Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0007124 (ductal carcinoma in situ)
3,833 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Cellular DNA-ploidy in 74 clinically detected intraductal breast carcinomas (IDCs) was analysed by flow cytometry. The histograms were classified as either diploid or aneuploid, and the DNA ploidy pattern compared with that of invasive breast carcinomas and normal breast tissue. All normal breast tissues were diploid while 28 (38%) of the IDCs were aneuploid, the DNA indices ranging from 1.32 to 2.00. The frequency of aneuploidy in invasive ductal carcinomas (73%) was significantly higher (P = 0.003), DNA index ranging from 1.34 to 2.92, compared with that in IDCs. Retrospectively, 14.5% of the patients had invasive breast cancer 16-166 months after the diagnosis of IDC. Neither DNA ploidy nor histopathological classification alone predicted clinical outcome, but patients with DNA diploid non-comedo IDC had a more favourable course.
Eur J Cancer 1990
PMID:DNA ploidy in intraductal breast carcinomas. 217 15

A multicenter series of 350 intraductal breast cancers (DCIS) is reported. Mammography was the most sensitive test but suspicion arose only at palpation in 13% of cases whereas in 10% of cases biopsy was recommended for a benign lesion and DCIS was an unexpected finding. Mammography, physical examination and cytology must be combined to achieve optimal sensitivity. Systematic biopsy of apparently benign masses would increase DCIS detection rates but the cost-effectiveness of such a policy is questionable. A trend of conservative surgery was evident over time (from 1968-79, 28%; 1985-1989, 50%) but breast irradiation followed only in one fourth of the cases. The local recurrence rate was significantly higher in cases of limited surgery (with or without irradiation) with respect to mastectomy (1.2 vs 0.2 x 100 patient-years at risk). Most recurrences (7 of 8) in the conserved breast were infiltrating, but no recurrence was seen in subclinical DCIS cases. Three patients died of breast cancer after local recurrence in the conserved breast (2 cases) or mastectomy scar (1 case). Eligibility for conservative surgery of DCIS needs to be carefully discussed to avoid under-treatment. Contralateral breast cancer was recorded in 44 cases and the incidence of further metachronous cancer to the other breast was ten times higher than expected in normal breasts. Four patients died of contralateral breast cancer, free of ipsilateral recurrence. A careful follow-up of the contralateral breast in DCIS cases looks as important as surveillance of the conserved breast.
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PMID:Intraductal breast carcinoma. Review of a multicenter series of 350 cases. Coordinating Center and Writing Committee of FONCAM (National Task Force for Breast Cancer), Italy. 166 Jun 33

Surgical techniques for breast cancer patients with early stages of disease are discussed. In situ cancers (LCIS, microscopic DCIS, and gross DCIS) present different risks and natural histories, and thus different treatment options are advised. For Stage I and earlier Stage II patients, either modified radical mastectomy or breast preservation with limited resection, axillary dissection, and subsequent breast irradiation are described. Immediate (or delayed) breast reconstruction offers other options for mastectomy patients.
Cancer 1990 May 01
PMID:Primary therapy for limited breast cancer. Surgical techniques. 218 24

The mammographic findings in 18 patients with invasive papillary carcinoma were studied retrospectively. The mammograms of 10 patients showed a multinodular pattern, and seven patients had solitary nodules. One patient had an irregular, ill-defined mass in the retroareolar region. Two patients were found to have carcinoma in the contralateral breast, and two patients had intraductal carcinoma adjacent to the invasive papillary carcinoma. The varied mammographic features that may occur with this rare breast malignancy are discussed.
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PMID:Invasive papillary carcinoma of the breast: mammographic appearance. 224 93

