The current findings may suggest a role for ACh in colon carcinogenesis/cancer progression; the data obtained could have prognostic and/or therapeutic significance for this disease.
Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) are able to predict outcome in patients with breast, colon and prostate cancer and appear to be promising biomarkers of pancreatic carcinoma. The aim of the present study was to demonstrate a statistically significant portal-arterial difference of CTCs during curative resection of periampullary cancer. A commercially available instrument (IsofluxR) was used to quantify blood content of CTC in 10 patients with periampullary cancer according to preoperative diagnostics. Portal and arterial blood samples (~8 ml each) were simultaneously collected intra-operatively following surgical dissection prior to division of the pancreas for tumor removal. Quantitative CTC analyses were performed according to standardized protocols for immune-magnetic enrichment of CTC. Flow cytometry was applied for qualitative evaluations of various CTC markers in 7 patients. There was a statistically significant difference in the number of CTCs collected in the portal blood [58±14 cells per 100 ml; mean ± standard error (SE)] vs. arterial blood [24±7 cells per 100 ml (SE), P<0.025]. A fractional uptake of ≥40% across liver and lung compartments of assumed malignant CTC was estimated to correspond to the appearance of ~410 tumor cells per minute during pancreatic resections based on estimated hepatic blood flow, measured tumor cell mass and tumor cell proliferation activity. Complications in the collection of portal blood were not observed. A significant uptake across liver or lung compartments of potentially malignant tumor CTCs from periampullary carcinoma may represent a model to capture, define and characterize cell clones with metastatic potential in liver and lung tissues following surgical resection.
1 Possibly acting via mu-opioid receptors (MORs), morphine inhibits the formation of experimentally induced postoperative abdominal adhesions in rats. Mesothelial cells may participate in adhesion formation by secreting mediators that interfere negatively with fibrinolysis. Morphine may prevent adhesions by inhibiting the release of pro-adhesion mediators from mesothelial cells. This study aimed to investigate whether human mesothelial cells express MOR-1; if so, such could constitute a site of action for morphine in adhesion prevention. 2 Cells from Met-5A, a human mesothelial cell line were seeded and prepared for immunocytochemistry and Western blotting. 3 Immunocytochemistry showed MOR-1 expression in mesothelial cells, predominantly in the nuclei. Western blotting showed two bands (c. 35 and 50 kDa) which correspond to those obtained with a control lysate from cells known to express MORs. In addition, we found MOR-1 expression with nuclear and cytoplasmatic localization in biopsies from human abdominal adhesions. 4 The current findings may suggest that morphine could interact directly with mesothelial cells via MOR-1 receptors, and thereby modulate adhesion formation, possibly by interfering with the release of pro-adhesion factors from these cells.
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