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1 risk population of patients with superficial bladder carcinoma.
2  11 with bile duct cancer and four with gall-bladder carcinoma.
3 t efficient adjuvant therapy for superficial bladder carcinoma.
4 ble tools for cytopathological screening for bladder carcinoma.
5 ed as an effective treatment for superficial bladder carcinoma.
6  in moderately VSV-resistant liposarcoma and bladder carcinoma.
7      The most common secondary malignancy is bladder carcinoma.
8 eeded to detect occult metastatic disease in bladder carcinoma.
9 es than to UTUC, which is similar to that of bladder carcinoma.
10  is admixed with other histological types of bladder carcinoma.
11 cterial infection and early-onset metastatic bladder carcinoma.
12 ed with a monoclonal antibody raised against bladder carcinoma.
13 s potential as a therapeutic target in human bladder carcinoma.
14  samples of nearly all patients with urinary bladder carcinoma.
15 versely correlated with LSD1 levels in human bladder carcinoma.
16 cancer progression in patients with stage T1 bladder carcinoma.
17  in 10 primary colon carcinomas and eighteen bladder carcinomas.
18 und in late-stage and high-grade ovarian and bladder carcinomas.
19 splasias, multiple myeloma, and cervical and bladder carcinomas.
20 t in poorly differentiated glioblastomas and bladder carcinomas.
21 d bone and in the majority of human lung and bladder carcinomas.
22 n, MiaPaCa pancreatic, Calu-1 lung, and EJ-1 bladder carcinomas.
23 NTRK and FGFR gene families were detected in bladder carcinoma (3.3%), glioblastoma (4.4%), head and
24 e activity) as well as antitumoral agents in bladder carcinoma 5637.
25 ve dramatically suppressed subcutaneous MB49-bladder carcinoma and B16-melanoma growth and prolonged
26 e conclude that FGFR3 is commonly mutated in bladder carcinoma and only rarely in cervical carcinoma.
27 ab exerted potent antitumor activity against bladder carcinoma and t(4;14)-positive multiple myeloma
28 nd smoking are at particular risk to develop bladder carcinomas and support the need for long-term ca
29 nvasive phenotype in melanomas and colon and bladder carcinomas and with the metastatic phenotype in
30 nd neck squamous cell carcinoma cells); T24 (bladder carcinoma); and DU 145 (prostate carcinoma).
31 n human cancers, including multiple myeloma, bladder carcinoma, and cervical cancer.
32 n human cancers, including multiple myeloma, bladder carcinoma, and cervical cancer.
33 357 pancreatic carcinoma cells in G2/M, T-24 bladder carcinoma, and HT-1080 fibrosarcoma cells in G0/
34 significant number of patients with stage T1 bladder carcinoma are at risk for cancer progression.
35 vels of KiSS-1 were observed in the invasive bladder carcinomas as compared to superficial tumors.
36  rat cell lines of nonhematopoietic lineage (bladder carcinoma BC47 and gliosarcoma 9L).
37 porine did not induce G1 phase arrest in the bladder carcinoma cell line 5637 that lacks a functional
38    Induction of wild-type p53 in the ECV-304 bladder carcinoma cell line by infection with a p53 reco
39  lines with mutations in either H-ras (human bladder carcinoma cell line T24 and mouse keratinocyte c
40 3 and Ha-ras mutations identical to those in bladder carcinoma cell line T24 prompted us to investiga
41  prostatic origin but are derivatives of the bladder carcinoma cell line T24.
42 mplicated in N-cadherin-mediated invasion in bladder carcinoma cell lines revealed no correlation bet
43                               Examination of bladder carcinoma cell lines reveals that certain lines
44 n this group, we used a preclinical model of bladder carcinoma cell lines to study a unique SV (trans
45 id human lung fibroblasts (MRC-5), and human bladder carcinoma cell lines with (T24) or without (J-82
46   Secreted miRNA characterized from isogenic bladder carcinoma cell lines with differing metastatic p
47 at FGFR3 functions as an important driver of bladder carcinoma cell proliferation (see the related ar
48 ibitor of both normal bladder epithelial and bladder carcinoma cell proliferation.
49 hine decarboxylase (ODC) activity with human bladder carcinoma cells (T24 cells), and TPA-induced nuc
50 on in cytoplasmic extracts prepared from T24 bladder carcinoma cells and human embryo fibroblasts sta
51           Two APF-responsive cell lines (T24 bladder carcinoma cells and the immortalized human bladd
52 t that inducible knockdown of FGFR3 in human bladder carcinoma cells arrested cell-cycle progression
53 t of human non-small cell lung carcinoma and bladder carcinoma cells by a recombinant adenovirus vect
54 es Akt as a modulator molecule in protecting bladder carcinoma cells from TRAIL-induced apoptosis.
55 shown to exhibit antitumor activity in human bladder carcinoma cells in vitro and in mouse bladder ca
56 eration of normal bladder epithelial and T24 bladder carcinoma cells in vitro by binding to cytoskele
57 ristate 13-acetate (PMA)] treatment of human bladder carcinoma cells induced S198 phosphorylation of
58 ly induce replicative senescence in EJ human bladder carcinoma cells lacking functional p53.
