6 results on '"Hannu, Kalimo"'
Search Results
2. [Untitled]
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Hannu Kalimo, Ville Vuorinen, M Utriainen, Timo Kurki, Heikki Minn, Pirkko Sonninen, T Utriainen, M Komu, Anne Roivainen, and Pertti Lehikoinen
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Cancer Research ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Metabolite ,Brain tumor ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Human brain ,medicine.disease ,Central nervous system disease ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Neurology ,Oncology ,chemistry ,Positron emission tomography ,Biopsy ,Medicine ,Choline ,Neurology (clinical) ,business - Abstract
Background: The signal of choline containing compounds (Cho) in proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (1H-MRS) is elevated in brain tumors. [11C]choline uptake as assessed using positron emission tomography (PET) has also been suggested to be higher in brain tumors than in the normal brain. We examined whether quantitative analysis of choline accumulation and content using these two novel techniques would be helpful in non-invasive, preoperative evaluation of suspected brain tumors and tumor malignancy grade. Methods: 12 patients with suspected brain tumor were studied using [11C]choline PET, gadolinium enhanced 3-D magnetic resonance imaging and 1H-MRS prior to diagnostic biopsy or resection. Eleven normal subjects served as control subjects for 1H-MRS. Results: The concentrations of Cho and myoinositol (mI) were higher and the concentration of N-acetyl signal/group (NA) lower in brain tumors than in the corresponding regions of the normal brain. There were no significant differences in metabolite concentrations between low- and high-grade gliomas. In non-tumorous lesions Cho concentrations were lower and NA concentrations higher than in any of the gliomas. Enormously increased lipid peak differentiated lymphomas from all other lesions. The uptake of [11C]choline at PET did not differ between low- and high-grade gliomas. The association between Cho concentration determined in 1H-MRS and [11C]choline uptake measured with PET was not significant. Conclusion: Both 1H-MRS and [11C]choline PET can be used to estimate proliferative activity of human brain tumors. These methods seem to be helpful in differential diagnosis between lymphomas, non-tumorous lesions and gliomas but are not superior to histopathological methods in estimation of tumor malignancy grade.
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- 2003
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3. [Untitled]
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Helena Miettinen, Heikki Helin, Leo Paljärvi, Hannu Kalimo, Hannu Haapasalo, Immo Rantala, and Niina Paunu
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Cancer Research ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Tissue microarray ,Oligoastrocytoma ,Cell growth ,Histology ,Cell cycle ,Biology ,medicine.disease ,Malignancy ,Neurology ,Oncology ,medicine ,Immunohistochemistry ,Neurology (clinical) ,Oligodendroglioma - Abstract
Using the novel tissue microarray technique, we studied immunohistochemical expression of cell cycle regulators p53, p21, pRb in 42 grade II oligodendrogliomas, 16 grade III anaplastic oligodendrogliomas, 10 primary and 4 recidive grade II oligoastrocytomas, 10 grade III oligoastrocytomas and 2 other grade II mixed gliomas. The p53 immunopositivity associated with malignant histology of the tumor (p = 0.01, Mann-Whitney test) and high pRb expression (p = 0.015). The p21 score associated strongly with histological grade (p < 0.001). The immunopositive tumors had a significantly higher rate of proliferation (p = 0.021). The p21 immunopositivity correlated positively with p53 immunopositivity: among the 33 p21 immunopositive tumors 30 (91%) were p53 immunopositive and only 3 were p53 immunonegative (p = 0.017). Patients with p21 immunonegative primary tumors had significantly better prognosis: among them 42 of the 46 (91%) survived, whereas only 18 of the 30 patients (60%) with p21 immunopositive primary tumors survived until the follow-up date (p = 0.0017). Statistical significance was reached in multivariate analysis as well (p = 0.01, exp(B) = 5.5). The pRb immunopositive tumors had higher proliferation rate than immunonegative tumors (p = 0.002). In multivariate variance analysis, comparing the effects of different regulatory proteins on cell proliferation, only the amount of pRb expression reached statistical significance (p = 0.004). In conclusion, the expression of p21 in oligodendrocytic tumors seems to be upregulated by p53 expression which rises with cell proliferation and malignancy as in attempt to halt cell cycle but seems to be overrun by other factors. The amount of p21 expression has independent prognostic significance and could be used in diagnosis to help the difficult evaluation of the malignancy potential of oligodendrogliomas and oligoastrocytomas.
