Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0007097 (carcinoma)
152,788 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Since November 1983, 16 patients with resectable pancreatic cancer have been treated by a multimodality approach at the National Cancer Center Hospital. This therapy included extended pancreatic resection, intraoperative irradiation by 30 Gy of electrons, and intraoperative hepatic arterial or portal infusion of mitomycin C. Furthermore, postoperative chemotherapy with mitomycin C, using Seldinger's method or intravenously, was added. The patients consisted of 12 with carcinoma of the pancreatic head and four with carcinoma of the body and tail. The 1- and 3-yr survival rates for these patients were 88 and 53%, respectively. The rates were markedly better than the 26 and 10% after conventional radical pancreatectomy from 1962 to 1983. The cancers consisted of Stage I, 1 case; II, 1; III, 11; and IV, 3 according to the p-TNM pathological classification by UICC, and the 1- and 3-yr survival rates for the 14 patients other than those with Stage I and II were 85 and 57%, respectively. According to our experience, pancreatic carcinoma usually pursues an aggressive course and is unlikely to be cured by surgery alone. A multimodality therapy in addition to radical surgery appears to be necessary in the treatment of resectable pancreatic cancer.
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PMID:Effectiveness of multimodality treatment for resectable pancreatic cancer. 208 24

A study of clinical and pathological features, patterns of relapse and prognosis of breast cancer in various religious communities--viz. Hindu, Muslim, Christian and Parsi--was undertaken among 4377 evaluable cases treated at Tata Memorial Hospital between 1965 and 1982. Of these 82.4 per cent were Hindus, 7.3 per cent Muslims, 7.4 percent Christians and 2.7 percent Parsis. The mean age at diagnosis was 55 years for Parsis which was 7 to 8 years older than that for the other communities. There were no remarkable differences in histological tumour type or grade; except that parsis had higher incidence of uncommon histological types, such as dust carcinoma in situ and colloid carcinoma, and had a slightly more favourable grade distribution. When classified according to the TNM system (UICC 1978), the Parsis had the most favourable stage at presentation followed by Christians, Hindus and Muslims in that order. This trend was highly statistically significant (p less than 0.001). Despite this significant differences between stage of disease at diagnosis, no differences in the overall 5-year survival was observed between the communities. This remained true even after matching for disease stage and menopausal status. Even the Parsis, in whom the disease was detected relatively early, failed to register a survival advantage. Much work need to be done with regard to early detection of Breast Cancer in India.
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PMID:Clinico-pathological features and prognosis of breast cancer in different religious communities in India. 209 May 78

Male breast carcinoma is a truly rare tumor the treatment and prognosis of which have been recently considered similar to female cancer. In this work we reviewed the clinical histories of 21 patients with breast cancer attended in our hospital over a period of fifteen years. Mean age was 60 years. The main cause of consult was the presence of painless nodules most frequently localized in the left breast. We have found a great latency period between the detection of the first symptoms and medical consult (almost 20 months) which by itself justifies that almost fifty percent of patients were either in stage III or IV. Global surveillance was 60% after 5 years excluding other causes of death that were not directly related with the tumor. Statistic analysis did not reveal any significant relationship, probably due to the small number of patients, between the prognosis of the disease and the presence of factors such as cutaneous involvement, duration of symptoms, thelorrhagia, patient age, lymph node [correction of ganglionar] involvement, or deep plane involvement, although a significant relationship (p less than 0.05) was found with TNM stage.
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PMID:[Breast carcinoma in men: a review of 21 cases]. 209 Nov 11

A precise histologic and clinical delineation of infiltrating lobular carcinoma, including its variant forms, has been elusive. We studied 230 patients with stage I and II infiltrating lobular carcinoma treated by mastectomy and axillary lymph node dissection. Included were 176 patients with the "classical" or "Indian-file" pattern (IFL) of infiltrating lobular carcinoma, and 54 patients with variant (VAR) histology [solid (SOL), alveolar (ALV), and mixed (MIX) patterns]. IFL patients were younger than VAR patients (52 versus 57 years; p = 0.004), and IFL patients were more likely to be premenopausal (p = 0.013). Microscopic multifocality and intraepithelial ductular extension of LCIS were both more frequent in the IFL group (p = 0.008 and 0.03, respectively). There was no significant difference in tumor size (T1 versus T2), axillary lymph node status, or TNM stage at presentation. Median survival time and time to recurrence was similar in the two groups. Although it was not statistically significant, median survival for stage I and low-axillary lymph node positive stage II IFL patients was better than that of VAR patients. One hundred forty of our 176 IFL patients (80%) could be matched with infiltrating duct carcinoma (IFDC) patients of similar age at diagnosis, menstrual status, tumor size, and axillary lymph node involvement. When stratified by stage, stage I IFL patients had a significantly higher disease-free survival (p = 0.02) than comparable patients with IFDC. There was not a significant difference in disease-free survival when stage II IFL and IFDC patients were compared. The unmodified term "infiltrating lobular carcinoma" should be restricted to lesions exhibiting the classical or Indian-file (IFL) microscopic architectural pattern in approximately 85% of the tumor. Patients with VAR forms of IFL may have a less favorable prognosis and should be distinguished from those with classical IFL for further characterization.
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PMID:Prognosis in infiltrating lobular carcinoma. An analysis of "classical" and variant tumors. 215 7

