreased tumor but not lung IFP compared to controls (no L-PDT) without affecting TBF. These conditions were associated with a significant improvement in Liporubicin distribution in tumor tissues compared to controls (P < .05). DISCUSSION: L-PDT specifically enhanced convection in blood vessels of tumor but not of normal lung tissue, which was associated with a significant improvement of Liporubicin distribution in tumors compared to controls.
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Mucocutaneous leishmaniasis (MCL) in South and Central America is characterized by the dissemination (metastasis) of Leishmania Viannia subgenus parasites from a cutaneous lesion to nasopharyngeal tissues. Little is known about the pathogenesis of MCL, especially with regard to the virulence of the parasites and the process of metastatic dissemination. We previously examined the functional relationship between cytoplasmic peroxiredoxin and metastatic phenotype using highly, infrequently, and nonmetastatic clones isolated from an L. (V.) guyanensis strain previously shown to be highly metastatic in golden hamsters. Distinct forms of cytoplasmic peroxiredoxin were identified and found to be associated with the metastatic phenotype. We report here that peroxidase activity in the presence of hydrogen peroxide and infectivity differs between metastatic and nonmetastatic L. (V.) guyanensis clones. After hydrogen peroxide treatment or heat shock, peroxiredoxin was detected preferentially as dimers in metastatic L. (V.) guyanensis clones and in L. (V.) panamensis strains from patients with MCL, compared with nonmetastatic parasites. These data provide evidence that resistance to the first microbicidal response of the host cell by Leishmania promastigotes is linked to peroxiredoxin conformation and may be relevant to intracellular survival and persistence, which are prerequisites for the development of metastatic disease.
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Radiotherapy is a widely used treatment option in cancer. However, recent evidence suggests that doses of ionizing radiation (IR) delivered inside the tumor target volume, during fractionated radiotherapy, can promote tumor invasion and metastasis. Furthermore, the tissues that surround the tumor area are also exposed to low doses of IR that are lower than those delivered inside the tumor mass, because external radiotherapy is delivered to the tumor through multiple radiation beams, in order to prevent damage of organs at risk. The biological effects of these low doses of IR on the healthy tissue surrounding the tumor area, and in particular on the vasculature remain largely to be determined. We found that doses of IR lower or equal to 0.8 Gy enhance endothelial cell migration without impinging on cell proliferation or survival. Moreover, we show that low-dose IR induces a rapid phosphorylation of several endothelial cell proteins, including the Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor (VEGF) Receptor-2 and induces VEGF production in hypoxia mimicking conditions. By activating the VEGF Receptor-2, low-dose IR enhances endothelial cell migration and prevents endothelial cell death promoted by an anti-angiogenic drug, bevacizumab. In addition, we observed that low-dose IR accelerates embryonic angiogenic sprouting during zebrafish development and promotes adult angiogenesis during zebrafish fin regeneration and in the murine Matrigel assay. Using murine experimental models of leukemia and orthotopic breast cancer, we show that low-dose IR promotes tumor growth and metastasis and that these effects were prevented by the administration of a VEGF receptor-tyrosine kinase inhibitor immediately before IR exposure. These findings demonstrate a new mechanism to the understanding of the potential pro-metastatic effect of IR and may provide a new rationale basis to the improvement of current radiotherapy protocols.
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Chemotherapy is widely used as a systemic treatment modality in cancer patients and provides survival benefits for a significant fraction of treated patients H However, some patients suffer from cancer relapse and rapidly progress to metastasis, suggesting that following chemotherapy their residual tumor developed a more aggressive phenotype 4 5. Although some molecular mechanisms involved in chemo-resistance and chemotherapy-induced metastatic relapse have been reported, more investigations and understanding of these processes are necessary before any translation into the clinic might be considered. By using the syngeneic metastatic 4T1 murine breast cancer model, we observed that chemotherapy treatment and selection of chemotherapy-resistant cancer cells in vitro can induces two opposite phenotypes: a dormant one and a relapsing-metastatic one. Previous studies in our laboratory demonstrated that irradiation of mammary gland promotes tumor metastasis, at least in part, by inducing the recruitment of CD11b+ cells to both the primary tumor and the lungs at a pre-metastatic stage. In this study we found that CD11b+ cells may also play important roles in chemotherapy-induced tumor metastasis and dormancy in vivo. Tumor cells expressing the stem cell marker Sca-1 were enriched by chemotherapy treatment in vitro, as well as in tumor metastasis in vivo. Furthermore, tumor-derived CD11b+ cells were capable to maintain and expand this population in vitro. These results suggest that the expansion of a tumor cell population with stem cell features might be a mechanism by which chemotherapy induces metastasis. On the other hand, the same drug treatment in vitro generated resistant cells with a dormant phenotype. Dormant tumor cells were able to induce an in vivo immune- inflammatory response in the draining lymph node, which is normally absent due to the immunosuppressive effects of tumor-recruited myeloid derived- suppressor cells (MDSCs). Genome-wide gene expression analysis revealed the enrichment of invasion and metastasis-related genes in the relapsing metastatic tumor cells and immune response-related genes in the dormant tumor cells. Interestingly, CD11b+ cells derived from the microenvironment of growing-metastatic tumors, but not CD11b+ cells derived from the