Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0016199 (flank pain)
2,189 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Renal Cell Carcinoma is the third most common malignoma in urology. Only little is known about the etiology and risk factors; the age peak lies at 60 and twice as many men than women are affected. The clinical picture presents with a wide spectrum. Over one third of all tumours are detected accidentally by ultrasound or computed tomography in asymptomatic patients. Most common symptoms are hematuria and flank pain, the classical trials including in addition a palpable mass is rare and by mo means an early symptom. Paraneoplastic syndromes include unspecific (increased blood sedimentation rate, weight loss, fever) and endocrine symptoms (hypertension, polyglobulia, hypercalcemia). Diagnosis is based on imaging procedures. By means of sonography renal cysts may be separated from solid, space-occupying tumors. For the latter CT plays a decisive role for staging, therapeutic planning and prognosis. Further radiologic investigations (angiography, MRI) are indicated only in special situations. Rarely a biopsy is necessary for the distinction between renal cell carcinoma and metastases of other primary tumors. The only curative treatment of localized carcinoma is radical nephrectomy. Partial resection is indicated in cases of a single kidney, bilateral tumors and possibly also for tumors smaller than 4 cm in diameter. Radiotherapy is only initiated for palliation of painful skeletal metastases. In case of distant metastases--mainly pulmonary--nephrectomy should only be performed if systemic treatment is planned or if local complaints (pain, hematuria leading to anemia) exist. Chemotherapeutic drugs have no influence on survival. The effect of gestagens on life quality is questionable. Adoptive immunotherapy with cytokines (Interferon-alpha, interleukin-2) appears most promising. These substances, however, not yet been introduced into routine therapy should only be used in prospective studies. Furthermore, renal cell carcinoma is a potential candidate for gene therapy. After tumor nephrectomy follow-up investigations should be performed twice a year, because of the possibility of curative surgical treatment of late solid metastases. Prognosis of tumors restricted to the organ is good. Five year survival after operation is about 90%. However, is distant metastases exist already at the time of diagnosis 5 year survival drops to less than 10%.
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PMID:[Renal cell carcinoma--a current review]. 931 11

We report a case of a sonographically-detected impalpable embryonal cell carcinoma with bulky retroperitoneal metastases. A 34-year-old man, who presented with left flank pain, was presumed to have an extragonadal retroperitoneal germ cell tumor. Scrotal sonography revealed a hypoechoic lesion, 7 mm in diameter, which was histologically diagnosed as a primary embryonal cell carcinoma. Evidence suggested that the primary tumor had grown slowly, as the tumor was well encapsulated. This case suggests that some extragonadal germ cell tumors arise from a primary testicular cancers, and that successful treatment of these tumors should include consideration that they may have arisen as a primary testicular mass.
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PMID:Sonographically-detected impalpable testicular cancer with retroperitoneal bulky metastases: a case report. 935 63

Adrenal gland metastasis is often observed during the clinical course of patients with lung cancer. However, treatment of adrenal gland metastasis is seldom considered because of the systemic spread of the disease. Treatment with curative intent is very rare, but palliative treatment may sometimes be considered when symptoms such as flank pain are observed. Three cases of adrenal gland metastasis were reported. Two of them received surgery for lung cancer and developed a sole metastasis of the adrenal gland. Case 1 developed a sole left adrenal gland metastasis with left flank pain 14 months after surgery for large cell carcinoma of the lung. Curative radiotherapy after intra-arterial chemotherapy was given. A good response was obtained, and he has been alive for 2 years and 9 months. Case 2 developed a right adrenal gland metastasis after radiotherapy for brain metastasis, after having received right upper lobectomy because of SCLC. The increase in the size of the right adrenal gland led us to treat the lesion before symptoms developed. Radiotherapy was given on an outpatient basis. Case 3, who was previously treated with chemoradiotherapy for SCLC, developed brain, liver, and bilateral adrenal gland metastasis. Huge adrenal gland metastases displaced the pancreas and caused severe pain with the increase in serum amylase level. Concurrent radiotherapy with systemic chemotherapy was given and remarkable shrinkage of the adrenal gland metastases was obtained together with pain relief. Cases 2 and 3 died after 8 and 4 months, respectively. In some cases, radiotherapy for adrenal gland metastasis is a good palliative therapy even in the advanced stage patients. Radiotherapy can sometimes curatively treat adrenal metastasis from NSCLC, as in our Case 1, in which adrenalectomy appeared difficult at the time of recurrence.
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PMID:Radiotherapy for adrenal gland metastasis from lung cancer: report of three cases. 1037 56