The prognostic significance of conventional TNM staging remains the standard for determining prognosis in breast carcinoma. The presence (or absence) of axillary lymph node metastases remains the single most important parameter for predicting patient outcome. The presence of regional lymph node metastases implies that the primary tumor has the capacity for successfully completing the steps of the metastatic cascade. However, the absence of regional lymph node metastases does not ensure that distant or systemic seeding of tumor cells has not occurred, only that it is less likely. Staging data appear to be refined by addition of several standard morphological parameters. Although there is considerable overlap and interaction between these factors, as well as with staging data, there is strong evidence that grade, necrosis, inflammatory cell "immune response," and possibly pattern of invasion and intravascular tumor each independently supplement staging information. Some data appear to have independent significance only when applied to specific patient subsets, raising serious question as to their biologic importance. Nevertheless, morphological data are subjective and susceptible to observer variation and have less statistical power in predicting patient outcome than staging data. It was initially thought that DNA analysis of breast cancer by flow cytometry might supplant morphological data in assessing tumor behavior. The following conclusions can now be drawn: (1) there is no clear association between aneuploidy and SPF and stage; (2) aneuploid tumors are associated with higher SPF and shorter disease-free survival while diploid-range tumors generally have lower SPF and longer disease-free survival; (3) aneuploid DNA content is significantly associated with markers of decreased morphological (grade) and biochemical (ER status) differentiation. Determination of S-phase fraction by FCM appears to be a rapid and potentially easy method for obtaining kinetic information on individual breast tumors, although the technology for improving the accuracy of SPF measurements is still under development (e.g., tumor cell gating, debris subtraction). SPF appears to be comparable to other kinetic measurements, such as TLI, and shows many of the same associations with morphological and clinical data as ploidy. This is due to the close association of ploidy and SPF. Which of these parameters is more important for predicting patient outcome has not been clearly defined. Additional technological refinements for determining SPF may result in a more prominent prognostic role for this measurement. Three problems have limited our ability to draw specific conclusions about the biologic significance of tumor ploidy and SPF.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Prognostic significance of morphological parameters and flow cytometric DNA analysis in carcinoma of the breast. 215 77

ES was performed preoperatively in 39 patients with a proximal bile duct carcinoma. The results were correlated with the histologic findings of resected specimens or intraoperative excision according to the new (1987) TNM classification. ES was accurate in assessing the depth of tumor infiltration. The overall accuracy of ES was 83.8%. Overstaging of T2 carcinoma occurred in three of ten patients (30%) and understaging of T3 carcinoma occurred in 3 of 27 patients (11%). ES was helpful in diagnosing lymph node metastasis (accuracy, 92.9%) but not accurate in defining nonmetastatic lymph nodes (accuracy, 18.8%). Difficulties occurred in distinguishing inflammatory lymph nodes and micrometastatic lymph node involvement. ES was not accurate in diagnosing hepatic metastases and peritoneal dissemination because of the limited penetration depth of ultrasound. The incidence of lymph node metastasis of advanced stage carcinoma was approximately 40%. Technical improvements, such as reduction of the diameter of the echoprobe, easy handling of ES-guided cytologic puncture, and the routine use of a catheter echoprobe during ERCP will further enhance the accuracy of ES.
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PMID:Preoperative TNM classification of proximal extrahepatic bile duct carcinoma by endosonography. 216 63

