64 research outputs found

    Restricted 12p amplification and RAS mutation in human germ cell tumors of the adult testis

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    Human testicular germ-cell tumors of young adults (TGCTs), both seminomas and nonseminomas, are characterized by 12p overrepresentation, mostly as isochromosomes, of which the biological and clinical significance is still unclear. A limited number of TGCTs has been identified with an additional high-level amplification of a restricted region of 12p including the K-RAS proto-oncogene. Here we show that the incidence of these restricted 12p amplifications is approximately 8% in primary TGCTs. Within a single cell formation of i(12p) and restricted 12p amplification is mutually exclusive. The borders of the amplicons cluster in short regions, and the amplicon was never found in the adjacent carcinoma in situ cells. Seminomas with the restricted 12p amplification virtually lacked apoptosis and the tumor cells showed prolonged in vitro survival like seminoma cells with a mutated RAS gene. However, no differences in proliferation index between these different groups of seminomas were found. Although patients with a seminoma containing a homogeneous restricted 12p amplification presented at a significantly younger age than those lacking it, the presence of a restricted 12p amplification/RAS mutation did not predict the stage of the disease at clinical presentation and the treatment response of primary seminomas. In 55 primary and metastatic tumors from 44 different patients who failed cisplatinum-based chemotherapy, the restricted 12p amplification and RAS mutations had the same incidence a

    EFFECT: a randomized phase II study of efficacy and impact on function of two doses of nab-paclitaxel as first-line treatment in older women with advanced breast cancer

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    Background: Limited data are available regarding the use of nab-paclitaxel in older patients with breast cancer. A weekly schedule is recommended, but there is a paucity of evidence regarding the optimal dose. We evaluated the efficacy of two different doses of weekly nab-paclitaxel, with a specific focus on their corresponding impact on patient function, in order to address the lack of data specifically relating to the older population. Methods: EFFECT is an open-label, phase II trial wherein 160 women with advanced breast cancer aged 65 65 years were enrolled from 15 institutions within Italy. Patients were randomly assigned 1:1 to receive nab-paclitaxel 100 mg/m2 (arm A) or 125 mg/m2 (arm B) on days 1, 8, and 15 on a 28-day cycle, as first-line treatment for advanced disease. The primary endpoint was event-free survival (EFS), wherein an event was defined as disease progression (PD), functional decline (FD), or death. In each arm, the null hypothesis that the median EFS would be 64 7 months was tested against a one-sided alternative according to the Brookmeyer Crowley test. Secondary endpoints included objective response rate (ORR), clinical benefit rate (CBR), progression-free survival (PFS), overall survival (OS), and safety. Results: After a median follow-up of 32.6 months, 140 events were observed in 158 evaluable patients. Median EFS was 8.2 months (90% CI, 5.9-8.9; p = 0.188) in arm A vs 8.3 months (90% CI, 6.2-9.7, p = 0.078) in arm B. Progression-free survival, overall survival, and response rates were similar in both groups. A higher percentage of dose reductions and discontinuations due to adverse events (AEs) was noted in arm B. The most frequently reported non-haematological AEs were fatigue (grade [G] 2-3 toxicity occurrence in arm A vs B, 43% and 51%, respectively) and peripheral neuropathy (G2-3 arm A vs B, 19% and 38%, respectively). Conclusion: Pre-specified outcomes were similar in both treatment arms. However, 100 mg/m2 was significantly better tolerated with fewer neurotoxicity-related events, representing a more feasible dose to be recommended for older patients with advanced disease. Trial registration: EudraCT, 2012-002707-18. Registered on June 4, 2012. NIH ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02783222. Retrospectively registered on May 26, 2016

    The acute impact of chemotherapy on the cognitive and emotional domains and on quality of life of older cancer patients

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    Background There are data suggesting that chemotherapy may have a negative impact on cognitive function; on the other hand, aging itself causes changes in the cognitive domain. This area is commonly evaluated in the context of a comprehensive geriatric assessment by the Mini-mental state examination (MMS). Aim We conducted a pilot study to evaluate the acute effects of chemotherapy on cognition in elderly patients (age >70) affected by solid tumors and to evaluate its effect on quality of life and emotional domain. Methods Cognitive function was measured before chemotherapy start and at 12 weeks (or chemotherapy interruption, whichever occurred first) with a battery of neuropsychological tests administered to assess attention, learning and memory, language and reading , visuo-constructional ability, problem salving and general intelligence. Quality of life and the emotional domain were evaluated by the FACT-G questionnaire and the Geriatric Depression Scale, respectively. Results A total of 30 patients, median age 76 (range 70-82) are evaluable. Baseline values of the test are reported. Data on changes in test scores after chemotherapy, as well as impact of chemotherapy on emotion and quality of life will be presented. Conclusion These results will be the basis to design a more complete and adequately sized study

    Monitoraggio della popolazione nidificante di fratino in Sicilia nel periodo 2011-2019

