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Hypothesis for the Mechanism of Elevated Serum Copper in Cancer Patients
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1978
Year
Epidemiology Of CancerElevated Serum CopperPathologyCancer PatientsDermatologyTumor BiologyOncologySurgical PathologyClinical ChemistryCancer ResearchSerum CopperCopper-containing OxidaseHistopathologyCancer PreventionNeoplastic GrowthsMalignant DiseaseTumor MicroenvironmentTumoral PathologyCancer RiskHepatologyBreast CancerMedicine
Neoplastic growths seem to interfere with normal processes regulating the serum level of ceruloplasmin, a copper-containing oxidase, which accounts for 96% of serum copper. Normal catabolism of ceruloplasmin in the liver follows desialylation. However, in patients with tumors, ceruloplasmin may be resialylated at the tumor cell surface or in peripheral blood. Decreased catabolism due to resialylation of asialo-ceruloplasmin could account for the increased concentration of serum copper noted in patients with neoplasia.