spleen of tumor-free mice, were able to instigate outgrowth of dormant tumor cells in vivo. Also, dormant cells formed growing and metastatic tumors when injected into immune-compromised NGS mice. These results point to a role of chemotherapy in enabling treated tumor cells to acquire immune response-inducing capabilities, while impairing the recruitment of CD11b+ cells and their differentiation into an immune-suppressive cell. The molecular mechanisms underneath these effects are being further investigated. In conclusion, results obtained in this model indicate that chemotherapy can induce a dormant phenotype in cancer cells and that this state of dormancy can be broken by MDSCs educated by relapsing tumors. Understanding the mechanism beyond these effects, in particular unraveling the genetic or epigenetic determinants of dormancy vs relapse, might open the way to therapies aimed and maintaining residual cells escaping chemotherapy in a state of sustained dormancy. - La chimiothérapie est un traitement systémique largement utilisé chez les patients cancéreux qui donne un avantage de survie significatif pour une bonne partie de patients traités (1-3). Cependant, certains patients souffrent d'une rechute et progressent ensuite vers la métastase. Ceci suggère que leur tumeur résiduelle a développé un phénotype agressif suite à la chimiothérapie (4-5). Bien que certains mécanismes moléculaires impliqués dans la chimiorésistance et la rechute métastatique ont été identifiés, d'avantage d'études sont nécessaires afin de mieux comprendre ce phénomène et de développer des nouvelles thérapies cliniques. En utilisant un modèle syngénique de cancer du sein métastatique chez la sourie (4T1), nous avons observé que la sélection des cellules cancéreuses résistantes à la chimiothérapie in vitro peut induire deux phénotypes opposés: un phénotype de dormance et un phénotype de progression métastatique. Une étude précédente issue de notre laboratoire a démontré que l'irradiation de la glande mammaire favorise la métastase de tumeurs recourants suite au recrutement de cellules CD11b+ dans la tumeur primaire et dans les poumons pré-métastatiques. Dans notre étude nous avons constaté que les cellules CD11b+ peuvent également jouer un rôle important dans la formation de métastases induites par la chimiothérapie ainsi que dans le maintien de la dormance in vivo. Nous avons également observé un enrichissement de cellules tumorales exprimant le marqueur de cellule souche Sca-1 parmi les cellules tumorales résistantes à la chimiothérapie et dans les cellules qui on formé des métastases in vivo. Des cellules CD11b+ dérivées du microenvironnement tumorale favorisent l'expansion de la population de cellules tumorales Sca-1+ in vitro. Ces résultats suggèrent que l'expansion d'une population de cellules tumorales avec des caractéristiques de cellules souches pourrait constituer un mécanisme par lequel la chimiothérapie induit des métastases dans des tumeurs récurrentes. D'autre part le même traitement de chimiothérapie peut générer des cellules résistantes avec un phénotype dormant. Les expériences in vivo indiquent que les cellules tumorales dormantes induisent une réponse immunitaire inflammatoire dans le ganglion lymphatique de drainage, qui est normalement réprimée par des cellules myéloïdes suppressives de tumeur (MDSC). Une analyse d'expression de gènes a révélé l'enrichissement de gènes liés à l'invasion et à la métastase dans les cellules tumorales récurrentes et des gènes liés à la réponse immunitaire dans les cellules tumorales dormantes. Les cellules CD11b+ issues du microenvironnement des tumeurs récurrents ont incité la croissance des cellules tumorales dormantes in vivo, tandis que les cellules CD11b+ dérivées de la rate de souris non porteuses de tumeur ne l'étaient pas. Les mécanismes moléculaires sous-jacents restent à découvrir. En conclusion, les résultats obtenus dans ce modèle indiquent que la chimiothérapie pourrait favoriser non seulement l'induction d'une dormance cellulaire, mais également que les cellules dormantes seraient adroits de induire une réponse immunitaire capable les maintenir dans un état de dormance prolongé. Un déséquilibre dans cette réponse immunitaire pourrait des lors briser cet état de dormance et induire une progression tumorale. Comprendre les mécanismes responsables de ces effets, en particulier l'identification des déterminants génétiques ou épigénétiques liés à la dormance vs la rechute, pourraient ouvrir la voie à des nouvelles thérapies visant le maintien d'un état de dormance permanente des cellules résiduelles après chimiothérapie.
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To study the postulated mutant p53 (mutp53) "gain of function" effects in mammary tumor development, progression and metastasis, we crossed SV40 transgenic WAP-T mice with mutant p53 transgenic WAP-mutp53 mice. Compared to tumors in monotransgenic WAP-T mice, tumors in bitransgenic WAP-T x WAP-mutp53 mice showed higher tumor grading, enhanced vascularization, and significantly increased metastasis. Bitransgenic tumors revealed a gene signature associated with the oncogenic epithelial-mesenchymal transition pathway (EMT gene signature). In cultures of WAP-T tumor-derived G-2 cancer cells, which are comprised of subpopulations displaying "mesenchymal" and "epithelial" phenotypes, this EMT gene signature was associated with the "mesenchymal" compartment. Furthermore, ectopic expression of mutp53 in G-2 cells sufficed to induce a strong EMT phenotype. In contrast to these in vitro effects, monotransgenic and bitransgenic tumors were phenotypically similar suggesting that in vivo the tumor cell phenotype might be under control of the tumor microenvironment. In support, orthotopic transplantation of G-2 cells as well as of G-2 cells expressing ectopic mutp53 into syngeneic mice resulted in tumors with a predominantly epithelial phenotype, closely similar to that of endogenous primary tumors. We conclude that induction of an EMT gene signature by mutp53 in bitransgenic tumors primarily promotes tumor cell plasticity, that is, the probability of tumor cells to undergo EMT processes under appropriate stimuli, thereby possibly increasing their potential to disseminate and metastasize.