Abstract

This millennium meeting was held at Imperial College, London, UK, 24th-27th September 2000. Celebrating the return of this biannual meeting to the city of its very first meeting, 300 participants from around the world attended plenary lectures, a workshop session and presented 150 posters over two sessions. Two award lectures were given: the Paget-Ewing award lecture was given by Isaiah Fidler (University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, USA) who gave an overview of the recent developments in the seed and soil hypothesis; Stephen Carter (Sugen, USA) gave the Kurt Hellmann award lecture, a new award in honour of those who have made an outstanding contribution in translating the problems of research in metastatic disease from the laboratory to the clinic. The opening session consisted of a workshop entitled Novel technologies and bioinformatics. Lance Liotta (NIH, Bethesda, USA) and Emmanual Petricoin (Center for Biological Evaluation and Research, FDA, Bethesda, USA) gave an overview of the advances that can be applied to molecular analysis of tissues, enabling thousands of molecular events to be studied simultaneously. The problem of the multistep polygenetic phenotype with more than one metastasis gene or predictive marker requires the development of technology that is capable of studying simultaneous multiple events. Techniques such as laser capture microdissection (LCM) to isolate the neoplastic cells followed by analysis using a combination of 2D gel electrophoresis and surface-enhanced laser desorption and ionisation (SELDI) can be used to investigate the complex protein patterns involved in metastasis as well as the traditional cDNA microarrays. Not unexpectedly, the changes identified cluster into four groups concerned with unrestrained growth, motility, invasion, evasion of host defenses and angiogenesis.

Highlights

  • This millennium meeting was held at Imperial College, London, UK, 24th–27th September 2000

  • Two award lectures were given: the Paget-Ewing award lecture was given by Isaiah Fidler (University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, USA) who gave an overview of the recent developments in the “seed and soil” hypothesis; Stephen Carter (Sugen, USA) gave the Kurt Hellmann award lecture, a new award in honour of those who have made an outstanding contribution in translating the problems of research in metastatic disease from the laboratory to the clinic

  • Techniques such as laser capture microdissection (LCM) to isolate the neoplastic cells followed by analysis using a combination of 2D gel electrophoresis and surface-enhanced laser desorption and ionisation (SELDI) can be used to investigate the complex protein patterns involved in metastasis as well as the traditional cDNA microarrays

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Summary

Meeting report VIII International Congress of the Metastasis Research Society

Received: 29 September 2000 Revisions requested: 5 October 2000 Revisions received: 9 October 2000 Accepted: 9 October 2000 Published: 2 November 2000. This article may contain supplementary data which can only be found online at http://breast-cancer-research.com/content/3/1/049

Introduction
Genes and environment
Multiple functions of proteases
Molecular crosstalk and angiogenesis
Molecular therapeutics
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
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