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)

21 patients were followed by positron-emission-tomography (PET) FDG (18Flourdeoxyglucose) uptake, physical examination, CT and CEA levels after combined photon-neutron irradiation for inoperable recurrent rectal carcinoma. In order to evaluate the response to radiotherapy symptomatic relief, CEA levels, decrease of tumor volume measured by CT analysis were correlated with the FDG-uptake. The objective of this study was also to investigate if the level of FDG-uptake prior to radiotherapy or the early decrease after therapy can be used as a prognostic factor. Prior to radiotherapy sacral pain was the predominant symptom. All malignancies showed measurable tumor masses, evaluation of CEA levels and enhanced tracer accumulation of FDG in the PET cross section. The mean FDG-uptake before radiotherapy was 2.3 +/- 1.1 (range 1.1 to 5.0) in 21 patients in contrast to 1.9 +/- 0.7 (range 0.8 bis 4.0) three months after radiotherapy. In six patients FDG concentration values decreased to the range of normal soft tissue, moreover, two of them relapsed after six and 22 months. Elevated FDG-uptake of the sacral bone was noted in PET cross sections in two patients, while there was no evidence of osseous alterations in CT. Normal levels of CEA were achieved in 14 patients and complete or partial pain relief in 20 of 21 patients. A decrease of tumor volume of more than 50% was detected in the follow-up CT scans of three patients but no complete remission was found. The result suggests that enhanced glucose uptake is associated with recurrent rectal cancer. However, enhanced glycolytic activity is related not only to malignant cells but also to all proliferating cells. To distinguish between proliferation, repair, inflammation, and residual viable tumor cells is not possible and may be responsible for an unchanged or elevated FDG-uptake after radiotherapy.
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PMID:Therapy monitoring of presacral recurrences after high-dose irradiation: value of PET, CT, CEA and pain score. 157 69

Forty-four patients with recurrent colorectal carcinoma were examined prior to a combination of conventional photon radiotherapy (40 Gy) and neutron therapy (10 Gy). Twenty-one of these underwent a PET examination after photon therapy and 12 also were studied after the end of combined therapy. CEA plasma levels were measured from blood samples taken immediately before the PET study. A significant decrease in FDG uptake despite good palliative results were observed in only 50% of the patients. This may be explained by inflammatory reactions caused by radiation injury. Inflammation and metabolically active residual tumor tissue cannot be distinguished. It is concluded that an observation interval longer than 6 mo may more effectively detect residual tumor activity. In 14 of 41 examinations, an increased FDG uptake was associated with a normal CEA value, and in only two cases were normal FDG uptake values and increased CEA levels found, suggesting that PET is more sensitive than the measurements of CEA plasma levels for tumor recurrence.
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PMID:PET studies of fluorodeoxyglucose metabolism in patients with recurrent colorectal tumors receiving radiotherapy. 171 97

The uptake of 18F-Deoxyglucose (FDG) was studied in vivo in relation to the proliferation rate of human head and neck tumors. Forty-two patients with histologically proven squamous-cell carcinoma of the head and neck and four patients with metastases of head and neck tumors were examined with PET and FDG prior to surgery. In 35 of these patients, a flow cytometric analysis of the DNA content and the proliferation rate was done using one-dimensional flow cytometry rate was done using one-dimensional flow cytometry (DAPI staining). In 17 cases, perfusion studies with 15O-labeled water were performed. Twenty-seven specimens were evaluable by flow cytometry. The analysis of the distribution of the FDG uptake revealed two groups, showing a high and a lower uptake pattern. In both groups the FDG uptake and the proliferation rate were correlated with an r-value of 0.64 and 0.8 respectively. However, the slope of the regression function was flat. No correlation was found between the perfusion and the proliferation rate. It is suggested that these differences in uptake in histologically identical tumor populations may correspond to differences at the molecular level, e.g., differences in the amount of the glucose carrier, perhaps caused by oncogenic transformation.
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PMID:Glucose uptake, perfusion, and cell proliferation in head and neck tumors: relation of positron emission tomography to flow cytometry. 186 78

Patients with lymphomas are conventionally imaged with [67Ga]citrate for tumor detection and determination of dissemination. Fluorine-18-2-fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose [( 18F]FDG) is a radiopharmaceutical that accumulates into tissues where glucose utilization is enhanced, such as tumors. Six cancer patients (five non-Hodgkin's lymphomas, one endodermal retroperitoneal sinus carcinoma) were imaged with [18F]FDG and [67Ga]citrate whole-body scintigraphies in order to compare the sensitivities of these two tumor imaging radiopharmaceuticals. Among the five untreated lymphoma patients, two 67Ga scans and four [18F]FDG scans were positive; in the patient with the retroperitoneal carcinoma who had a positive [18F]FDG scan before treatment, both scans were negative after treatment. Fluorine-18 FDG may be a more sensitive tumor-detecting radiopharmaceutical for non-Hodgkin's lymphoma than [67Ga]citrate.
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PMID:Comparison of fluorine-18-2-fluorodeoxyglucose and gallium-67 citrate imaging for detection of lymphoma. 346 32