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    Il fratino (Charadrius alexandrinus), \ue8 una specie in diminuzione nella maggior parte del suo areale europeo (BirdLife International, 2019). In Italia, \ue8 considerata specie \u201cin pericolo\u201d (EN) per via della forte riduzione della popolazione nidificante, presumibilmente del 50%, nel periodo 2000-2010. La regione Sicilia, risulta ad oggi, dopo Sardegna e Veneto, la regione italiana pi\uf9 importante per la nidificazione e lo svernamento del fratino; purtroppo anche la popolazione regionale mostra una diminuzione in linea con quella nazionale, evidenziata da vari autori dalla fine degli anni \u201970, poi ulteriormente accentuata nel 2000-2010. Successivamente abbiamo solo lavori a livello locale sullo status della specie: da qui la necessit\ue0 di ottenere un quadro aggiornato della specie in Sicilia nell\u2019ultimo decennio attraverso una rete di monitoraggi sistematici ed analisi delle principali criticit\ue0 e fattori di rischio in ambito regionale. La raccolta e l\u2019elaborazione dei dati raccolti ha permesso inoltre di realizzare una base cartografica che evidenzia i siti soggetti a maggiore criticit\ue0 o valenza ecologica; il prossimo passaggio sar\ue0 la pianificazione e la realizzazione di interventi mirati di conservazione e salvaguardia di habitat, nidi e pullus

    CCAAT/Enhancer-Binding Protein γ Is a Critical Regulator of IL-1β-Induced IL-6 Production in Alveolar Epithelial Cells

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    CCAAT/enhancer binding protein γ (C/EBPγ) is a member of the C/EBP family of transcription factors, which lacks known activation domains. C/EBPγ was originally described as an inhibitor of C/EBP transactivation potential. However, previous study demonstrates that C/EBPγ augments the C/EBPβ stimulatory activity in lipopolysaccharide induction of IL-6 promoter in a B lymphoblast cell line. These data indicate a complexing functional role for C/EBPγ in regulating gene expression. Furthermore, the expression and function of C/EBPγ during inflammation are still largely unknown. In this study, we demonstrate that C/EBPγ activation was induced by IL-1β treatment in lung epithelial cells. Importantly, we demonstrate for the first time that C/EBPγ plays a critical role in regulating IL-1β-induced IL-6 expression in both mouse primary alveolar type II epithelial cells and a lung epithelial cell line, MLE12. We further provide the evidence that C/EBPγ inhibits IL-6 expression by inhibiting C/EBPβ but not NF-κB stimulatory activity in MLE12 cells. These findings suggest that C/EBPγ is a key transcription factor that regulates the IL-6 expression in alveolar epithelial cells, and may play an important regulatory role in lung inflammatory responses

    HDAC inhibitor confers radiosensitivity to prostate stem-like cells

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    Background: Radiotherapy can be an effective treatment for prostate cancer, but radiorecurrent tumours do develop. Considering prostate cancer heterogeneity, we hypothesised that primitive stem-like cells may constitute the radiation-resistant fraction. Methods: Primary cultures were derived from patients undergoing resection for prostate cancer or benign prostatic hyperplasia. After short-term culture, three populations of cells were sorted, reflecting the prostate epithelial hierarchy, namely stem-like cells (SCs, α2β1integrinhi/CD133+), transit-amplifying (TA, α2β1integrinhi/CD133−) and committed basal (CB, α2β1integrinlo) cells. Radiosensitivity was measured by colony-forming efficiency (CFE) and DNA damage by comet assay and DNA damage foci quantification. Immunofluorescence and flow cytometry were used to measure heterochromatin. The HDAC (histone deacetylase) inhibitor Trichostatin A was used as a radiosensitiser. Results: Stem-like cells had increased CFE post irradiation compared with the more differentiated cells (TA and CB). The SC population sustained fewer lethal double-strand breaks than either TA or CB cells, which correlated with SCs being less proliferative and having increased levels of heterochromatin. Finally, treatment with an HDAC inhibitor sensitised the SCs to radiation. Interpretation: Prostate SCs are more radioresistant than more differentiated cell populations. We suggest that the primitive cells survive radiation therapy and that pre-treatment with HDAC inhibitors may sensitise this resistant fraction

    Aza-deoxycytidine induces apoptosis or differentiation via DNMT3B and targets embryonal carcinoma cells but not their differentiated derivatives

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    Background: Teratocarcinoma is a malignant male germ cell tumour, which contains stem cells and differentiated cancer tissues. DNMT3B has been shown to be highly expressed in human teratocarcinoma stem cells, and to mediate cytotoxicity of Aza-deoxycytidine (Aza-dC) in a pluripotent stem cell line NTERA2. Methods: We have established DNMT3B or POU5F1 (hereafter referred to as OCT4) knockdown in teratocarcinoma stem cells N2102Ep and TERA1 and in the pluripotent NTERA2 by a doxycycline-inducible system, and tested the cytotoxicity induced by Aza-dC. Results: Silencing of DNMT3B led to apoptosis of human teratocarcinoma stem cells N2102Ep and TERA1. Further, we found that induction of apoptosis or differentiation in NTERA2 and human embryonic stem cells by Aza-dC requires DNMT3B. To test whether Aza-dC inhibits proliferation of differentiated teratocarcinoma cells, we depleted OCT4 expression in N2102Ep and TERA1 cells treated with Aza-dC. Treatment with Aza-dC reduced cell number of differentiated cells to a lesser extent than their undifferentiated parental stem cells. Moreover, in contrast to the stem cells, Aza-dC failed to induce apoptosis of differentiated cells. Conclusions: Our finding suggests that DNMT3B acts as an antiapoptotic gene in teratocarcinoma stem cells, and mediates apoptosis and differentiation of human pluripotent stem cells induced by Aza-dC, and that Aza-dC specifically induces apoptosis of teratocarcinoma stem cells
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