The influence of patient age on risk of recurrence in the breast was retrospectively studied in 496 stage I-II invasive ductal carcinomas treated by macroscopically complete primary tumor excision followed by radiotherapy. With a median follow-up of 71 months, local recurrence occurred in 13 of 62 (21%) patients younger than 40 years, compared with 48 of 434 (11%) older patients (P less than .025). Cox multivariate analysis of 18 parameters identified four that significantly determined risk: major lymphocytic stromal reaction (MCR), unsatisfactory resection margins, increasing histologic grade, and extensive intraductal cancer (DCIS) within the primary tumor. Compared with older patients, those younger than 40 years had tumors that more often exhibited MCR (36% v 20%, P less than .01), histologic grade 3 (42% v 28%, P less than .025), and very extensive DCIS (21% v 6%, P less than .001). The status of resection margins did not differ significantly between younger and older patients. Restriction of Cox analysis to patients younger than 40 indicated that risk was adequately described by MCR and percentage of DCIS, without consideration of grade or margins. For patients younger than 40, local failure occurred in four of five (80%) tumors with both MCR and more than 50% DCIS, in eight of 25 (32%) with either, and one of 32 (3.1%) with neither of these morphologic features. This study suggests that the higher local failure risk observed in patients younger than 40 years reflects the greater prevalence of certain morphologic characteristics in breast cancers in younger patients. Age itself does not appear to be an independent determinate of risk.
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PMID:Why are local recurrences after breast-conserving therapy more frequent in younger patients? 231 29

Most epithelial hyperplasias of the human breast indicate an increased likelihood of carcinoma development, and the majority are best understood as markers or indicators of higher risk. Prospective studies of women with hyperplasia biopsied in the premammographic era indicate that about 70 per cent of women had mild or no hyperplastic epithelial alterations and experienced no increase in the risk of subsequent carcinoma. About 25 per cent of women had well-developed hyperplastic changes associated with a risk 1.5 to 2.0 times that of the general population controlled for age and length of follow-up. Somewhat fewer than 5 per cent of women had specific patterns of atypical hyperplasia that approached the patterns of carcinoma in situ. The women with atypical hyperplasia had a risk of cancer four to five times that of the general population, or about half the risk associated with microscopic carcinoma in situ. Only ductal carcinoma in situ should be considered without question to be an intrinsically precancerous lesion because of its regular association with recurrence at the site of its initial diagnosis. No follow-up studies of comparable type involving women with mammographically detected lesions are as yet available. However, it is clear that the incidence of atypical hyperplasia is higher in mammographically directed biopsies. The principal therapeutic implication of these premalignant lesions is a need for intensified breast cancer surveillance and screening for these patients.
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PMID:Premalignant conditions and markers of elevated risk in the breast and their management. 237 47

The Gleason grading system for prostate cancer was applied quantitatively to analysis of entire tumors in 209 radical prostatectomy specimens from patients with clinical Stage A and Stage B carcinoma. Percentage of poorly differentiated tumor (Gleason histologic pattern 4 and/or 5) was related to quantitated cancer volume, cancer location within the prostate, and presence or absence of pelvic lymph node metastasis. A strong correlation was found between cancer volume, percentage of poorly differentiated cancer, and nodal metastasis. Twenty-two of 38 patients with more than 3.2 cc of Gleason histologic pattern 4-5 cancer had nodes with positive results, compared with one of 171 patients with less than 3.2 cc of pattern 4-5 cancer. Gleason histologic patterns 1 and 2 cancer was found mainly in a small subgroup of tumors whose site of origin was in the anatomic transition zone and whose volume was less than 1 cc. Gleason "cribriform" histologic pattern 3 cancer was thought to represent mainly intraductal carcinoma. Its increase in area with increasing cancer volume paralleled the increase in pattern 4 cancer and was counter to the decrease in other types of pattern 3 cancer.
Cancer 1990 Sep 15
PMID:Histologic differentiation, cancer volume, and pelvic lymph node metastasis in adenocarcinoma of the prostate. 240 Sep 73