A 49-yr-old white woman with diffuse sclerosing variant of papillary carcinoma of the thyroid revealed abnormal [18F]FDG accumulation within cervical lymph node metastases prior to thyroidectomy. The abnormal cervical foci of glucose metabolism corresponded to similar areas of abnormal [99mTc]pertechnetate and radioiodine accumulation on presurgical scans. The primary thyroid tumor within the thyroid gland was not delineated as a focal defect on any of the three imaging studies. The relative thyroid-to-background soft-tissue ratio in the [18F]FDG study, however, appeared higher than usual. As with 131I and [99mTc]pertechnetate, this case demonstrates that [18F]FDG PET can detect cervical lymph node metastases in the preoperative thyroid cancer patient.
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PMID:Cervical lymph node metastasis of thyroid papillary carcinoma imaged with fluorine-18-FDG, technetium-99m-pertechnetate and iodine-131-sodium iodide. 756 53

The use of radioactive isotopes in thyroid evaluation and therapy gives important information in the endocrine assessment of the aged. Thyroid uptake imaging can be used to establish a hypothyroid or hyperthyroid state and can determine the functional status of a palpable nodule. Investigational agents, such as T1 201m DMSA, MIBG, FDG, and Gallium are reviewed in relation to the evaluation of neoplasia. A detailed discussion of thyroid carcinoma ablation and subsequent radioiodine therapy is described, as are radiation safety procedures as they relate to the elderly.
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PMID:Radioisotopes and their use in the diagnosis and management of thyroid disease. 760 90

The authors report a case of a patient with postsurgical colorectal carcinoma and metastatic disease to the ovaries (Krukenberg tumor), the lung, and the liver first revealed by F-18 FDG PET imaging. The value of PET in a patient with an unexplained rising CEA is cited.
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PMID:Krukenberg tumor and lung metastases from colon carcinoma diagnosed with F-18 FDG PET. 762 45

In 27 examinations of 24 patients with differentiated thyroid carcinoma an alternating pattern of metastases with either 131I- or FDG-uptake was found. In the follow-up of these patients this flip-flop pattern was seen in 89% (17/19) of patients with metastases and uptake of 131I or FDG as described here as uptake types 1 and 2 (type 1: FDG-positive and 131I-negative; type 2: FDG-negative and 131I-positive). In 4 patients a mixed type was observed (uptake type 3), i.e. a combination of metastases with uptake types 1 and 2 in the same patient. Metastases of papillary or follicular thyroid carcinoma without uptake of iodine have all been found to be FDG-positive in patients with an increase of thyroglobulin and with negative diagnostic results from other imaging modalities, and were histologically confirmed by surgery. False-negative or false-positive cases were not observed in this study. The FDG uptake showed an inverse proportionality to iodine uptake and to tumor differentiation. Increased glucose metabolism is a sign of higher malignancy.
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PMID:[18FDG whole-body PET in differentiated thyroid carcinoma. Flipflop in uptake patterns of 18FDG and 131I]. 767 41

Distant sites of metastatic fallopian tube carcinoma, including humerus, umbilicus, and groin, were clearly imaged with FDG-PET; the surgical-pathologic correlations are presented. In disorders such as ovarian or fallopian tube cancer, where a reliable means of diagnosing persistent or recurrent disease remains elusive, PET scanning offers another approach to this problem. Based on the increased rate of glucose metabolism in tumors, this modality focuses on the biochemical differences between malignant tissues and their normal counterparts in order to demonstrate positive findings on imaging. Potential uses of PET scanning in gynecologic oncology are presented.
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PMID:Whole-body positron emission tomography with (fluorine-18)-2-deoxyglucose can detect metastatic carcinoma of the fallopian tube. 831 43

In order to evaluate the utility of positron emission tomography (PET) with 18F-labelled deoxyglucose (FDG) for detection of pancreatic cancer 15 patients with pancreatic masses shown by computed tomography were investigated. Static PET scans covering an axial field of view of 15 cm were obtained 45 min after intravenous injection of 150-300 MBq FDG. Focally increased FDG accumulation was present in 12 out of 13 patients with histologically proven adenocarcinoma, in particular in eight of nine lymph node and four of five liver metastases. Scans of two patients with chronic pancreatitis confirmed by surgery revealed a normal FDG distribution. Contrast between tumour and normal tissue depended the metabolic situation prior to FDG injection. High ratios were found in fasting patients whereas no elevated FDG uptake was measured in an insulin-dependent diabetic suffering from carcinoma of the pancreatic head. We conclude that FDG PET might have the potential for detection and even differentiation of pancreatic carcinoma from chronic pancreatitis. Further studies are necessary to substantiate these preliminary findings and to optimize results in diabetic patients.
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PMID:Pancreatic cancer detected by positron emission tomography with 18F-labelled deoxyglucose: method and first results. 835 20


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