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Showing 1 - 4 of
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I. Intracellular Communications.- Tissue Specificity and Cell Death
are Associated with Specific Alterations in Nuclear Matrix
Proteins.- Mechanism of Growth Regulation in Androgen Responsive
Cells.- The Impact of Androgen, Extracellular Matrix, and Stroma
upon Proliferation and Differentiation of Benign and Malignant
Prostate Epithelial Cells.- Therapeutic Approaches to Activating
Programmed Cell Death of Androgen-Independent Prostatic Cancer
Cells.- Cell Motility and Structural Harmonics in Prostate Cancer.-
Panel Discussion.- II. Growth Factors - 1.- Studies of the
Endocrine and Paracrine Effect of Tumor Produced Factors in Human
Genitourinary Cancers.- Fibroblast Growth Factor: Implications in
the Etiology of Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia.- Fibroblast-Mediated
Human Epithelial Tumor Growth and Hormonal Responsiveness In Vivo.-
Polyamine Requirement of Prostate Cancer Cell Proliferation.-
Heparin-Binding (Fibroblast) Growth Factor/Receptor Gene Expression
in the Prostate.- Characterization and Partial Purification of a
Non - Heparin-Binding Prostate Growth Factor From Cancerous Human
Prostate.- Panel Discussion.- Growth Factors - 2.- Transforming
Growth Factor a: A Potential Autocrine Growth Regulator in
Prostatic Carcinoma.- Prostatic Growth Factors (PrGFs) - From the
Identification of Probasin to the Role of PrGFs.- Urogenital Sinus
Derived Growth Inhibitory Factor.- Growth Factor Antagonists in
Prostate Cancer: Suramin and Cytotoxic Polyamines as Potential
Therapy.- Transforming Growth Factors in Human Prostate Cancer.-
Gene Products as the Motivating Force in the Prostate Cell's
Response to Androgens.- Panel Discussion.- III. Steroid Receptors.-
Molecular Biology of Prostate - Specific Antigen.- Structure and
Expression of the Androgen Receptor in Normal Tissues and in
Prostate Carcinoma Cell Lines.- Structural Analysis and Gene
Expression of TR2 Receptor and TR3 Receptor.- cDNA Cloning,
Antibody Production and Immunohistochemical Localization of the
Androgen Receptor.- New Approaches to Studies on the Androgen
Receptor.- Specific Receptors for Vitamin D3 in Human Prostatic
Carcinoma Cells.- Panel Discussion.- IV. Poster Presentations.-
Role of Androgens and Extracellular Matrix in the Growth and
Differentiation of Benign and Malignant Prostatic Epithelial
Cells.- Tissue Specificity and Cell Death Are Associated with
Specific Alterations in Nuclear Matrix Proteins.- ElTect of
Transformation on Rat Prostatic Fibroblasts: Alterations In
Extracellular Matrix and Cytoskeleton Gene Expression with
Retention of Androgen Responsiveness and Androgen Receptor
Expression.- A Potential Role for the MDR-1 Gene in the Development
of Androgen-Independent Tumors.- Relevance of Low Androgen Levels
and Adrenal Androgens in the Growth of Transplantable Human
Prostatic Carcinomas.- Growth-Stimulating Effect of Growth
Factor(s) from Androgen Independent Tumor Cells (CS 2-Cell) on
Androgen Responsive Tumor Cells.- The Cellular Form of Human
Prostatic Acid Phosphatase May Function as a Phosphotyrosyl Protein
Phosphatase in Cells.- Expression of Prostate Antigen in LNCaP
Cells in Culture.- Allelic Expression of the Mouse Ren-1 Genes in
the Anterior Prostate (Coagulating Gland).- V. Dna Structure and
Gene Expression.- Genomic Alterations in Prostatic Cancer.-
Regulation of Gene Expression in the Prostate.- Androgen Regulation
of HBGF I-(aFGF) and Characterization of the Androgen-Receptor mRNA
in the Human Prostate Carcinoma Ceil Une - LNCaP/A-dep.- DNA
Methylation, Differentiation and Cancer.- Evidence for tbe
Involement of Genetic Differences and Mesenchymal Factors in the
Progression of Oncogene - Induced Prostate Cancer in Reconstituted
Mouse Prostate.- Differential Hybridization Analysis as a Tool to
Study Prostatic Cancer Metastasis.- Molecular Biology of Androgen
Acceptors in Prostatic Cancer Cells.- Panel Discussion.- Panel
Discussion.- Panel Discussion.- Panel Discussion.- Panel
Discussion.- Contributors.
I. Prostatic Cancer Bone Metastasis: An International Perspective.-
Clinical Dilemmas and Problems in Assessing Prostatic Metastasis to
Bone: The Scientific Challenge.- Comparative Study of Prostatic
Carcinoma Bone Metastasis among Japanese in Japan and Japanese
Americans and Whites in Hawaii.- Prostate Cancer in the United
States and Japan.- Analysis of Survival of Prostate Cancer Patients
in Japan and the USA.- II. Biology.- The Cellular Basis for
Prostate Cancer Metastasis.- Cytogenetic and Molecular Genetic
Aspects of Human Prostate Cancer: Primary and Metastatic.-
Hemodynamics of Prostate Bone Metastases.- Role of the Vertebral
Venous System in Metastatic Spread of Cancer Cells to the Bone.-
Clinical Significance of the Vertebral Vein in Prostate Cancer
Metastasis.- Effects of Various Growth Factors on a Chondrocyte
Differentiation Model.- Potential Role of HBGF (FGF) and TGF-Beta
on Prostate Growth.- Hormone Refractory Prostatic Cancer: The Role
of Radiolabelled Diphosphonates and Growth Factor Inhibitors.- III.
