Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0001418 (adenocarcinoma)
68,496 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The records of 237 patients treated for benign and malignant villous and tubulovillous adenomas at Roswell Park Memorial Institute from 1963 to 1987 were reviewed. Sixty-five adenomas were greater than or equal to 4 cm and form the basis of this report. Fifteen (23%) were in the cecum, 3 (5%) in the right colon, 1 (1%) in the splenic flexure, 10 (15%) in the sigmoid colon, and 36 (55%) in the rectum. The most common symptoms were rectal bleeding (70%), mucus diarrhea (44%), constipation (22%), and tenesmus (19%). Fifty-five (85%) of these large adenomas contained invasive adenocarcinoma and one in situ carcinoma. Two thirds of invasive carcinomas arose from predominantly villous adenomas and one third from tubulovillous adenomas. Half of all malignant adenomas demonstrated metastases to regional lymph nodes or distant metastases. Seven malignant adenomas (12%) were associated with synchronous adenocarcinomas of the colon, and 29% of malignant adenomas were associated with synchronous adenomatous polyps, principally tubular type. Four of nine benign, large adenomas were associated with synchronous adenomas but with no adenocarcinomas. No relationship was found between the size of the adenoma, location, or Dukes' stage. Though the incidence of in situ and invasive carcinomas is clearly related to the size of the adenoma, a linear relationship could not be demonstrated.
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PMID:Colorectal villous and tubulovillous adenomas equal to or greater than four centimeters. 333 63

A 69-year-old female, chiefly complaining of diarrhea, was admitted to the Toyama Medical & Pharmaceutical University Hospital. A barium enema and an endoscopic examination revealed a villous adenocarcinoma of the rectum. Computerized tomography disclosed multiple metastatic lesions in the liver. She underwent an amptatio recti and an intra-arterial cannulation of the common hepatic artery in order to administer anticancer agents. Gross findings of the resected specimen showed villous adenocarcinoma containing a small ulcerated lesion. Histologic findings of this lesion revealed a collision neoplasm containing both an adenocarcinoma and a carcinoid with no obvious transitional region between the two lesions. The type D carcinoid, determined according to Soga's histologic classification, showed positive argyrophil granules but no argentaffin granules in the cytoplasm. The electron-microscopic findings of the carcinoid revealed small electron-dense endocrine granules measuring about 150 approximately 300 nm in diameter. The woman died 4 months after this operation.
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PMID:[A case report of carcinoid of the rectum coexisting with adenocarcinoma in a single lesion]. 334 97

The toxic effects of protein A (Prosorba, IMRE Corporation, Seattle, WA) treatments given as part of an on-line plasmapheresis or off-line procedure were determined in a Phase I Study. Patients were randomized and treated 12 times either once per week or three times per week with a Prosorba column containing 50 or 200 mg protein A. Treated plasma volumes varied from 150 ml off-line to 2000 ml on-line. Seven patients having advanced metastatic breast adenocarcinoma patients were evaluated. All had advanced progressive disease that was resistant to chemotherapy and/or radiation therapy. Greater than 50% regression of measurable tumor volume occurred in four of seven patients; an additional patient responded with 33.5% regression. Two patients with only bony metastases demonstrated stable disease for a 60-day period. Side effects resulting from protein A treatments included transient fever, chills, rigors, and infrequently nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, episodic hyper and/or hypotension, bronchospasm, venospasm, headache, joint and tumor pain. Mild to moderate reactions were seen in all patients regardless of clinical response, but abated spontaneously or were controlled with pretreatment and/or post treatment with antipyretics and/or antihistaminics. The side effects decreased notably during the course of the week with the more intense reaction occurring during the first treatment of the week. Side effects occurred regardless of column size or volume of plasma treated. In the course of 12 treatments, anemia requiring transfusion developed in two of seven patients. Significant tumor regression was obtained in this group of patients with advanced disease. In light of the mild to moderate side effects and tumor regression in five of seven of the patients treated, protein A treatment merits further evaluation to determine the effectiveness of this treatment in breast adenocarcinoma.
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PMID:Toxicity following protein A treatment of metastatic breast adenocarcinoma. 334 17

Thirteen patients with metastatic colorectal adenocarcinoma underwent treatment with continuous ambulatory 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) infusion 300 mg/m2/day and intermittent bolus methotrexate (MTX) (200 mg/m2) with calcium leucovorin (LCV) 10 mg/m2 orally every 6 h X four to eight doses given 24 h after MTX. Although MTX administration was planned every 14 days, the average time between treatments exceeded 19 days (range 14-42) because of excessive toxicity. All patients experienced toxicity at some time in their treatment course, requiring interruption of 5-FU infusion in 12 of 13 patients. Significant toxicities included stomatitis (13 of 13 patients), hand-foot syndrome (8 of 13 patients), and diarrhea (3 of 13 patients). Toxicity did not appear to be minimized by attenuation of MTX and/or 5-FU dosage or by increasing the dose and/or duration of LCV. At this dosage schedule the addition of MTX/LCV to 5-FU infusion results in excessive and unacceptable toxicity and does not appear to improve treatment results.
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PMID:Continuous 5-fluorouracil infusion and pulse methotrexate/leucovorin for colorectal adenocarcinoma. A report of excessive toxicity. 349 2

