Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0016382 (flushing)
6,387 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Two patients who had severe carcinoid syndrome are presented. In one patient prednisone relieved symptoms for 20 months, and in the second patient chemotherapy appears to have precipitated fatal carcinoid crisis. Changes in mentation, increased frequency and intensity of flushing, and hypotension indicate increased risk of a chemotherapy induced carcinoid crisis. Since prednisone may produce relatively long control of carcinoid syndrome, it should be tried before chemotherapy in patients who have increased risk of carcinoid crisis. If chemotherapy is given, doses should be decreased by 50%, and patients should be followed closely.
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PMID:Management of carcinoid syndrome. 44 Feb 7

APUDomas are rare tumours originating from a variety of endocrine cells localized in different organs. Acute complications from APUDomas usually result from the increased biosynthesis and release of bioactive amines or polypeptide hormones by the tumour. Less frequently, bleeding or compression by the tumour can occur requiring emergency surgery. Increased gastrin production by gastrinomas is the cause of ZES (peptic ulceration and diarrhoea) by gastrin effects on gastric acid secretion. Volume depletion, hypokalaemia, severe bleeding, duodenal perforation, oesophageal stricture and pyloric stenosis are the most dramatic complications. Treatment of these complications and their prevention has been facilitated by the availability of antagonists to H2 receptors and H(+)-K+ proton pump. These medications should control acid output in every patient with ZES. Frequent manifestations of carcinoid tumours, VIPomas and medullary thyroid carcinomas are flushing and diarrhoea. Octreotide, a long-acting somatostatin analogue, has markedly changed the management of these patients, their symptoms decreasing in severity or disappearing in most cases. Octreotide has also been used with success in the prevention and treatment of the carcinoid crisis, a dreaded complication of carcinoid tumours. A better understanding of the pathophysiology of APUDomas has enabled new treatment designs which have considerably ameliorated the quality of life of patients affected by these tumours; efforts must be continued to affect their life expectancy.
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PMID:APUDomas: acute complications and their medical management. 131 Aug 47

Survival in patients with metastatic carcinoid tumors is dependent on control of tumor growth and adequate palliation of vasoactive amine-induced symptoms of flushing, diarrhea, wheezing, and valvular heart disease. Eight patients with carcinoid tumors metastatic to the liver were treated with long-term octreotide acetate therapy (100 to 500 micrograms three times a day), intra-arterial 5-fluorouracil infusion (2 g/day x 5 days), and hepatic tumor chemoembolization. All eight patients became asymptomatic and have remained so with a mean follow-up duration of 22 months from the time of first infusion. Following institution of subcutaneous octreotide acetate, intra-arterial infusion, and tumor chemoembolization, all patients are alive with a mean survival of 40 months from the time of diagnosis of carcinoid syndrome (range: 2 to 108 months). Four patients had greater than a 50% decrease in tumor size after therapy (mean follow-up duration: 10.6 months), and the other four patients have had stable disease after institution of therapy. It appears that combinations of long-term subcutaneous administration of octreotide acetate, intra-arterial 5-fluorouracil, and tumor chemoembolization effectively control progressive liver metastasis and provide excellent symptomatic palliation in patients with hepatic metastasis from functional carcinoid tumors.
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PMID:Effective palliative treatment of metastatic carcinoid tumors with intra-arterial chemotherapy/chemoembolization combined with octreotide acetate. 137 22

A patient with carcinoid tumor of the head of pancreas and carcinoid syndrome presented without liver metastasis. The patient had retroperitoneal lymphadenopathy. He had symptoms of flushing, diarrhea and abdominal pain. 5-Hydroxyindoleacetic acid (5-HIAA) was elevated. Absence of liver metastasis was documented not only by the negative computed tomography (CT) scan and liver/spleen scan, but also by autopsy. Except for carcinoid arising from ovary, testis, or bronchi, the other carcinoid tumors rarely cause carcinoid syndrome without liver metastasis. The literature was reviewed, and the findings are presented.
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PMID:Carcinoid syndrome in the absence of liver metastasis: a case report and review of literature. 157 32