Models.- Localization of Basic Fibroblast Growth Factor (bFGF) in a
Metastatic Cell Line (AT-3) Established from the Dunning Prostatic
Carcinoma of Rat: Application of a Specific Monoclonal Antibody.-
Use of a Reconstituted Basement Membrane to Study the Invasiveness
of Tumor Cells.- Animal Prostate Carcinoma Models: Limited
Potential for Vertebral Metastasis.- A Model for Studies on Human
Prostatic Carcinoma.- IV. Pathology.- Studies on the Pathogenesis
of Osteoblastic Metastases by Prostate Cancer.- Analysis of Bone
Metastasis of Prostatic Adenocarcinoma in 137 Autopsy Cases.-
Nucleolar Organizer Regions in Prostate Cancer.- Flow Cytometric
Analysis of Prostatic Carcinoma with and without Bone Marrow
Metastasis.- V. Evaluation.- Evaluation of the Response of Bone
Metastases to Therapy.- Computed Tomographic Evaluation of Bone
Metastases in Prostatic Cancer Patients.- Magnetic Resonance
Imaging of Bone Metastases.- Bone Marrow MRI in Prostate Cancer.-
Bone Mineral Density for Patients with Bone Metastasis of Prostate
Cancer: A Preliminary Report.- Quantification of Changes in Bone
Scans of Patients with Osseous Metastases of Prostatic Carcinoma.-
The Usefulness of Serum Acid Phosphatase in Monitoring Patients
with Advanced Prostate Carcinoma.- VI. Treatment.- Radiation
Treatment of Prostate Bone Metastases and the Biological
Considerations.- Clinical Course of Bone Metastasis from Prostatic
Cancer Following Endocrine Therapy: Examination with Bone X-Ray.-
Palliative Radiotherapy of Bone Metastasis.- Clinical Study of
Bone-Related Relapse in Prostate Carcinoma.- Surgical Treatment of
Metastatic Tumors of Long Bones and the Spine.- Hormone Therapy of
Prostatic Bone Metastases.
The biology of solid tumor metastasis has been the subject of
significant scientific and clinical interest for years and while
experimental evidence reveals that metastasis is not solely a
random event, very little is known about the biology of metastasis
originating from prostate cancer. This is in spite of the fact that
the majority of prostate cancer patients die with metastatic
lesions to the bone. Progress in understanding this most important
aspect of prostate cancer has been hampered by the lack of suitable
animal models and an inability to accurately quantify bone
metastases and their responses to therapy. Over the past decade,
scientists in Japan and the United States have steadily advanced
our understanding of the cellular, molecular and immunologic
biology of primary and disseminated prostate cancer. It is this
body of new information, combined with advances in imaging
techniques and prostate cancer tumor markers, that prompted the
need for an in-depth assessment of bone metastasis of prostate
cancer. Accordingly, on December 12, 1990, a group of basic and
clinical investigators from Japan and the United States convened in
Gotenba, Japan, to hold the first conference devoted solely to the
basic biology and clinical aspects of bone metastases originating
from prostate cancer. The cross-fertilization of ideas that was
fostered through in-depth discussion of technological advances
among various basic and clinical disciplines not only further
advanced our understanding of prostate metastases to the bone, but
suggested approaches for precise quantitative assessment of these
lesions and their treatment.
These proceedings of the 5th Prouts Neck Meeting on Prostate
Cancer, held in October, 1989, highlight the many advances in the
understanding of prostatic growth and function at the cellular and
molecular levels which have been registered since the first Prouts
Neck Meeting in 1985, a meeting which also focused on the then
current concepts and basic approaches to understanding prostate
cancer. Inter vening Prouts Neck Meetings in 1986, 1987 and 1988
were devoted to treatment, image cytometry and clinical markers. As
before, the Prouts Neck tradition of bringing together an
international, multidiscipli nary group of experts for 3 days to
exchange ideas and new data, in the relaxed atmosphere of an old
iun on the scenic Maine coast, proved to be an ideal combination
for a highly successful conference. Accordingly, the Organ System
Program of the National Cancer Institute plans to use the Prouts
Neck model for future conferences on other solid tumors (bladder in
1990 and kidney in 1991) and will return to the prostate in 1992. A
new dimension was added to the current program through the
inclusion of a poster session to recognize the research of pre-and
postdoctoral investigators. The posters were judged by Drs.
Collette Freeman, Frank French, Shutsung Liao, Robert Matusik and
Henry Sun. The three winners, in alphabeti cal order, were John
Fabian, Robert Getzenberg and Ming Fong-Lin."
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