Clear cell sarcoma of the kidney is a distinct, highly malignant pediatric neoplasm. Its occurrence in adults is extremely rare and the subject of isolated case reports. We present a series of four cases (three males and one female) identified in an adolescent and in young adults (16, 18, 20, and 25 years) with flank mass (three cases), hematuria (two cases), flank pain (two cases), and hypertension (one case). Three patients had stage III disease and one had stage I disease (National Wilms' Tumor Study staging system). All tumors had predominantly or exclusively the classic histology of a monotonous proliferation of uniform small round cells with evenly distributed fine chromatin, although focal microcyst formation (two cases) and spindled architecture (one case) (variant patterns) were also noted. Therapy in all cases consisted of surgery and chemotherapy with or without radiation. Follow-up data (29-202 months) showed distant metastases in all four cases, including the lung (four cases), bone (two cases), and the liver (two cases). Three patients died of disease at 29, 59, and 63 months (mean, 50.3 months), and one patient is alive with no evidence of disease at 202 months. Ultrastructural features included scattered primitive junctions, short and irregular cytoplasmic extensions, and scant to a moderate amount of mitochondria. Immunohistochemical study (three cases) showed immunoreactivity with vimentin (two cases) and no reaction with cytokeratin, epithelial membrane antigen, S-100 protein, or desmin. Flow cytometric analysis showed diploid DNA content in three primary tumors and tetraploidy in one metastatic tumor. The proliferative activity (S-phase fraction) was low to intermediate (mean, 9.8%). Our data suggest that clear cell sarcoma of the kidney in the young adult age group resembles its pediatric counterpart in ultrastructural and immunohistochemical characteristics, proclivity for skeletal and visceral metastasis, DNA diploid status with relatively low S-phase, and aggressive clinical course. Clear cell sarcoma of the kidney in adult patients, although rare, must be differentiated from sarcomatoid carcinoma, sarcomas, and round cell tumors because of its unique characteristics in comparison to other renal neoplasms.
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PMID:Clear cell sarcoma of kidney in an adolescent and in young adults: a report of four cases with ultrastructural, immunohistochemical, and DNA flow cytometric analysis. 1058 98

Penile metastasis is rare. It occurs in the advanced stage of genitourinary cancer, with many other metastases in various organs. All 7 patients with penile metastasis of renal cell cancer, reported in the Japanese literature, died within a year. Our case was not the exception. A 69-year-old male presented with right flank pain and penile induration. Right renal cancer with liver invasion and multiple pulmonary metastases were found. Microscopic examination revealed a sarcomatous pattern. He died 4 months later.
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PMID:[Penile metastasis from renal cell carcinoma: a case report]. 1096 51

Ewing's sarcoma/primitive neuroectodermal tumor (ES/PNET) is an extraordinarily rare primary tumor in the kidney and can be mistaken for a variety of other round cell tumors, including blastema-predominant Wilms' tumor (WT). Approximately 90% of ES/PNET have a specific t(11;22), which results in a chimeric EWS-FLI-1 protein. Immunohistochemistry for the carboxy-terminus of FLI-1 is sensitive and highly specific for the diagnosis of ES/PNET. WT-1, the WT-associated tumor suppressor gene, is overexpressed in WT but not in ES/PNET. No study has examined FLI-1 or WT-1 expression in renal ES/PNET. The clinicopathologic features of 11 renal ES/PNET were studied along with immunohistochemistry for cytokeratin, desmin, CD99, FLI-1, and WT-1. WT were also immunostained for CD99 (5 cases), FLI-1 (10 cases), and WT-1 (9 cases). The patients (6 men, 5 women) ranged from 18 to 49 years of age (mean, 34 yr). The mean tumor size was 11.8 +/- 3.8 cm (mean +/- standard deviation). Presenting symptoms included abdominal/flank pain and/or hematuria. Grossly, all tumors showed necrosis and hemorrhage, and 4 had cystic change. Microscopically, all tumors showed vaguely lobular growth, primitive round cells, and variable rosette formation. Epithelial, myogenous, or cartilaginous differentiation was not seen. Immunohistochemical results on the renal ES/PNET were cytokeratin (2/8 focal), desmin (0/9), CD99 (8/8), FLI-1 (5/8), and WT-1 (0/8). In comparison, the WT only rarely expressed CD99 (1/5) and did not express FLI-1 (0/10), but were usually WT-1-positive (7/9). Follow-up on 8 cases (mean, 28 mo; range, 6-64 mo) showed 4 lung and pleural metastases, 1 bone metastasis, liver metastasis, 2 local recurrences, and 5 deaths from disease (median time to death, 16.8 mo). No case had distant metastatic disease at presentation. Adjuvant therapy included chemotherapy (8 cases), radiation (3 cases), and bone marrow transplantation (1 case). Our study affirms a unique proclivity of renal ES/PNET for young adults and that it is a highly aggressive neoplasm, with rapid death in many cases, usually after the development of treatment-resistant lung metastases. These tumors must be distinguished from blastema-predominant WT and other primitive renal tumors that require different therapy. FLI-1 and WT-1 immunohistochemistry may be valuable in this differential diagnosis, given the known immunophenotypic overlap between ES/PNET and blastema-predominant WT with regard to CD99, cytokeratin, and desmin. The accurate distinction between these two entities has clear prognostic and therapeutic implications.
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PMID:Primary Ewing's sarcoma/primitive neuroectodermal tumor of the kidney: a clinicopathologic and immunohistochemical analysis of 11 cases. 1288 55

