Medullary thyroid cancer is an aggressive form of thyroid cancer arising from parafollicular C cells. Calcitonin (CT) is a specific and sensitive biochemical marker which typically aids primary diagnosis and disease surveillance following treatment. There are rare cases of calcitonin negative medullary thyroid cancer (CNMTC) documented in the literature; however, to our knowledge, this case is the first report of CNMTC arising in ectopic thyroid tissue.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAims: The introduction of TNM 8 into UK pathology practice in January 2018 considers tumour deposits in colorectal cancer staging for the first time. The impact of this new classification on pathology reporting practices has yet to be evaluated.
Methods And Results: A clinical audit was conducted, comparing consecutive colorectal cancer resection specimens reported under TNM 5 classification guidelines in 2017 (n = 177) and TNM 8 guidelines in 2018 (n = 234).
Proteomics Clin Appl
April 2016
Upper gastrointestinal cancers originating in the oesophagus and stomach often present late and have a very poor prognosis. Treatment options include surgery for localised disease but, increasingly, neoadjuvant chemotherapy and radiotherapy are being employed to improve outcome. There is often a variable response to neoadjuvant treatment between individual patients and side effects are relatively common.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProteomics Clin Appl
February 2015
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is a common malignancy and it contributes significantly to cancer mortality. Outcomes in colorectal cancer vary between patients and this is due to the complexity of colorectal carcinogenesis. Interactions between tumor cells and their microenvironment, genetic alterations, and changes in intracellular signalling networks are just some of the abnormal pathways involved in colorectal cancer development.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe majority of deaths owing to cancer are ultimately caused by metastatic disease. However, most research, to date, has focused on the molecular features of cancers at their primary sites rather than on understanding disseminated malignancy in its systemic form. The dynamic nature of metastatic malignancy and its behavior as a co-ordinated systemic disease require a cancer progression paradigm that is integrative and can incorporate both the proximate causes of cancer and the broader ultimate causes in an evolutionary and developmental context.
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