Thirty-five patients with strongly suspected recurrent tumor of the lung and a definitely positive CT scan were reviewed. The patients had undergone surgery (group A, n = 17) or radiation therapy (group B, n = 18). TNM staging of lung cancer in both groups revealed similar results. Small-cell carcinoma (p less than 0.05), central tumors (p less than 0.003) and elder patients (p less than 0.05) were more often found in group B. The disease-free interval was longer in patients with tumor resection (45.5 vs 11.7 months, p less than 0.007) and depended on the T-stage in irradiated cases (p less than 0.05). Local recurrence with or without mediastinal lymph node involvement occurred in all irradiated patients: 3 out of 17 surgical patients showed isolated mediastinal lymph node enlargement without tumor relapse (not seen by plain chest roentgenographs). Plain films failed to detect nearly 20% of space-occupying lesions, which could easily be identified by CT. In one patient the suspected tumor recurrence turned out to be a tuberculous infiltration. A second lung cancer--no tumor recurrence--was pathohistologically assumed in 3 of the resected cases with an interval of from 10 to 181 months after surgery. On the basis of these findings, CT monitoring can be recommended when the patient is resected for cure. Some patients will benefit by an early diagnosis of local regional tumor recurrence when the time until the necessary secondary treatment can be shortened. Long-term-survival may be achieved in a small part of these patients.
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PMID:[The place of computed tomography in the diagnosis of recurrences in patients with bronchogenic carcinoma]. 217 37

We reviewed 39 cases of squamous cell carcinoma of lip from 53 consecutive patients with carcinoma of the lip. The retrospective review includes age, location, risk factors, TNM classification, histologic differentiation, treatment methods, recurrent disease, site of recurrence, and follow-up status. Results reveal prognosis is related to original tumor size, local recurrence, and presence of cervical metastasis. Aggressive surgical treatment is recommended for identifiable poor prognostic lesions and includes surgical excision, prophylactic suprahyoid neck dissection, and possible radical neck dissection.
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PMID:Squamous cell carcinoma of the lip. 217 68

To determine the accuracy of computed tomography (CT) of the chest in the staging of lung cancer, we studied 418 patients with primary pulmonary carcinoma between 1979 and 1986. Each had a preoperative scan performed before detailed operative staging. Each CT scan was analyzed for components of the current TNM staging system. Computed tomography sensitivity and specificity for mediastinal lymph node metastasis were 84.4% and 84.1%, with corresponding positive and negative predictive accuracies of 68.7% and 92.9%, respectively. When TNM stages were derived from CT scans, only 190 of 418 (45.4%) completely agreed with operative staging. An additional 53 of 418 (12.7%) predicted the correct stage, although components of the TNM system were incorrect. In 94 of 418 scans (22.5%) CT overestimated the stage, whereas in 81 (19.4%) CT downgraded the stage. Computed tomography suggested metastatic lesions in liver, lung, adrenal gland, bone, or abdominal lymph nodes in 40 of 373 scans (10.7%); only five of 40 (12.5%) had documented metastasis. In summary, CT of the chest cannot accurately stage primary lung carcinoma according to the TNM classification. Because the negative predictive accuracy for mediastinal lymph node metastasis remains high (92.9%), invasive staging can be deferred for definitive thoracotomy when no lymphadenopathy is evident on CT. The high negative predictive accuracy for scans of the chest and upper abdomen makes CT a useful tool for exclusion of metastatic disease.
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PMID:Can computed tomography of the chest stage lung cancer? Yes and no. 198 65

Endosonography (ES) was used for the preoperative TNM (1987) staging of tumors in 43 patients with pancreatic cancer and 24 patients with ampullary carcinomas. These results were correlated with the histologic findings of resected specimens. Early-stage tumors could be distinguished from advanced stages of cancer with ES. Detailed images of ductular and parenchymal abnormalities allowed distinction between pancreatic and ampullary carcinomas based on anatomic location. The overall accuracy of ES in the assessment of tumor classification in pancreatic and ampullary carcinoma was 92% and 88%, respectively. In diagnosing regional lymph nodes in pancreatic and ampullary tumors the accuracy of ES was 74% and 54%, respectively. For diagnosing metastatic lymph nodes in pancreatic and ampullary carcinoma the accuracy of ES was 91% and 80%, respectively. The prevalence of lymph node metastases in T1 pancreatic cancers and T1 ampullary carcinomas was 40% and 0%, respectively. Discrimination between inflammation and metastases was difficult with ES. ES was not accurate in assessing distant metastases because of the limited penetration depth of ultrasound.
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PMID:Ampullopancreatic carcinoma: preoperative TNM classification with endosonography. 218 84


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