The lancet oncology
-
The lancet oncology · Mar 2004
ReviewRole of imbalance between neutrophil elastase and alpha 1-antitrypsin in cancer development and progression.
Neutrophil elastase and alpha 1-antitrypsin are a pair of protease and protease inhibitor counterparts. The imbalance between the two counterparts is generally thought to cause tissue damage, which could create a favourable tissue environment for carcinogens and tumour progression. ⋯ Several mechanisms of carcinogenesis have been postulated. Excess neutrophil elastase might facilitate cancer development by causing tissue damage and air trapping, which foster longer carcinogen exposure, might promote cancer progression by degrading the intercellular matrix barrier, and might directly lead to cancer development through the tumour-necrosis-factor signalling pathway.
-
The lancet oncology · Mar 2004
Review Historical ArticleOestrogen receptor beta: what it means for patients with breast cancer.
Oestrogen receptor (ER) alpha is a well established prognostic marker in breast cancer, and all patients who are ER alpha positive receive tamoxifen as adjuvant endocrine therapy. Although ER alpha predicts a favourable disease outcome, the usefulness of ER beta as a clinical prognostic marker remains to be defined. Here, we outline the history of both ERs and discuss the implications ER beta has to patients with breast cancer.
-
By use of modern immunological and molecular analytical techniques, cells with the characteristics of tumour cells can be detected in the blood of many patients with breast cancer. The ability to detect and characterise such cells routinely could have a profound influence on the early diagnosis of breast cancer, risk stratification in the adjuvant setting, early detection of relapse, and the development of new targeted strategies. In this review we discuss current techniques to detect circulating breast-cancer cells and the limitations of these approaches. We also review the clinical studies in breast cancer and discuss the potential relevance of this research to the future management of the disorder.
-
Eukaryotic organisms depend on an intricate and evolutionary conserved cell cycle to control cell division. The cell cycle is regulated by a number of important protein families which are common targets for mutational inactivation or overexpression in human tumours. ⋯ A greater understanding of the cell cycle has led to the development of a number of compounds with the potential to restore control of cell division in human cancers. This review will introduce the protein families that regulate the cell cycle, their aberrations in malignant progression and pharmacological strategies targeting this important process.
-
For patients diagnosed with early-stage testicular cancer radical orchidectomy is the primary therapeutic intervention. The major pathological types of testicular cancer are seminoma and non-seminomatous germ-cell cancer. After orchidectomy, most patients with seminoma receive adjuvant radiotherapy as standard of care, although surveillance and adjuvant chemotherapy protocols are being developed. ⋯ After orchidectomy, about 50% of patients with high-risk disease will relapse but this risk is reduced to less than 5% with adjuvant therapy. Surveillance of patients with low-risk disease is acceptable because testicular cancer is still curable if metastatic recurrence occurs. There is no consensus about the management of early non-seminomatous testicular cancer because survival is almost 100% irrespective of the initial treatment decision.