We report the results of an expanded trial of 5-fluorouracil (FUra) combined with high-dose folinic acid for treatment of patients with advanced colorectal or gastric adenocarcinoma. In each treatment course, the patients received both FUra (340-400 mg/m2/day by iv infusion over 15 minutes) and folinic acid (200 mg/m2/day by iv bolus) for 5 consecutive days, with a 21-day interval between courses. Eighty-six patients with colorectal carcinoma were evaluated. The combined complete response (CR) and partial response (PR) rates were 39% for 54 patients who did not receive prior chemotherapy and 22% for 32 patients who had previously received chemotherapy. Four patients who were previously resistant to FUra attained objective responses. The median time to disease progression for the 28 responders was 10 months. The median survival time of responders was 19.5 months, and the probability of their being alive at 2 years was 40%. Of 27 patients with gastric adenocarcinoma, 13 (48%) responded to therapy. Their median time to disease progression was 5.5 months. The median survival time of responders was 11 months, and their probability of being alive at 15 months was 30%. Toxicity was within acceptable limits. Toxic effects included stomatitis, diarrhea, conjunctivitis, skin rash, and mild myeloid hypoplasia. In a separate study, plasma concentrations of L-folates above 10(-5) M were achieved after a rapid single iv injection of 200 mg/m2 of folinic acid.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Treatment of advanced colorectal and gastric adenocarcinomas with 5-fluorouracil and high-dose folinic acid. 350 42

We report the results of an expanded trial of 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) combined with high-dose folinic acid for treatment of patients with advanced colorectal or advanced gastric adenocarcinoma. In each treatment course, the patients received both 5-FU (340 to 400 mg/m2/d by intravenous (IV) infusion for a period of 15 minutes) and folinic acid (200 mg/m2/d by IV bolus) for 5 consecutive days, with a 21-day interval between courses. Eighty-six patients with colorectal carcinoma were evaluated. The combined complete and partial response rates were 39% for 54 patients who did not receive prior chemotherapy and 22% for 32 patients who had previously received chemotherapy. Four patients who were previously resistant to 5-FU attained objective responses. The median time to disease progression for the 28 responders was 10 months. The median survival time of responders was 19.5 months, and the probability of their being alive at 2 years was 40%. Of 27 patients with gastric adenocarcinoma, 13 (48%) responded to therapy. Their median time to disease progression was 5.5 months. The median survival time of responders was 11 months, and their probability of being alive at 15 months was 30%. Toxicity was within acceptable limits. Toxic effects included stomatitis, diarrhea, conjunctivitis, skin rash, and mild myeloid hypoplasia. In a separate study, plasma concentrations of L-folates greater than 10(-5) mol/L were achieved after a rapid single IV injection of 200 mg/m2 of folinic acid. Comparisons of our results with those reported in previous studies on 5-FU administered as a single agent suggest that, in advanced colorectal and gastric adenocarcinoma, folinic acid administered in high doses enhances the effectiveness of 5-FU administered concomitantly. Furthermore, some colorectal tumors that were previously resistant to 5-FU become sensitive to this drug. The survival of the patients who responded to therapy was markedly improved over that observed in reported series of untreated patients with advanced colorectal and gastric adenocarcinomas.
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PMID:Treatment of advanced colorectal and gastric adenocarcinomas with 5-fluorouracil and high-dose folinic acid. 351 42

A 49-year-old patient presented with urticaria, vomiting, diarrhea and peripheral eosinophilia. A histological diagnosis of eosinophilic gastroenteritis was made. Within 3 weeks of admission a highly papillary adenocarcinoma of the right ovary was diagnosed. The gastrointestinal symptoms and the eosinophilia disappeared after partial resection of the tumor and chemotherapy. A possible relationship between cancer, eosinophilia and eosinophilic gastroenteritis is discussed.
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PMID:Malignant tumor masquerading as eosinophilic gastroenteritis. 362 86

