Publications by authors named "Roy R Brown"

Primary amyloidosis of the ureter is a rare disease that is difficult to distinguish from urothelial carcinoma. Only 50 cases of primary ureter amyloidosis have been reported since it was first described in 1937. Of these, only five cases of ureter amyloidosis with osseous metaplasia were reported.

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A 54-year-old man presented to the office with gross painless hematuria, dysuria, and urinary frequency. He was diagnosed with renal cell carcinoma of the kidney and transitional cell carcinoma of the bladder. The article reviews the presentation, radiology, pathology, and intervention of an uncommon case of synchronous primary carcinomas, and aims to show the importance of continued clinical suspicion for multiple genitourinary primary neoplasms.

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A novel orthotopic metastatic model of mouse prostate cancer was developed using MHC-negative TRAMP-C1P3 (transgenic adenocarcinoma of mouse prostate) cells derived by serial passage of the parental TRAMP-C1 line in mouse prostate glands. TRAMP-C1P3 cells grew efficiently in mouse prostate glands and reproducibly metastasized to draining lymph nodes. Using this model, we show that Fms-like tyrosine kinase-3 ligand (flt3-L) dramatically inhibited growth of preexisting orthotopic TRAMP-C1P3 tumors and the development of metastatic disease.

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We have previously reported that Fms-like tyrosine kinase-3 ligand (flt3-L) induced tumor stabilization and regression of palpable ectopic prostate tumors (TRAMP-C1). Although some mice remained "tumor free" for several months following termination of therapy, tumors invariably reappeared and grew progressively in all animals. The lack of a curative response suggests that TRAMP-C1 tumors may inhibit the development of a flt3-L-induced anti-tumor immune response.

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We established an orthotopic treatment model of prostate cancer to generate reproducible primary and metastatic carcinoma in immunocompetent C57BL/6 mice. Using an in vivo selection scheme of intraprostatic implantation of TRAMP-C1 cells, primary prostate tumors were cultured and recycled three times by intraprostatic injection resulting in the selection and establishment of the recycled cell line TRAMP-C1P3. Prostate tumors were detected approximately 30 days post-implantation with periaortic lymph node metastasis in 19/20 (95%) of mice.

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