Publications by authors named "EB Goosenberg"

The dithiolethione oltipraz is being developed as a chemopreventive agent for many malignancies, including colorectal cancer, on the basis of its in vivo protective activity against chemically induced tumors in a variety of animal models. This protection has been associated with an enhanced capacity to detoxify reactive carcinogens and, more recently, with increased DNA repair. In a previous single-dose study, elevated detoxification gene expression was observed in the days after oltipraz dosing.

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Previous studies suggest that cruciferous vegetables may provide protection against carcinogen exposure by inducing detoxification enzymes. ICR(Ha) mice were gavaged with broccoli tablets (1 g/kg), and colon tissues were collected after treatment. Glutathione S-transferase (GST) activity was assayed and peaked on days 1 and 2 after treatment, respectively (P = 0.

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Prolonged exposure to mutagenic substances is strongly associated with an individual's risk of developing colorectal cancer. Clinical investigation of oltipraz as a chemopreventive agent is supported by its induction of the expression of detoxication enzymes in various tissues, and its protective activity against the formation of chemically induced colorectal tumors in animals. The goals of the present study were: to determine if oltipraz could induce detoxicating gene expression in human tissues; to identify effective non-toxic doses for more extensive clinical testing; and to establish a relationship between effects in the colon mucosa and those in a more readily available tissue, the peripheral mononuclear cell.

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The glutathione S-transferases (alpha, mu, and pi), a family of Phase II detoxication enzymes, play a critical role in protecting the colon mucosa by catalyzing the conjugation of dietary carcinogens with glutathione. We investigated the efficacy of using the glutathione S-transferase (GST) activity of blood lymphocytes and GST-mu expression as biomarkers of risk for colorectal cancer. GST activity was measured in the blood lymphocytes of control individuals (n = 67) and in the blood lymphocytes (n = 60) and colon tissue (n = 34) of individuals at increased risk for colon cancer.

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Palliative interventions for advanced esophageal cancer include surgery, radiation therapy, chemotherapy, chemoradiation, endoscopic procedures, and combinations of the above. Palliative esophagectomy or bypass procedures are difficult to justify in these patients because their life expectancy is so short. Palliative external beam radiation to doses of 50 to 60 Gy is successful in 50% to 70% of patients.

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