4 research outputs found

    Prognostic significance of endogenous adhesion/growth-regulatory lectins in lung cancer

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    Objective: To determine the expression of endogenous adhesion/growth-regulatory lectins and their binding sites using labeled tissue lectins as well as the binding profile of hyaluronic acid as an approach to define new prognostic markers. Methods: Sections of paraffin-embedded histological material of 481 lungs from lung tumor patients following radical lung excision processed by a routine immunohistochemical method (avidin-biotin labeling, DAB chromogen). Specific antibodies against galectins-1 and - 3 and the heparin-binding lectin were tested. Staining by labeled galectins and hyaluronic acid was similarly visualized by a routine protocol. After semiquantitative assessment of staining, the results were compared with the pT and pN stages and the histological type. Survival was calculated by univariate and multivariate methods. Results: Binding of galectin-1 and its expression tended to increase, whereas the parameters for galectin-3 decreased in advanced pT and pN stages at a statistically significant level. The number of positive cases was considerably smaller among the cases with small cell lung cancer than in the group with non-small-cell lung cancer, among which adenocarcinomas figured prominently with the exception of galectin-1 expression. Kaplan-Meier computations revealed that the survival rate of patients with galectin-3-binding or galectin-1-expressing tumors was significantly poorer than that of the negative cases. In the multivariate calculations of survival lymph node metastases ( p < 0.0001), histological type ( p = 0.003), galectin-3-binding capacity ( p = 0.01), galectin-3 expression ( p = 0.03) and pT status ( p = 0.003) proved to be independent prognostic factors, not correlated with the pN stage. Conclusion: The expression and the capacity to bind the adhesion/growth regulatory galectin-3 is defined as an unfavorable prognostic factor not correlated with the pTN stage. Copyright (C) 2005 S. Karger AG, Basel

    Unknown primary detected by FDG-PET. A review of the present indications of FDG-PET in head and neck cancers.

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    To investigate the indications of 18F-2-fluoro-2-Deoxy-D-glucose (FDG) Positron Emission Tomography (PET) in head and neck cancer, the present study focuses on a case of cervical metastatic lymph node, which is not detected by the routine approach. It discusses the potential role of FDG-PET in the detection of unknown primary tumors, lymph node metastasis and post radiation follow-up, and demonstrates the implications of its findings through a few examples. Based on the literature in the field of head and neck oncology, the paper recommends the following uses for FDG-PET: 1. To guide biopsy or even local resection at the initial stage of examining the unknown primary lesions in case of high clinical suspicion 2. A whole body PET in high-risk patients may prevent unnecessary treatment and reduce the number of examinations 3. To monitor tumor response before full-dose irradiation so as not to delay the salvage surgery when applicable 4. To detect residual, recurrent or secondary neoplasm after definitive radiotherapy at least 4 months post-treatment 5. To revise the necessity of neck treatment in case of a negative PET, in the NO necks; and 6. In cases of clinical suspicion for laryngeal cancer recurrence and absence of objective findings before obtaining biopsy.Case ReportsJournal ArticleReviewinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishe

    The levels of expression of galectin-3, but not of galectin-1 and galectin-8, correlate with apoptosis in human cholesteatomas.

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    OBJECTIVES: To investigate whether galectins 1, 3, and 8 are expressed in human cholesteatomas and whether any such expression does correlate with the level of apoptosis, which is, as we have previously shown, predictive of recurrence.7 STUDY DESIGN: The analysis of 52 cholesteatomas resected by the same surgeon by means of canal wall up and canal wall down procedures. METHODS: The immunohistochemical levels of expression of galectins 1, 3, and 8 were quantitatively determined (using computer-assisted microscopy) on conventional histological slides by means of specific anti-galectin-1, anti-galectin-3, and anti-galectin-8 antibodies. The level of apoptosis in each cholesteatoma under study had already been determined 7 by means of the in situ labeling of nuclear DNA fragmentation (Tolt-mediated dUTP nick end labeling [TUNEL] staining). RESULTS: Galectin-1 was expressed markedly in both the epithelial and the connective tissue areas of all the cholesteatomas under study. The levels of expression of galectin-3 and galectin-8 were considerably lower than that of galectin-1. The level of expression of galectin-3 correlated both highly and positively with the level of apoptosis. CONCLUSIONS: An upregulation of galectin-3 (known to have an antiapoptotic and antianoikis effect in certain model systems) expression, which is associated with pronounced apoptotic activity, could have a physiologically protective effect against the characteristically substantial apoptotic features occurring in recurrent cholesteatomas.Journal ArticleResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tFLWINinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishe

    Characterization of the levels of expression of retinoic acid receptors, galectin-3, macrophage migration inhibiting factor, and p53 in 51 adamantinomatous craniopharyngiomas.

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    OBJECT: Craniopharyngiomas are histopathologically defined as benign tumors that can behave very aggressively at the clinical level. They can originate from different types of embryonal epithelial tissue in which correct spatiotemporal regulation has been disrupted at the effector production level. The goal of this study was to determine the efficacy of using selected biological markers to distinguish between recurring and nonrecurring craniopharyngiomas. METHODS: The authors used computer-assisted microscopy to determine quantitatively the immunohistochemical levels of expression of selected markers, including retinoic acid receptors (RARs), as response elements to retinoic acid in a series of 51 adamantinomatous craniopharyngiomas. These tumors may also originate as the result of physiological defects in the apoptosis-mediated elimination of embryological remnants of epithelial tissue. Galectin-3, p53, and the macrophage migration inhibiting factor (MIF) are known to play crucial roles in these processes. The authors quantitatively determined the levels of expression of these substances in this series of 51 craniopharyngiomas. The data show that all craniopharyngiomas were immunoreactive for RARalpha, whereas their immunoreactivity for RARbeta and RARgamma varied dramatically from one case to another. Craniopharyngiomas with low levels of RARbeta and high levels of RARgamma are more likely to recur than those with higher levels of RARbeta and lower levels of RARgamma. Rapidly recurring craniopharyngiomas also show significantly lower levels of expression of galectin-3 and MIF than nonrecurring or slowly recurring cases. Few tumors exhibited p53 immunopositivity. CONCLUSIONS: The data indicate that even in the so-called adamantinomatous group of craniopharyngiomas, several subgroups with different clinical behavior patterns can be identified on the basis of differentiation markers relating mainly to the presence or absence of RARbeta and RARgamma.Journal ArticleResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishe
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