Risk of urothelial bladder cancer in Lynch syndrome is increased, in particular among MSH2mutation carriers
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He's a Canadian hero known all around the world, and on Sunday thousands of people are lacing up to walk or run in his name. Terry Fox runs are being held across the country and the GTA, with the goal of continuing Terry's dream of raising money for cancer research. "What you ever you do you gotta do the best you can possibly do, and I'm going to give it everything I possibly can," Fox said. And that he did, as Fox ran his Marathon of Hope, inspiring people across a nation. Martha McLew, Ontario Director of the Terry Fox Foundation, says there are 17 runs in the GTA alone. "I think that when people come out to the Terry Fox run, they realize they are doing it for such a personal reason, they are doing it for a loved one, and to really thank Terry at the same time," McLew said. There is no per-registration needed and no mandatory fee. To find a run near you, click here.
http://www.680news.mobi/article.aspx?content_id=401999OBJECTIVE: A cohort study was conducted to evaluate whether preoperative plasma HE4 levels could predict the occurrence of death (primary endpoint) and progression (secondary endpoint) in women with ovarian cancer (OC).
METHODS: Between 1998 and 2006, we recruited 136 women newly diagnosed with OC of any FIGO stage at the University Hospital, CHUQ-L'Hôtel-Dieu de Québec, Canada. HE4 was measured using the Abbott's ARCHITECT HE4 assay. Dates of death were obtained by record linkage with the Québec mortality files. Progression was evaluated using the CA-125 or the RECIST criteria, as recommended by the Gynecology Cancer Intergroup. Adjusted hazard ratios (HR) of death and progression, as well as their 95% confidence intervals (CI), were estimated using the Cox proportional hazard regression model.
RESULTS: Preoperative levels of HE4 were strongly associated with all OC standard prognostic factors. HE4 levels increased significantly with age (p=0.02), FIGO stage (p<0.0001), grade (p=0.005), preoperative CA-125 levels (p<0.0001), and residual tumor (p<0.0001). HE4 levels above the median value (394 pmol/L) were significantly associated with mortality (HR=2.17; 95% CI: 1.42-3.32) and progression (HR=1.81; 95% CI: 1.21-2.72). After adjustment for the FIGO stage, which was the only factor significantly associated with prognosis in multivariate analyses, the association of HE4 with death remained statistically significant (HR=1.67; 95% CI: 1.08-2.59). However, the association with progression was no longer significant (HR=1.32; 95% CI: 0.87-1.99).
CONCLUSION: These results show that preoperative the plasma level of HE4 is a marker of OC aggressiveness and a predictor of death.
DOI: 10.1111/his.12028
© 2012 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
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The peritoneal metastatic route of cancer dissemination is shared by cancers of the ovary and gastrointestinal tract. Once initiated, peritoneal metastasis typically proceeds rapidly in a feed-forward manner. Several factors contribute to this efficient progression. In peritoneal metastasis, cancer cells exfoliate into the peritoneal fluid and spread locally, transported by peritoneal fluid. Inflammatory cytokines released by tumor and immune cells compromise the protective, anti-adhesive mesothelial cell layer that lines the peritoneal cavity, exposing the underlying extracellular matrix to which cancer cells readily attach. The peritoneum is further rendered receptive to metastatic implantation and growth by myofibroblastic cell behaviors also stimulated by inflammatory cytokines. Individual cancer cells suspended in peritoneal fluid can aggregate to form multicellular spheroids. This cellular arrangement imparts resistance to anoikis, apoptosis, and chemotherapeutics. Emerging evidence indicates that compact spheroid formation is preferentially accomplished by cancer cells with high invasive capacity and contractile behaviors. This review focuses on the pathological alterations to the peritoneum and the properties of cancer cells that in combination drive peritoneal metastasis.
Influence of a family history of breast and/or ovarian cancer on breast cancer outcomes.
Exp Ther Med. 2011 9;2(5):917-923
Authors: Cao AY, He M, DI GH, Wu J, Lu JS, Liu GY, Shen ZZ, Shao ZM
Abstract
Various published studies have been inconclusive in attempting to relate a family history of breast and/or ovarian cancer (BOC) to the survival of breast cancer patients. The aim of the study was to investigate the association of a family history of BOC with tumor characteristics, treatment response and the difference between the prognosis of familial breast cancer (FBC) patients and sporadic breast cancer (SBC) patients. Data on 348 operable FBC patients and 345 SBC patients were retrospectively analyzed. The overall survival (OS) and recurrence/metastasis-free survival (RFS) were compared for both groups. FBC cases were diagnosed at a relatively younger age (51.1±10.4 vs. 53.7±11.0 years, P=0.054) and presented a lower T stage (P=0.000) than the SBC cases. Patients with a family history of BOC had a significantly greater risk of recurrence/metastasis (P= 0.04) and a non-significantly increased risk of death (P=0.06) compared to the SBC patients. In a multivariate analysis, family history of BOC was an independent predictive factor for both recurrence/metastasis rate (P=0.01, HR=0.012, 95% CI 0.02-0.57) and mortality (P=0.044, HR=0.43, 95% CI 0.19-0.98) in the hormone receptor-positive population. Our results found that women diagnosed with FBC had an early onset of disease in the population studied, and the poor outcome of patients with a family history of BOC associated with survival was restricted to the hormone receptor-positive population.
