1 results match your criteria: "Unit of Pathological Anatomy University and University Hospital of Parma[Affiliation]"
Hum Pathol
December 2013
Centre for Molecular and Translational Oncology (COMT), Department of Biomedical, Biotechnological and Translational Sciences, Unit of Pathological Anatomy University and University Hospital of Parma, 43126 Parma, Italy.
The adenomatous polyposis coli gene is a key tumor suppressor gene. Alterations in this gene have been found in most sporadic colon cancers; associated with familial adenomatous polyposis; and found in neoplasms of other organs, such as the liver, stomach, lung, breast, and cerebellar medulloblastoma. In the heterogeneous group of neuroendocrine neoplasms of the gastrointestinal tract, the involvement of adenomatous polyposis coli is debated, and only occasional reports found adenomatous polyposis coli alterations in foregut and midgut neuroendocrine neoplasms, with adenomatous polyposis coli mutations only in the latter.
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