Adrenal epithelioid angiosarcoma is an extremely rare tumor. Even if such tumors are very aggressive, a long survival may occasionally be observed after an adrenal ectomy. A 70-year-old woman suffering from persistent right flank pain showed a 5-cm right adrenal mass plus a 2-cm liver mass at the radiologic workup, and both were suspected of being malignant. No adrenal hypersecretion was demonstrated. During an explorative median laparotomy the right adrenal gland with the whole periadrenal tissue and locoregional lymph nodes was removed. A histological examination revealed an adrenal angiosarcoma. The resection margin was tumor-free with no lymph node infiltration. The liver mass turned out to be a cistobiliary adenoma. Since no distant metastases were observed, no adjuvant chemotherapy was performed. After an 18-month follow-up the patient is still well with no sign of a relapse. When this rare adrenal tumor is encountered and curative treatment is attempted initially extensive surgical procedures are essential.
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PMID:Adrenal angiosarcoma: report of a case. 1210 88

Although autopsies performed on patients with cancer have shown 4 6 to 7.6% of metastases to the kidneys, the preoperative clinical identification remains rare. The primary sources of metastases to the kidney are in decreasing order of frequency: breast, lung, intestine, contralateral kidney, stomach, ovary, cervix, pancreas, uterus, and pro tate. As far as we know, only seven cases of malignant neoplasms of the thyroid gland metastatictothe kidney have been reported [1]. Herein, we report the eighth case of this event and the second of a follicular variant of papillary thyroid carcinoma whose initial manifestation was hematuria and flank pain.
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PMID:Metastatic Follicular Variant of Papillary Thyroid Carcinoma Manifested as a Primary Renal Neoplasm. 1211 7

A 72-year-old non-diabetic uremic woman underwent right nephrectomy for urolithiasis at the age of 50. Because pyuria, fever, chilliness and left flank pain developed during preparing for arteriovenous fistula, she was admitted to National Cheng Kung University Hospital. Renal cell carcinoma (RCC) complicated with emphysematous pyelonephritis (EPN) was diagnosed and immediately treated with antibiotics and CT-guided percutaneous catheter drainage. Cultures of pus and blood yielded Escherichia coli. She received left radical nephrectomy later for the control of persistent sepsis and removal of left renal tumor. The pathology of the tumor was composed of a glandular arrangement of granular cells with the occasional atypism, and renal parenchyma had been totally replaced by RCC. The non-tumor part of the kidney showed chronic pyelonephritis. Five months later, multiple metastases developed. We reported this first uremic case with EPN and RCC, but without diabetes mellitus and urinary tract obstruction. The gas formation may be due to large RCC, which caused impaired tissue perfusion and E. coli infection.
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PMID:Renal cell carcinoma complicated by emphysematous pyelonephritis in a non-diabetic patient with renal failure. 1218 10

Inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor is a rare entity composed of spindle cells admixed with variable amounts of extracellular collagen, lymphocytes, and plasma cells. In the genitourinary tract, inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor most commonly occurs in the bladder. Isolated case studies of inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor of the kidney, renal pelvis, and ureter have been previously reported. Our series includes 12 cases of inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor occurring in the renal pelvis (six cases), renal parenchyma (four cases), and immediate perirenal soft tissue (two cases). Clinical presentation included flank pain (two patients), painless gross hematuria (one patient), and ureteropelvic junction stenosis with hydronephrosis (one patient). The remaining eight patients were asymptomatic. All patients underwent nephrectomy. The tumors were characterized by firm white tissue or had a myxoid "gelatinous" appearance. Three histologic patterns were identified in the tumors, including a myxoid vascular pattern, a compact spindle cell pattern, and a hypocellular fibrous pattern. Immunohistochemical and electron microscopic studies supported a myofibroblastic proliferation. All cases were negative for anaplastic lymphoma kinase. Follow-up was available in eight cases and ranged from 1 to 17 years with no evidence of recurrence. Based on this series, renal inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor is a proliferative lesion of myofibroblasts of uncertain pathogenesis with no identified potential for recurrence or metastases.
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PMID:Inflammatory myofibroblastic tumors of the kidney: a clinicopathologic and immunohistochemical study of 12 cases. 1271 50


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