scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal Article

Studies on Prostatic Cancer. I. The Effect of Castration, of Estrogen and of Androgen Injection on Serum Phosphatases in Metastatic Carcinoma of the Prostate

Charles Huggins, +1 more
- 01 Apr 1941 - 
- Vol. 1, Iss: 4, pp 293-297
Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
It is demonstrated that a marked rise in acid phosphatase in serum is associated with the appearance or spread of roentgenologically demonstrable skeletal metastases and implies dissemination of the primary tumor and thus is of unfavorable prognostic significance.
Abstract
Carcinoma of the prostate gland is peculiarly favorable for endocrine investigation since frequent serial observations of the activity of phosphatases in serum were found to provide objective indices of activity of the neo/~i~m when the enzymes were increased in amount above normal. In the present paper data are given for the values of serum phosphatases in carcinoma of the prostate and in normal men. We shall demonstrate that the acid phosphatase of serum is reduced in metastatic carcinoma of the prostate by decreasing the activity of androgens through castration or estrogenic injections and that this enzyme is increased by injecting androgens. We have been unable to find previous observations indicating any relationship of hormones to carcinoma of the prostate gland. An enzyme capable of hydrolyzing phosphoric esters was discovered by Grosser and Husler (4) in intestinal mucosa and kidney. Robison (16) found that this enzyme was particularly high in activity in growing bone and cartilage and that its activity was greatest at pH 9 to 9.5. This ~alkaline phosphatase," was found by Kay (9) to be increased in the serum in certain bone diseases including metastasis of neoplasms to bone and later work has shown that among these conditions is carcinoma of the prostate. Davies (3) and Bamann and Riedel (1) discovered that there occurs in the spleen and kidney of swine and cattle, in addition to the alkaline phosphatase, a phosphatase with an activity maximum at pH 4.8. An enzyme believed to be identical with this "acid phosphatase" was found by Kutscher and Wolbergs (11) to be present in very large amount in the human prostate gland. This finding of great activity of acid phosphatase in the prostate gland was confirmed and extended to include prostatic cancer by Gutman, Sproul, and Gutman (7). The serum of certain patients with disseminated prostatic carcinoma was found by Gutman and Gutman (6) and Barringer and Woodard (2) to exhibit increased acid phosphatase activity. Robinson, Gutman, and Gutman'~I5) summarized the acid phosphatase activity levels of 44 patients with carcinoma of the prostate. They concluded that a marked rise in acid phosphatase in serum is associated with the appearance or spread of roentgenologically demonstrable skeletal metastases and implies dissemination of the primary tumor and thus is of unfavorable prognostic significance. METttODS AND MATERIALS

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal Article

Expression of human prostatic acid phosphatase activity and the growth of prostate carcinoma cells.

TL;DR: In LNCaP cells, the stimulated cell growth is associated with an increased p-tyr level and a decreased cellular PAcP activity, which may lead to understand the role of tyrosine phosphorylation in human prostate cells.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cytotoxic Effects of Recombinant Adenovirus p53 and Cell Cycle Regulator Genes (p21 sup WAF1/CIP1 and p16 sup CDKN4) in Human Prostate Cancers

TL;DR: Overexpressing or restoring the basal levels of tumor suppressor genes in cancer cells can suppress tumorigenicity of cancer cells and Ad5CMV-p53 was observed to exert the greatest growth inhibitory action on all of the cell lines tested.
Journal ArticleDOI

Anti-GnRH antibodies can induce castrate levels of testosterone in patients with advanced prostate cancer

TL;DR: This study shows that it is possible to immunize a patient with prostate cancer against GnRH to induce castrate levels of testosterone and this state appears to be reversible.
Journal ArticleDOI

Clinical Efficacy of Bone Alkaline Phosphatase and Prostate Specific Antigen in the Diagnosis of Bone Metastasis in Prostate Cancer

TL;DR: The clinical use of bone alkaline phosphatase enzyme determined by radioimmunoassay and PSA measurement for the diagnosis of bone metastases and progression of prostate cancer is recommended because of the good sensitivity and specificity.
Patent

Systems and methods for automated diagnosis and grading of tissue images

TL;DR: In this paper, a system and methods for automated diagnosis and grading of tissue images based on morphometric data extracted from the images by a computer is provided for segmentation and grading.
Related Papers (5)