59                                        Human bladder carcinoma cells mutant for p53 and containing a
60    Overexpression of galectin-3 in J82 human bladder carcinoma cells rendered them resistant to TRAIL
61         Through transcriptional profiling of bladder carcinoma cells subjected to short hairpin RNA k
62  growth factor (CTGF/CCN2) expression in T24 bladder carcinoma cells treated with APF.
63 ression of PKC-alpha protein and mRNA in T24 bladder carcinoma cells was reduced by approximately 80
64 mportant in lung metastasis, lung metastatic bladder carcinoma cells were injected in mice treated wi
65                               We treated T24 bladder carcinoma cells with 5-Aza-2'-deoxycytidine to i
66 +1 bp resulted in preferential expression in bladder carcinoma cells with negligible expression in no
67 ressed the B-myb promoter in EJ cells (human bladder carcinoma cells), which have a functional Rb, bu
68  in response to HSP90 inhibitor treatment in bladder carcinoma cells, and thus intensifies the unders
69 noculated s.c. with 5 x 10(4) syngeneic MB49 bladder carcinoma cells, and tumor growth was quantitate
70                                       In T24 bladder carcinoma cells, SAHA induces up to a 9-fold inc
71                                 In T24 human bladder carcinoma cells, these EGSs, but not control seq
72 es, in both LD419 normal fibroblasts and T24 bladder carcinoma cells, whereas the acetylation changes
73 tem, that wild-type p53 overexpression in EJ bladder carcinoma cells, which have lost functional p53,
74  whereas high doses induced apoptosis in T24 bladder carcinoma cells.
75  profiling the expression of RalA/B-depleted bladder carcinoma cells.
76 tably transfected into E-cadherin expressing bladder carcinoma cells.
77 butes to the increased invasive potential of bladder carcinoma cells.
78 ipheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs), and bladder carcinoma cells.
79 identified in several tumour types including bladder carcinoma, cervical carcinoma, and multiple myel
80 cient to drive both noninvasive and invasive bladder carcinoma development in transgenic mice.
81 butyl-N-(4-hydroxybutyl) nitrosamine-induced bladder carcinoma development.
82 frequent abnormalities have been observed in bladder carcinoma, esophageal cancers, and several other
83  visualization of malignant lesions in human bladder carcinoma ex vivo.
84 eic mice and in blocking the growth of human bladder carcinoma implanted in nude mice.
85 e post-translational modifications (PTMs) in bladder carcinoma in response to HSP90 inhibition.
86 we have profiled the expression of miRNAs in bladder carcinoma in situ (CIS) and distinct cell compar
87 low copy number of SV40T transgene developed bladder carcinoma in situ (CIS), whereas those bearing h
88                                  Uterine and bladder carcinoma induced by arsenic plus diethylstilbes
89  ~25,000 cells) of RT112 cells (derived from bladder carcinoma), induces a near-uniform intracellular
90 travesicular administration in patients with bladder carcinoma, initially using [123I]IUdR and curren
91 We show that growth of B16 melanoma and MB49 bladder carcinoma is reduced in IL-17(-/-) mice but dras
92 e, in two human cancer cell lines; UMUC-3, a bladder carcinoma line, and the prostate carcinoma line,
93 A) suppresses the proliferation of the human bladder carcinoma line, T24.
94 ity is a promising tool for the diagnosis of bladder carcinoma owing to the high rate of expression o
95 ve detection of urinary HAase activity in 40 bladder carcinoma patients, 11 benign bladder lesions pa
96 dependent data sets of breast, prostate, and bladder carcinoma, prediction of pathway activity by the
97  isoforms in both urothelial development and bladder carcinoma progression, with DeltaNp63 acting as
98 y extracts using tissue from four high-grade bladder carcinomas resulted in no accurate join formatio
99               Finally, analysis of 202 human bladder carcinomas revealed a new categorization of inva
100                                              Bladder carcinomas selectively down-regulate miRNAs that
101 sion of COX isoforms in benign tissue and in bladder carcinoma specimens.
102  the 253J B-V cell line, a tumorigenic human bladder carcinoma subline.
103 ee discrete regions of 3p were identified in bladder carcinoma, suggesting the involvement of candida
104  of COX-2 in a high percentage of high-grade bladder carcinomas, suggesting a possible role of COX-2
105 ine cervical carcinomas and nine of 26 (35%) bladder carcinomas, suggesting that constitutive activat
106                                     In human bladder carcinoma (T-24) cells, inhibition of PKC-alpha
107 umor-suppressor gene alterations in invasive bladder carcinoma than in superficial disease, suggestin
108 ence of urothelial carcinoma and the risk of bladder carcinoma, the long-term patient and kidney graf
109 ession in a series of patients with stage T1 bladder carcinoma treated with a contemporary therapeuti
110          A 67-year-old man with a history of bladder carcinoma was admitted to the emergency departme
111  of 83 consecutive patients in whom stage T1 bladder carcinoma was diagnosed at the Mayo Clinic betwe
112              Among all cancer subtypes, only bladder carcinoma was significantly associated with PV r
113                                           In bladder carcinoma, we recently identified FGFR3 mutation
114 uced by benign and malignant compartments of bladder carcinomas where it functions to suppress bladde
115 with recurrent superficial transitional cell bladder carcinoma who experienced prior intravesical the
116 h mouse model resembling clinically advanced bladder carcinoma with UMUC3 and NIH 3T3 cells have high
117 ma in situ of the SV40T mice into high-grade bladder carcinomas, without triggering tumor invasion.

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