Thirty-six patients with adenocarcinoma or epidermoid carcinoma of the esophagus were entered into a phase II trial evaluating the combination of cisplatin 100 mg/m2 intravenously (IV) day 2, vinblastine 1.6 mg/m2 IV days 1 to 4, and mitoguazone (MGBG) 500 mg/m2 IV days 1 and 8. Twenty-nine patients (group A) were newly diagnosed with local-regional disease only and were candidates for transhiatal esophagectomy (THE). These patients received two courses of chemotherapy at 3-week intervals prior to surgery. Response was assessed by measuring changes in the primary tumor length and depth on serial biphasic contrast esophagrams and comparing this result with tumor measurements obtained from the surgical specimen. Complete (CR) and partial responders (PR) received three additional postoperative cycles. Seven patients had recurrent or metastatic disease (group B) and were treated every 4 weeks until disease progression. Of 34 patients evaluable for response, there was one pathologically confirmed CR and 15 PRs (47%). This consisted of 12 of 27 (44%) group A patients (seven of 11 epidermoid, five of 16 adenocarcinoma) and four of seven (57%) group B patients (two of four epidermoid, two of three adenocarcinoma). Toxicity included leukopenia in one third of treatment courses and thrombocytopenia in 21%. Nausea and vomiting occurred in 60% of patients, diarrhea in 18%, transient nephrotoxicity in 18%, peripheral neuropathy in 12%, and ototoxicity in 3%. Twenty-five group A patients underwent resection. Four chemotherapy nonresponders (NR) and one PR had known disease left at surgery; all others (80%) had gross total removal of their disease. The median survival time (MST) of the 29 group A patients was 14 months, with 21% alive at 36 months. The MST of group A chemotherapy responders was 15 months compared with 9 months for NRs (P = .032). Initial sites of recurrence in 14 patients were local-regional in six, distant only in six, both local-regional and distant in two. This regimen, administered in maximally tolerated doses, was active in epidermoid and adenocarcinoma histologies, recurrent disease and newly diagnosed patients. However, nearly all responses were PRs and the MST of resected patients was similar to a prior series of patients treated with esophagectomy alone. Observations from this pilot trial and those of others have led to a follow-up study, in progress, evaluating intensive preoperative chemotherapy and concurrent radiation therapy (RT).
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PMID:Cisplatin, vinblastine, and mitoguazone chemotherapy for epidermoid and adenocarcinoma of the esophagus. 362 44

Two cases of carcinoma in Crohn's disease of the colon are reported. One patient was a 30-year-old man who had asymptomatic Crohn's ileocolitis resulting in an acute presentation due to toxic dilatation of the colon. This was preceded by a short prodromal period of four weeks, characterized by intermittent diarrhea on the basis of a coloileal tumor fistula. A mucus-secreting adenocarcinoma was present in the sigmoid colon associated with both adjacent and one nearby focus of high-grade mucosal dysplasia. Pelvic wall and abdominal metastases were present, and the patient died two months later. The other patient was a 60-year-old woman who had a nine-year history of biopsy-proven Crohn's proctocolitis. A stricture of the sigmoid colon due to Crohn's disease also harbored an invasive adenocarcinoma. The carcinoma was not evident preoperatively or on initial gross pathologic examination. The presentation and pathology of large intestinal carcinoma in Crohn's colitis are discussed and illustrated.
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PMID:Carcinoma in Crohn's disease of the colon. 376 96

Preclinical studies have suggested that synergistic antitumor toxicity occurs when methotrexate (MTX) is administered prior to 5-fluorouracil (FUra). A protocol of sequenced, overlapping infusions of MTX and FUra was designed to achieve 5 microM MTX serum levels lasting 36 h and 1 to 5 microM FUra levels lasting 24 h, with leucovorin started at the end of the MTX infusion. Thirty-nine patients with metastatic neoplasms received a total of 127 treatment courses; two-thirds of the patients had received prior treatment with radiation therapy or chemotherapy; most of the latter treatment regimens included MTX or FUra. In three patients, the duration of FUra infusion was prolonged up to 72 h to determine the toxic limits of therapy. Blood samples were collected during treatment courses to estimate the half-lives and total-body clearances of MTX and FUra. The initial serum half-lives and total-body clearances of both MTX and FUra appeared within the range of reported normal values. The terminal half-life of MTX appeared less than previously reported values, and there appeared to be a substantial delay in achieving a FUra steady-state concentration; these two differences may have resulted from either the prolonged intervals of drug infusion or from metabolic interaction between the two drugs. During the 127 courses of treatment, nearly one-half of the patients experienced mild toxicity occurring after at least one treatment, but this toxicity was predominantly Grade I mucositis and/or diarrhea. Of the three patients who received extended intervals of FUra infusion, none was able to tolerate more than 48 h of FUra without developing mucositis. Thirty-four patients were evaluable for response; no one experienced a complete response, but 11 (32%) patients had either a partial or minimal response. Adenocarcinomas as a group, arising from the lung, gut, breast, and unknown site, appeared to respond best. Sequenced MTX-FUra infusion by this schedule is a generally well-tolerated regimen that deserves further clinical assessment.
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PMID:Sequential infusions of methotrexate and 5-fluorouracil in advanced cancer: pharmacology, toxicity, and response. 400 58


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