Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0001430 (adenoma)
21,222 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

For many years the clinical syndrome of PMP has been enigmatic. Based on recent studies reevaluating the condition, tumors previously designated PMP can now be viewed as two pathologically and prognostically distinct disease processes. Disseminated peritoneal adenomucinosis is characterized by copious mucinous ascites (the classical clinical syndrome of PMP) and histologically bland peritoneal mucinous tumors. The condition can be attributed to a ruptured appendiceal mucinous adenoma in the vast majority of cases. It has an indolent clinical course when surgically treated but may recur over months to years. Peritoneal mucinous carcinomatosis is characterized by abundant peritoneal mucinous tumor, similar to the clinical presentation of adenomucinosis. However, microscopically, the peritoneal tumors have the architectural and cytologic features of carcinoma, are derived from gastrointestinal mucinous adenocarcinomas, and are associated with a significantly worse prognosis than cases of adenomucinosis. A third group of tumors displays intermediate or discordant histologic features but manifests a clinical course very similar to cases of pure peritoneal carcinomatosis. Women often have concomitant ovarian mucinous tumors that suggest primary ovarian neoplasia. Morphologic, immunohistochemical, and molecular studies support the interpretation that the ovarian tumors are secondary and that adenomucinosis is of appendiceal origin in women as well as men. The recognition that the ovarian tumors in nearly all of the cases of DPAM and mucinous carcinomatosis are secondary seriously calls into question the existence of a borderline group of ovarian mucinous tumors. Therefore, primary ovarian mucinous tumors should be classified as either benign or malignant. Tumors exhibiting the features currently interpreted as borderline should be included in the benign group and designated atypical proliferative mucinous tumors.
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PMID:Pseudomyxoma peritonei: new concepts in diagnosis, origin, nomenclature, and relationship to mucinous borderline (low malignant potential) tumors of the ovary. 957 76

PMP is a rare condition, which, although of "borderline malignancy," is invariably fatal. Difficulties exist with the definition of PMP. It has been broadly applied to include a heterogenous group of pathologic lesions that present clinically with "jelly belly" due to mucinous ascites. The relatively few reports in the literature commonly use different pathologic definitions, and there is no consensus on the point of separation between PMP and carcinomatosis secondary to a mucinous adenocarcinoma. Sugarbaker has suggested "the term pseudomyxoma peritonei syndrome be strictly applied to a pathologically and prognostically homogenous group of cases characterized by histologically benign peritoneal tumors that are frequently associated with an appendiceal mucinous adenoma." This definition excludes all cases with mucinous adenocarcinoma. The optimal treatment is undoubtedly complete tumor excision, by complex surgical peritonectomy procedures, taking on average 10 hours. Surgery is usually combined with intraperitoneal, and now intraoperative heated chemotherapy. These techniques have a high morbidity and mortality. The rarity of the condition, together with the risks associated with definitive treatment, suggests that such treatment ought to be centralized in a few centers, covering a large population. The search continues for safer, less aggressive treatments, but is hampered by a lack of hard evidence and the absence of experimental animal or human models to evaluate emerging strategies.
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PMID:The etiology, clinical presentation, and management of pseudomyxoma peritonei. 1456 19