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- 2001
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4. [Untitled]
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Pauli Helén, Jorma Isola, Helena Miettinen, Leo Paljärvi, Juha Kononen, Heikki Helin, Hannu Kalimo, Pauli Sallinen, Hannu Haapasalo, and Hannu Alho
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Cancer Research ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Mitotic index ,Astrocytoma ,Cell cycle ,Biology ,medicine.disease ,medicine.disease_cause ,nervous system diseases ,Neurology ,Oncology ,Glioma ,medicine ,Immunohistochemistry ,Neurology (clinical) ,Oligodendroglioma ,Carcinogenesis ,neoplasms ,Anaplastic astrocytoma - Abstract
Cyclin-dependent kinase 4 inhibitor (CDKN2/p16) is a cell cycle regulatory protein that has been demonstrated to be inactivated by mutations, deletions or transcriptional silencing during pathogenesis of a variety of human malignancies. We studied the correlation of CDKN2/p16 expression with cell proliferation activity and patient survival in 42 oligodendrogliomas and 36 astrocytomas. CDKN2/p16 expression was frequently decreased in grade II and anaplastic oligodendrogliomas (17/42) where lack of CDKN2/p16 protein predicted poor survival (p=0.0045). In astrocytomas low CDKN2/p16 expression was associated with high histologic malignancy grade (p=0.002): CDKN2/p16 protein level was decreased in 9 out of 10 glioblastomas, in 5 out of 9 anaplastic astrocytomas, in 3 out of 10 grade II astrocytomas and in none of pilocytic astocytomas (0/7). Low CDKN2/p16 expression was also associated with high cell proliferation activity (MIB-1 immunocytochemistry: p=0.004; mitotic index: p=0.007) and poor patient survival (p=0.025) in astrocytomas. Low CDKN2/p16 mRNA expression had the same topographic distribution as nuclear CDKN2/p16 immunoreactivity proving for reliability of the immunocytochemical findings. Our results are in agreement with earlier studies demonstrating CDKN2/p16 inactivation during tumorigenesis of astrocytic tumors. Furthermore, our findings suggest that loss of CDKN2/p16 expression may also play an important role in the progression of oligodendrogliomas. According to our findings CDKN2/p16 immunocytochemistry could be used as a tool to identify those oligodendrogliomas and low grade astrocytomas that are likely to progress and have poor outcome, and thus would need more aggressive therapy.
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- 1999
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5. Decreased expression of antioxidant enzymes is associated with aggressive features in ependymomas
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Hannu Kalimo, Leo Paljärvi, Pauli Helén, Hannu Haapasalo, Miia Jansson, Joonas Haapasalo, Kristiina Nordfors, Vuokko L. Kinnula, Sally Järvelä, and Ylermi Soini
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Adult ,Male ,Cancer Research ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,animal structures ,Antioxidant ,Thioredoxin-Disulfide Reductase ,Adolescent ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Thioredoxin reductase ,Biology ,Antioxidants ,Statistics, Nonparametric ,Central Nervous System Neoplasms ,Young Adult ,Thioredoxins ,medicine ,Humans ,Child ,Survival analysis ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Chi-Square Distribution ,Superoxide Dismutase ,Infant ,Patient survival ,Middle Aged ,Spinal cord ,Manganese Superoxide Dismutase ,Survival Analysis ,Enzyme ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Neurology ,Oncology ,chemistry ,Ependymoma ,Child, Preschool ,Cancer research ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Thioredoxin ,Oxidoreductases - Abstract