A 21 year old man presented with diarrhoea and flushing after meals and later developed miliary shadowing on his chest radiograph. Multifocal bronchial carcinoid tumour was diagnosed initially, but at necropsy metastatic medullary carcinoma of the thyroid was found. Multifocal bronchial carcinoid tumour should not be accepted as a primary diagnosis without first excluding medullary carcinoma of the thyroid because of the need to screen relatives of affected patients.
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PMID:Medullary carcinoma of the thyroid presenting as multifocal bronchial carcinoid tumour. 165 65

We examined the role of the potent vasoactive kinin substance-P (SP) in flushing derived from various causes. SP was measured in plasma after acetone/ether extraction using an antiserum directed at the carboxy-terminal 5-11 amino acid region of undecapeptide SP. The antiserum had less than 1% cross-reaction with the other neurokinins, neurokinin-A and neuropeptide-K, that derive from the beta-preprotachykinin gene and share carboxy-terminal residues. Basal and pentagastrin-stimulated SP levels were measured in 22 healthy controls, 11 patients with histologically proven carcinoid tumors, 8 patients with tumors other than carcinoid, and 7 patients with idiopathic flushing (IF). Basal SP levels were less than 10 pg/mL in normal subjects. All patients with midgut carcinoid tumors had SP levels greater than 25 pg/mL, as did 7 of 8 patients with noncarcinoid tumors and 5 of 7 patients with IF. Using 50 pg/mL as the cutoff point, the sensitivity was 63% for detection of a tumor, and 100% of nontumor patients were excluded. Pentagastrin administration uniformly induced flushing and caused a rise in SP levels greater than 150 pg/mL in 5 of 10 patients with carcinoid tumors, 3 of 8 with noncarcinoid tumors, and 0 of 7 with IF, i.e. a SP rise of more than 100 pg/mL suggests a tumor. Administration of somatostatin (150 micrograms) 0.5 h before the pentagastrin abolished flushing in all carcinoid patients and reduced SP levels, but not into the normal range. Long term treatment with SMS significantly reduced flushing and lowered SP levels, but did not restore these to normal. We conclude that 90% of patients with carcinoid/noncarcinoid tumor have raised COOH-terminal SP levels. A basal level above 50 pg/mL or a pentagastrin-stimulated rise of more than 100 pg/mL distinguishes carcinoid from IF. The dissociation between SP concentrations and flushing suggests that SP may not be the only kinin involved in the flushing associated with carcinoid tumors.
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PMID:Plasma substance-P in neuroendocrine tumors and idiopathic flushing: the value of pentagastrin stimulation tests and the effects of somatostatin analog. 169 75

This paper reports on the results of two controlled therapeutic trials on patients with endocrine tumours of the gastrointestinal tract. Seventeen patients were treated up to 18 months with recombinant interferon-alpha 2c (2 x 10(6) IU/m2 s.c. daily) and 16 patients are treated in an ongoing study with octreotide (3 x 200 micrograms daily). Objective response (greater than 50% reduction of hormone secretion) was observed in one of 15 evaluable patients on IFN-alpha and in 12 of 16 patients on octreotide. Reduction of tumour size was not observed in these two trials. However, the majority of patients had stable tumour size during IFN-alpha and octreotide treatment despite progressive disease before. Subjective improvement due to reduction of symptoms such as flushing, diarrhea, and dermatitis was significantly more frequent after octreotide than after IFN-alpha. Of five endocrine tumour patients with progressive disease on IFN-alpha, three responded to subsequent treatment with octreotide while one had stable disease and one progressed. Two cases are reported from the authors' series of patients treated with octreotide before start of these trials. Complete remission of the tumour by low-dose (2 x 100 micrograms daily) octreotide was observed in one carcinoid patient. This remission has now lasted for four years. In one patient with liver metastasis of a VIPoma, who had become resistant to streptozotocin, his watery diarrhoea is now completely controlled with 100 micrograms octreotide s.c. every second day.
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PMID:Treatment of gastrointestinal endocrine tumours with interferon-alpha and octreotide. 171 38