Many advances have occurred in breast cancer through research and clinical trials. More confidence in new biological consumptions about invasive breast cancer indicate that: (1) details of the primary breast cancer do not control survival; (2) breast-only failures after local excision do not bias against survival; and (3) cancer cell dissemination occurs at the same time via both lymphatic and hematogenous routes. Early detection with mammographic screening has indicated a greater number of smaller breast cancers, including sharp increases in ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS). With proper analysis and control, DCIS of limited extent can be treated by local excision with or without radiation. Invasive breast cancer of limited extent can frequently be managed by lumpectomy and radiation therapy with survival rates equivalent to the more traditional mastectomy. Patient desires regarding breast preservation and quality of life are paramount. Risk: benefit analyses for individual patients need to be emphasized in issues of breast preservation and in selecting adjuvant therapy, both regional (radiotherapy) and systemic (chemotherapy) and hormonal therapy). We are entering an era of highly selective therapy based on more sophisticated analysis of the primary cancer. In the future, not only statistical predictions of outcome as achieved by flow cytometry, for example, will be more widely used, but individual prognostic factors may be developed such as with oncogene expression. Such individual prognostic factors will enable more selective therapy.
Cancer 1990 Feb 01
PMID:New diagnostic, staging, and therapeutic aspects of early breast cancer. 240 90

Fifty-one women (29 to 75 years of age) with 55 cancers (ductal carcinoma in situ [DCIS] or ductal carcinoma in situ with microinvasion [DCISM] were studied by comparing biopsy specimens with mastectomy specimens. Presentation, histologic type, nuclear grade, microscopic duct counts, multicentricity, and microinvasion were correlated. Forty-seven percent of the cancers (26 of 55) were detected by mammography, 18% (ten of 55) were incidental to benign disease, and 35% (19 of 55) were palpable or exhibited nipple abnormality. Incidental tumors were all DCIS, averaged seven ducts, and showed no residual tumor during mastectomy. Mammographic lesions averaged 117 ducts (31% [eight of 26] were DCISM and 42% [11 of 26] were multicentric). Most comedocarcinomas that showed a high incidence of microinvasion were in this group. Clinical lesions averaged 110 ducts (42% [eight of 19] were DCISM and 68% [13 of 19] were multicentric). Three had nodal metastases. Mammographic and clinical tumors in the quantitative range of the incidental group (50 ducts) showed significant differences from it for all variables studied. Histologic and quantitative study of these tumors is necessary to best guide treatment. Incidental tumors, however, may only need observation.
Cancer 1989 Feb 15
PMID:Heterogeneity of intraductal carcinoma of the breast. 253 85

Between 1978 and 1985, 393 of 2,765 (14%) patients with operable cancer of the breast (clinical stage T0-3N0-2M0) were irradiated after excisional biopsy and staging axillary dissection. Of 77 patients with microscopic axillary metastases, 68 received systemic adjuvant therapy. Treatment failed locally in 26 cases, and there were seven patients with distant metastasis. The three major factors for increased local treatment failure were (a) age below 40 years (P = .003), (b) negative estrogen receptor assay result (P = .03), and (c) failure to deliver a radiation boost dose when tumor was present at the margin of the specimen (P = .002). The size of the tumor, the nodal status, the progesterone receptor assay result, and the presence of ductal carcinoma in situ mixed with infiltrating carcinoma did not show a significant influence on local recurrence. In 274 of 393 (70%) patients, cosmesis was evaluated. The four major factors affecting cosmesis favorably were (a) utilization of a wedge (P less than .0001); (b) treatment of two fields a day (P less than .0001); (c) failure to use a separate treatment port to the regional lymph nodes, so as to avoid field junctions (P = .0003); and (d) small size of specimen (less than 50 cm2) (P = .0171). A second or third cancer was found in 39 of the 393 (10%) patients; contralateral breast cancer was the most common form (n = 23), followed by genitourinary cancer (n = 5). The most frequent complication was arm edema (6%).
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PMID:Prognostic factors for recurrence and cosmesis in 393 patients after radiation therapy for early mammary carcinoma. 254 75


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