Displaying all 5 publications

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  1. Yadav M
    PMID: 1948253
    Serum tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF) concentration was assayed in 105 patients with nasopharyngeal carcinoma using a sensitive ELISA technique with detection level of 10 pg/ml. The TNF levels were detectable in 45 of 63 (71.4%) patients newly diagnosed for the malignancy and 29 of 42 (69%) patients in remission following treatment with radiotherapy. In 25 normal controls the TNF were less than 10 pg/ml. While TNF may be present in the majority of the patients with the malignant disease, the TNF concentration appeared to have no clinical significance in diagnosis or prognosis of the patients.
    Matched MeSH terms: Carcinoma/blood*
  2. Liau CS, Mogan P, Thomas W
    J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol, 2021 04;208:105786.
    PMID: 33189851 DOI: 10.1016/j.jsbmb.2020.105786
    Lung cancer is increasing in incidence particularly among women, associated with a global change in smoking habits. Steroid hormones, particularly oestrogen exert an influence on tumour progression in tissues where their target receptor is expressed. Oestrogen receptor, particularly ERβ is highly expressed in the lung and becomes more highly expressed in lung carcinogenesis. Genes involved in the process of lung carcinoma progression and signalling cascades linked to invasion and angiogenesis are modulated by oestrogen receptors. This review intends to collate recently published evidence identifying a role for oestrogen in the initiation and progression of lung carcinoma and how these two processes are differentially affected by circulating oestrogens both in women and in men. Circulating oestrogens may be a significant risk factor in women's susceptibility to lung carcinoma and also provide an additional approach for more targeted therapy.
    Matched MeSH terms: Carcinoma/blood*
  3. Hawkins BR, Simons MJ, Goh EH, Chia KB, Shanmugaratnam K
    Int J Cancer, 1974 Jan 15;13(1):116-21.
    PMID: 4206461 DOI: 10.1002/ijc.2910130113
    Matched MeSH terms: Carcinoma/blood
  4. Abdul-Rahman PS, Lim BK, Hashim OH
    Electrophoresis, 2007 Jun;28(12):1989-96.
    PMID: 17503403
    The expression of high-abundance serum proteins in newly diagnosed patients with endometrial adenocarcinoma (EACa), squamous cell cervical carcinoma (SCCa) and cervical adenocarcinoma (ACCa), relative to control female subjects, was analyzed by subjecting serum samples to 2-DE followed by image analysis of the silver-stained protein profiles. The three cohorts of cancer patients demonstrated different altered expression of serum high-abundance proteins compared to negative control women. The expression of alpha1-antitrypsin, alpha1-B glycoprotein, cleaved high-molecular-weight kininogen (light chain) and antithrombin III were consistently altered in all the patients. However, clusterin was upregulated only in the patients with EACa, while those with SCCa and ACCa were typically characterized by the upregulated expression of zinc alpha-2-glycoprotein. The aberrant expression of selective serum proteins in the various cohorts of cancer patients was validated by competitive ELISA as well as by lectin detection. Analysis by using the champedak galactose binding lectin further highlighted an unidentified protein that may be differently glycosylated in the sera of the EACa patients that were studied.
    Matched MeSH terms: Carcinoma/blood*
  5. Carayol M, Leitzmann MF, Ferrari P, Zamora-Ros R, Achaintre D, Stepien M, et al.
    J Proteome Res, 2017 Sep 01;16(9):3137-3146.
    PMID: 28758405 DOI: 10.1021/acs.jproteome.6b01062
    Metabolomics is now widely used to characterize metabolic phenotypes associated with lifestyle risk factors such as obesity. The objective of the present study was to explore the associations of body mass index (BMI) with 145 metabolites measured in blood samples in the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC) study. Metabolites were measured in blood from 392 men from the Oxford (UK) cohort (EPIC-Oxford) and in 327 control subjects who were part of a nested case-control study on hepatobiliary carcinomas (EPIC-Hepatobiliary). Measured metabolites included amino acids, acylcarnitines, hexoses, biogenic amines, phosphatidylcholines, and sphingomyelins. Linear regression models controlled for potential confounders and multiple testing were run to evaluate the associations of metabolite concentrations with BMI. 40 and 45 individual metabolites showed significant differences according to BMI variations, in the EPIC-Oxford and EPIC-Hepatobiliary subcohorts, respectively. Twenty two individual metabolites (kynurenine, one sphingomyelin, glutamate and 19 phosphatidylcholines) were associated with BMI in both subcohorts. The present findings provide additional knowledge on blood metabolic signatures of BMI in European adults, which may help identify mechanisms mediating the relationship of BMI with obesity-related diseases.
    Matched MeSH terms: Carcinoma/blood*
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