Seventeen patients with malignant carcinoid tumour, ten of whom had the malignant carcinoid syndrome, were treated with recombinant alpha-2b interferon by subcutaneous injection (3 MU per dose) three times per week for a median of 12 weeks (range 4-48). No objective tumour responses were observed; however, there was a greater than 50% reduction in 24-hour urinary 5-hydroxyindolacetic acid (5-HIAA) excretion in four of ten patients (40%) with elevated pretreatment levels. Five of ten patients (50%) with flushing, five of seven patients (71%) with diarrhoea and both patients with wheezing experienced relief of symptoms. Three of four patients (75%) with weight loss as their only problem experienced weight gain. Responses occurred within the first eight weeks of treatment, but were generally of short duration. Toxicity occurred in all patients, and consisted mainly of fever, chills, anorexia, fatigue and weight loss. Four patients ceased therapy due to toxic reactions. Although interferon has activity against carcinoid tumours, its benefits are short-lived and toxicity limits its use with increasing dose. Patients with carcinoid syndrome appear to achieve the best therapeutic response, and it is likely that low doses (9-20 million IU weekly) are as effective as higher doses (36-72 million IU weekly).
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PMID:Recombinant alpha-2b interferon in patients with malignant carcinoid tumour. 172 59

Treatment with the somatostatin analogue octreotide, SMS 201-995 (Sandostatin), has been carried out in a series of 23 patients with malignant midgut carcinoid tumours. The patients received initially 50 micrograms twice a day for six months, thereafter a median of 100 micrograms twice daily. Six of 22 evaluable patients (28%) showed objective tumour response lasting for 6 to 30 months. Stable disease was observed in 8 of the 22 patients (36%) and progressive disease in a further 8 patients (36%). A subjective response with decrease of diarrhoea or flushing was noted in 11 out of 22 patients (50%). Two out of 6 patients with objective response demonstrated a significant decrease of tumour size lasting for 6 and 30 months respectively. In order to maintain the clinical response, the dose had to be increased in all 6 responders. The adverse effects included development of diabetic blood glucose levels in 8 out of 22 patients (36%). Albumin-modified serum calcium levels were significantly reduced after treatment with octreotide 50 micrograms twice a day. One patient developed symptoms of hypocalcemia which was reversed by supplementation with calcium and D-vitamins. The somatostatin analogue SMS 201-995 has a beneficial effect in the treatment of patients with the carcinoid syndrome. However, the precise role of the drug in the long-term management of these patients has to be further investigated.
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PMID:Treatment of malignant midgut carcinoid tumours with a long-acting somatostatin analogue octreotide. 185 8

Fourteen patients with metastatic carcinoid tumors were treated with recombinant interferon alpha-2b at a dosage of 3-4 x 10(6) IU s.c. daily or every second day. No objective tumor regression was observed. Six out of 8 patients with carcinoids of the ileum and the caecum showed stable disease lasting for a median of 25 months (range 4-57). In 3 out of 6 patients with carcinoids of rectum, lung and of unknown primary site, stable disease was observed lasting for 2-7 months. The remaining patients had progressive disease. Six out of 9 evaluable patients had a more than 50% reduction of urinary 24 h 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid excretion lasting for a median of 4 months (range 2-11). Decrease of flushing was noticed in 3 out of 6 evaluable patients and decrease of diarrhea in 5 out of 9 evaluable patients. In 4 patients dose reduction was necessary due to confusion and fatigue.
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PMID:Treatment of metastatic carcinoid tumors and the carcinoid syndrome with recombinant interferon alpha. 189 78


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