PMID: 22977598 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
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Immunobiology of human mucin 1 in a preclinical ovarian tumor model.
Oncogene. 2012 Sep 10;
Authors: Budiu RA, Elishaev E, Brozick J, Lee M, Edwards RP, Kalinski P, Vlad AM
Abstract
Epithelial ovarian cancer is an aggressive malignancy, with a low 5-year median survival. Continued improvement on the development of more effective therapies depends in part on the availability of adequate preclinical models for in vivo testing of treatment efficacy. Mucin 1 (MUC1) glycoprotein is a tumor-associated antigen overexpressed in ovarian cancer cells, making it a potential target for immune therapy. To create a preclinical mouse model for MUC1-positive ovarian tumors, we generated triple transgenic (Tg) mice that heterozygously express human MUC1(+/-) as a transgene, and carry the conditional K-rasG12D oncoallele (loxP-Stop-loxP-K-ras(G12D/+)) and the floxed Pten gene (Pten/(loxP/loxP)). Injection of Cre recombinase-encoding adenovirus (AdCre) in the ovarian bursa of triple (MUC1KrasPten) Tg mice triggers ovarian tumors that, in analogy to human ovarian cancer, express strongly elevated MUC1 levels. The tumors metastasize loco-regionally and are accompanied by high serum MUC1, closely mimicking the human disease. Compared with the KrasPten mice with tumors, the MUC1KrasPten mice show increased loco-regional metastasis and augmented accumulation of CD4+Foxp3+ immune-suppressive regulatory T cells. Vaccination of MUC1KrasPten mice with type 1 polarized dendritic cells (DC1) loaded with a MUC1 peptide (DC1-MUC1) can circumvent tumor-mediated immune suppression in the host, activate multiple immune effector genes and effectively prolong survival. Our studies report the first human MUC1-expressing, orthotopic ovarian tumor model, reveal novel MUC1 functions in ovarian cancer biology and demonstrate its suitability as a target for immune-based therapies.Oncogene advance online publication, 10 September 2012; doi:10.1038/onc.2012.397.
PMID: 22964632 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
OBJECTIVE: Chemoresistance is a critical feature of advanced ovarian cancer with only 30% of patients surviving longer than 5years. We have previously shown that four kallikrein-related (KLK) peptidases, KLK4, KLK5, KLK6 and KLK7 (KLK4-7), are implicated in peritoneal invasion and tumour growth, but underlying mechanisms were not identified. We also reported that KLK7 overexpression confers chemoresistance to paclitaxel, and cell survival via integrins. In this study, we further explored the functional consequenses of overexpression of all four KLKs (KLK4-7) simultaneously in the ovarian cancer cell line, OV-MZ-6, and its impact on integrin expression and signalling, cell adhesion and survival as contributors to chemoresistance and metastatic progression.
METHODS: Quantitative gene and protein expression analyses, confocal microscopy, cell adhesion and chemosensitivity assays were performed.
RESULTS: Expression of α5β1/αvβ3 integrins was downregulated upon combined stable KLK4-7 overexpression in OV-MZ-6 cells. Accordingly, the adhesion of these cells to vitronectin and fibronectin, the extracellular matrix binding proteins of α5β1/αvβ3 integrins and two predominant proteins of the peritoneal matrix, was decreased. KLK4-7-transfected cells were more resistant to paclitaxel (10-100nmol/L: 38-54%), but not to carboplatin, which was associated with decreased apoptotic stimuli. However, the KLK4-7-induced paclitaxel resistance was not blocked by the MEK1/2 inhibitor, U0126.
CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrates that combined KLK4-7 expression by ovarian cancer cells promotes reduced integrin expression with consequently less cell-matrix attachment, and insensitivity to paclitaxel mediated by complex integrin and MAPK independent interactions, indicative of a malignant phenotype and disease progression suggesting a role for these KLKs in this process.
Posted by Gary Schwitzer in Screening
Platelets increase the proliferation of ovarian cancer cells.
Blood. 2012 Sep 10;
Authors: Cho MS, Bottsford-Miller J, Vasquez HG, Stone R, Zand B, Kroll MH, Sood AK, Afshar-Kharghan V
Abstract
Platelets promote metastasis and angiogenesis but their effect on tumor cell growth is uncertain. Here we report a direct proliferative effect of platelets on cancer cells both in vitro and in vivo. Incubation of platelets with ovarian cancer cells from murine (ID8 and 2C6) or human (SKOV3 and OVCAR5) origin increased cell proliferation. The proliferative effect of platelets was not dependent on direct contact with cancer cells, and preincubation of platelets with blocking antibodies against platelet adhesion molecules did not alter their effect on cancer cells. The proliferative effect of platelets was reduced by fixing platelets with paraformaldehyde, preincubating platelets with a TGFβ1-blocking antibody, or reducing expression of TGFβR1 receptor on cancer cells with siRNA. Infusing platelets into mice with orthotopic ovarian tumors significantly increased the proliferation indices in these tumors. Ovarian cancer patients with thrombocytosis had higher tumor proliferation indices compared to patients with normal platelet counts.
PMID: 22966171 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
| Ages Eligible for Study: | 20 Years to 46 Years |
| Genders Eligible for Study: | Female |
| Accepts Healthy Volunteers: | No |
Inclusion Criteria:
Exclusion Criteria: