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1 ihood of progression of superficial tumor to invasive tumor.
2 PSCC can occur as either an in situ or invasive tumor.
3 oclonal transformed cells to develop into an invasive tumor.
4 s than in patients with concomitant DCIS and invasive tumor.
5 ular evidence for the progression of DCIS to invasive tumor.
6 in the clonal progression to the synchronous invasive tumor.
7 nd messenger RNA, or mRNA, expression in the invasive tumor.
8 AC6 in vivo led to a more circumscribed less invasive tumor.
9 sion from APC-mutant neoplasia to submucosal invasive tumor.
10 oenvironment, ultimately resulting in a more invasive tumor.
11 enetic pathways, resulting in noninvasive or invasive tumors.
12 ficial tumors that are likely to progress to invasive tumors.
13 logy in the absence of features of malignant invasive tumors.
14 articularly estrogen receptor (ER) -positive invasive tumors.
15 found in poorly differentiated, later-staged invasive tumors.
16 tu melanomas, and from the RGP and VGP of 29 invasive tumors.
17 junction/cytoskeletal axis is a hallmark of invasive tumors.
18 unger, had higher stage tumors, and had more invasive tumors.
19 erentially expressed between superficial and invasive tumors.
20 st during the cells' transition to malignant invasive tumors.
21 ors have different propensity to progress to invasive tumors.
22 ugh the benefit was more pronounced for less invasive tumors.
23 duced apoptosis that is a hallmark of highly invasive tumors.
24 to a single phenotype at advanced stages of invasive tumors.
25 TAg-expressing cells in preinvasive foci and invasive tumors.
26 gnant epithelial cells in late-stage, highly invasive tumors.
27 -grade lesions but not in those derived from invasive tumors.
28 invariably integrate into the host genome in invasive tumors.
29 f the ACVR1C signaling, was observed in most invasive tumors.
30 eptide, reduced or absent staining in muscle invasive tumors.
31 ally increased in human gliomas, notoriously invasive tumors.
32 oplastic stages and a decreased incidence of invasive tumors.
33 pattern of staining to that observed for the invasive tumors.
34 uitary tumor growth and expansion into large invasive tumors.
35 ved in the invasiveness of gliomas and other invasive tumors.
36 Human malignant gliomas are highly invasive tumors.
37 of the end point of carcinomas and number of invasive tumors.
38 nase A on cell surfaces and are expressed in invasive tumors.
39 The bladder remains at risk for new invasive tumors.
40 croscopic manifestations of disease, such as invasive tumors.
41 CA1d cells outcompeted MCF10A, forming invasive tumors.
42 varian cancer, including both borderline and invasive tumors.
43 focus upon their role in high-risk nonmuscle invasive tumors.
44 hroughout tumor progression, and absent from invasive tumors.
45 scription factor that synergizes with FOS in invasive tumors.
46 2 and IL13 were increased and IL13 predicted invasive tumors.
47 differentiate between superficial and muscle-invasive tumors.
48 ring mutant p53, leading to the formation of invasive tumors.
49 i alone were lowest in localized and locally invasive tumors (1/14 and 2/12, respectively) and highes
50 18.5%; P < .001), and margin involvement by invasive tumor (12.3% vs 6.3%; P = .046) compared with t
52 %) relapsed in the bladder with a new muscle-invasive tumor, 18 (53%) were successfully treated with
53 Higher median AI scores were observed for invasive tumors (62 [IQR, 39-88]) than for noninvasive t
54 f 16 (100%) HNSCC cell lines, 26 of 29 (90%) invasive tumors, 7 of 7 (100%) dysplastic lesions, and 5
55 y of having an in situ tumor (rather than an invasive tumor) [95% CI: 3.48-4.61], compared to sites o
56 SVER expression resulted in hyperplasias or invasive tumors affecting particular visceral smooth mus
57 ped hyperplastic ductal trees and multifocal invasive tumors after several pregnancies, some of which
61 quencies in 5,724 subjects with at least one invasive tumor and 1,943 subjects with in situ tumors on
63 unger than the screening age, found that 711 invasive tumors and 180 cases of DCIS were overdiagnosed
64 D3S1300, was found in 6 of 16 microdissected invasive tumors and 3 of 6 ductal in situ carcinomas.
69 longer survival with only 20% penetrance of invasive tumors and no apparent lung or liver metastases
70 have demonstrated that proteases secreted by invasive tumors and pathological microorganisms are capa
71 uld predict the likelihood of progression to invasive tumors and to test the robustness of the expres
73 al cells of the desmoplastic response to the invasive tumor, and four of these genes were specificall
74 ven ovarian carcinoma cell lines, 71% of the invasive tumors, and 92% of the borderline tumor tissues
78 sociated form of RalGEF (RalGDS-CAAX) formed invasive tumors as well, demonstrating that activation o
81 generally present with small, unresectable, invasive tumors at a site traditionally considered progn
82 ts undergoing surgical resection for grossly invasive tumors at UT Southwestern Kidney Cancer Program
86 ygosity at this locus was observed in 50% of invasive tumors but in none of the borderline tumors.
87 endothelial, and tumor cells in a variety of invasive tumors but is undetectable in the majority of n
88 n family, N-cadherin, is expressed in highly invasive tumor cell lines that lacked E-cadherin express
89 tumor cells and their revertants from highly invasive tumor cell populations, indicating how phenotyp
90 and studying the gene expression profile of invasive tumor cell subpopulations would be a crucial st
92 cancer, 3p loss of heterozygosity occurs in invasive tumor cells as well as in morphologically norma
93 that archazolid induced apoptosis in highly invasive tumor cells at nanomolar concentrations which w
95 ndogenous APCN showed elevated expression in invasive tumor cells compared with intratumoral cells.
96 show a pattern like that seen previously in invasive tumor cells from the MTLn3 cell line-derived tu
98 yonic development and for progression of non-invasive tumor cells into malignant, metastatic carcinom
100 cell behavior, which were identified in the invasive tumor cells of cell line-derived tumors, are co
101 ll line-derived tumors, are conserved in the invasive tumor cells of PyMT-derived mouse mammary tumor
104 iform, intense membrane staining of > 30% of invasive tumor cells), a fluorescent in situ hybridizati
105 analogously to the process of chemotaxis in invasive tumor cells, axonal growth cones of Xenopus spi
106 r conductance versus those derived from less invasive tumor cells, based on dielectrophoresis measure
107 herefore, CD147, which is itself elevated on invasive tumor cells, may make a major contribution to t
116 several-fold lower than in the corresponding invasive tumors; cells throughout these multilayered pro
119 glutamate release leads to smaller and less invasive tumors compared with saline-treated controls.
120 umors and widespread hypermethylation in the invasive tumors, confirming that the two pathways differ
121 gemistocytic astrocytomas, typically highly invasive tumors, contained high numbers of PLP-positive
124 plus synthesized mammography (SM) increases invasive tumor detection compared with digital mammograp
125 bed that PPARgamma activation suppresses non-invasive tumor development and induces ER-positivity wit
127 combined mammography and MR imaging, median invasive tumor diameters at diagnosis decreased to 1.9,
128 from normal to preinvasive and ultimately to invasive tumors, discovering a potential structural bott
130 lesions and subgroups within early-stage and invasive tumors displaying different overall survival.
139 m low- and high-grade dysplastic lesions and invasive tumor foci from 10 fully embedded esophageal re
140 for Ras mutation, and Ras is sufficient for invasive tumor formation in Rb1 family mutant mouse embr
142 using gene array analysis of preinvasive and invasive tumors from mice, which were then evaluated in
143 vasion of HCC cells in the livers, with more invasive tumor front and increased incidence of venous i
144 ivated in a small subset of SCC cells at the invasive tumor front and predicts for poor prognosis of
146 inated elevation of Twist and Glu-tubulin at invasive tumor fronts, particularly within ductal carcin
149 red for many pathologic processes, including invasive tumor growth as well as physiologic organ/tissu
150 th a history of previous debulking), lack of invasive tumor growth, and minimal residual disease afte
151 will further facilitate in-depth analysis of invasive tumor growth, angiogenesis, metastasis and tumo
153 including proliferative fibrotic disorders, invasive tumor growth, rheumatoid arthritis, and atheros
154 including proliferative fibrotic disorders, invasive tumor growth, rheumatoid arthritis, and atheros
159 ed through screening were at risk for a more invasive tumor (>/=T3: relative risk [RR] = 1.96; P < .0
162 ive breast carcinomas than in normal breast; invasive tumors have significantly higher numbers than D
168 resection of the mass showed large masses of invasive tumor in the resection site, with small foci of
169 cinoma in situ (DCIS) of the breast is a non-invasive tumor in which cells proliferate abnormally, bu
170 , Notch1 loss could accelerate the growth of invasive tumors in a manner associated with increased ex
171 which TbetaRIII had been knocked down formed invasive tumors in athymic nude mice, whereas the contro
172 lized MCF-7 cells overexpressing IQGAP1 form invasive tumors in immunocompromised mice, whereas tumor
175 ferative, poorly differentiated, and locally invasive tumors in nude mice compared with WT EREG-expre
176 genes, grow in soft agar and develop ectopic invasive tumors in recipient mice, indicating that the c
177 vival with a bladder, frequency of recurrent invasive tumors in the bladder, and survival after salva
180 carcinomas revealed a new categorization of invasive tumors into basal-like (positive for DeltaNp63
181 high (A2b2) SPARC-secreting clones produced invasive tumors, invading with fingerlike projections an
182 The switch from a quiescent tumor to an invasive tumor is accompanied by the acquisition of angi
183 recently-proposed genus Versteria causing an invasive, tumor-like hepatic infection with regional and
187 oportion of detected tumors that were large (invasive tumors measuring >/=2 cm) decreased from 64% to
188 n of detected breast tumors that were small (invasive tumors measuring <2 cm or in situ carcinomas) i
190 0 with fibroblasts and observed also in this invasive tumor model with stroma components a decreased
191 with the corresponding patient tumors, with invasive tumors more likely to successfully engraft.
192 ell nutrients, driving shape instability and invasive tumor morphologies, and stabilizing mechanical
193 rms was detected in paraffin sections in all invasive tumors, most prominently in moderately differen
195 aIgTrkB NCM-1 cells form rapidly growing and invasive tumors necessitating euthanasia of all mice by
196 d within one of five distinct regions of the invasive tumors (neoplastic epithelium; angioendothelium
199 positive SLNs was found in patients who had invasive tumors of increasing size: 18 of 112 patients (
202 n was scored negative, close or positive for invasive tumor or ductal carcinoma in situ according to
203 lance is eventually overwhelmed by a growing invasive tumor, our findings suggest that productive tum
204 chymal transition and migration and promoted invasive tumor outgrowth within mouse mammary ducts.
205 ete loss of Pten was not sufficient to cause invasive tumors, over two thirds of the mutant females d
207 sk stratification of patients with nonmuscle-invasive tumors permits appropriate timing of intravesic
209 ng short hairpin RNA technology to mimic the invasive tumor phenotype and also RAD51 knockdown (RAD51
210 icroenvironment affect the proliferative and invasive tumor phenotype of the earliest stages of tumor
215 Ras/Raf pathway in the eye, or in malignant invasive tumors resulting when Raf activation is combine
216 s with concentrations substantially lower in invasive tumor rim (intact BBB) compared to glioblastoma
217 kely than first melanomas to be in situ; for invasive tumors, second melanomas were more likely to be
220 for IDC + DCIS was limited to patients with invasive tumor size < 4 cm or with node negative disease
221 significantly associated with sex (P < .01), invasive tumor size (P < .01), T status (P < .01), N sta
224 tion of unedited miR-376a* and the extent of invasive tumor spread as measured by magnetic resonance
227 ALT were present in both intraepithelial and invasive tumors, suggesting that an ATRX mutation is an
228 greater degree in higher grade node-positive invasive tumors than in normal breast tissue or ductal c
229 ncy of copy number alterations was higher in invasive tumors than that in DCIS, with several of them
230 luminal-like cells generated larger and more invasive tumors than their basal-like counterparts.
231 Ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) is a pre-invasive tumor that can progress to invasive breast canc
233 lood vessels, and arterioles and to identify invasive tumor through distinctive patterns in OCME imag
238 We observed complete loss of KiSS-1 in all invasive tumors under study as compared to their respect
239 This surgery is best suitable for locally invasive tumors unresectable because of location and vas
240 enotypic pathways (superficial papillary non-invasive tumors versus flat carcinoma in situ lesions),
246 with germ-line mutations in BRCA1 and BRCA2, invasive tumors were studied from 58 Jewish women ascert
247 ncident breast cancer cases (including 5,245 invasive tumors) were ascertained among 89,902 women.
248 oes not express BEHAB/brevican and forms non-invasive tumors when grown as intracranial grafts, can f
249 ls still form progressively growing, locally invasive tumors when injected into mammary fat pads but
250 when grown as intracranial grafts, can form invasive tumors when transfected with a 5' cDNA fragment
251 ults suggest that 10p losses may define less invasive tumors, whereas 10q losses may play a role in t
252 PIK3CA mutations occur almost exclusively in invasive tumors, whereas upstream mutations occur as fre
255 assified normal urothelium, superficial, and invasive tumors with 82.2% accuracy, and stratified blad
256 risk of relapse (P = .04) and patients with invasive tumors with both shorter relapse-free (P = .004
257 ssociations were evident for the majority of invasive tumors with ductal histology and regardless of
258 erm invasive surveillance, to aggressive and invasive tumors with high disease-specific mortality.
259 low levels of beta8 integrin, whereas highly invasive tumors with limited neovascularization expresse
261 loci in 49 noninvasive urothelial tumors, 38 invasive tumors with matched normal-appearing urothelium
263 us cell carcinomas (SCCas) are heterogeneous invasive tumors with proliferating outer layers and inne
264 gnef-C-expressing cells formed smaller, less invasive tumors with reduced tyrosine phosphorylation of