The purpose of this study was to investigate the relationship between antioxidant enzyme expression and clinicopathological features in 67 ependymal tumors. We included into the analysis antioxidant enzymes (AOEs) and related proteins, such as, manganese superoxide dismutase (MnSOD), gammaglutamylcysteine synthetase catalytic and regulatory subunits (GLCL-C and GLCL-R), thioredoxin (Trx) and thioredoxin reductase (TrxR). Their expression was studied in 46 primary (10 grade I, 30 grade II and 6 grade III) and 21 recurrent (3 grade I, 12 grade II and 6 grade III) tumors. Immunoreactivity for MnSOD was found in 87%, GLCL-C in 74%, GLCL-R in 89%, Trx in 72%, TrxR in 54%, of primary tumors. Lower GLCL-C and GLCL-R expression was associated with higher tumor grade (P = 0.047 and 0.049, respectively). MnSOD, GLCL-C and TrxR expressions were significantly higher in tumors located in the spinal cord compared to those in the brain (P = 0.044, 0.046 and 0.004, respectively). In the primary tumors Trx-positivity was found to correlate significantly with patient survival. In univariate survival analysis patients whose tumors did not express Trx had shorter survival (P = 0.045) and there was even more significant association (P = 0.011) when only adults were included in the analysis (in the total material median follow-up time of Trx-positive tumors was 9.7 years and of Trx-negative 5.4 years). The results indicate that AOEs have several biological functions in ependymal tumors. Trx had important prognostic value: all adults with Trx-positive tumors were alive at follow-up (median 7.8 years).
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- 2007
6. Antioxidant enzymes in oligodendroglial brain tumors: association with proliferation, apoptotic activity and survival
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Sally, Järvelä, Järvelä, Sally, Helena, Bragge, Bragge, Helena, Niina, Paunu, Paunu, Niina, Timo, Järvelä, Järvelä, Timo, Leo, Paljärvi, Paljärvi, Leo, Hannu, Kalimo, Kalimo, Hannu, Pauli, Helén, Helén, Pauli, Vuokko, Kinnula, Kinnula, Vuokko, Ylermi, Soini, Soini, Ylermi, Hannu, Haapasalo, and Haapasalo, Hannu
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Cancer Research ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Thioredoxin-Disulfide Reductase ,Thioredoxin reductase ,Glutamate-Cysteine Ligase ,Oligodendroglioma ,Apoptosis ,Biology ,Antioxidants ,Superoxide dismutase ,Thioredoxins ,Glioma ,medicine ,Biomarkers, Tumor ,Humans ,Oligodendroglial Tumor ,Survival analysis ,Cell Proliferation ,Cell growth ,Brain Neoplasms ,Superoxide Dismutase ,medicine.disease ,Prognosis ,Survival Analysis ,Neurology ,Oncology ,biology.protein ,Cancer research ,Neurology (clinical) ,Thioredoxin ,Tumor Suppressor Protein p53 - Abstract
Purpose of the study was to investigate the relationship between antioxidant enzyme expression and clinicopathological features in oligodendroglial tumors. The expression of antioxidant enzymes and related proteins (AOEs), manganese superoxide dismutase (MnSOD), thioredoxin (Trx), thioredoxin reductase (TrxR) and gammaglutamylcysteine synthetase catalytic and regulatory subunits (GLCL-C and GLCL-R), was studied in 85 oligodendroglial tumors. The material included 71 primary (43 grade II and 28 grade III) and 14 recurrent (6 grade II and 8 grade III) tumors. Fifty-seven cases were pure oligodendrogliomas and 28 were mixed oligoastrocytomas. Immunoreactivity for MnSOD was found in 89%, Trx in 29%, TrxR in 76%, GLCL-C in 70% and GLCL-R in 68% of cases. Increased Trx expression was associated with higher tumor grade, cell proliferation and apoptosis (P=0.006, P=0.001 and P=0.003, Mann-Whitney test). Pure oligodendrogliomas showed more intense staining than oligoastrocytomas, especially for MnSOD (P=0.002, Mann-Whitney test). In the total series Trx was associated with poor prognosis in univariate survival analysis (P=0.0343, log-rank test) and furthermore in Cox multivariate analysis (P=0.009) along with age (P=0.002). The results suggest that the expression of Trx has a correlation to patient outcome and that there may be some association between AOEs, like MnSOD and Trx, and clinicopathological features of oligodendrogliomas.
- Published
- 2005
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