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)

Long-acting depot forms of somatostatin analogs administered by intramuscular injections are now available for the treatment of neuroendocrine tumors (NETs). In the present study, we investigated the efficacy and tolerability of a slow-release form of lanreotide in patients with advanced NETs. From July 1996 to January 1999, 25 patients with advanced NETs (12 carcinoids, 13 endocrine pancreatic tumors) were enrolled in the study. Thirteen patients were pretreated with subcutaneous octreotide, chemotherapy, or hepatic metastasis alcoholization. All the patients had measurable disease. Seventeen patients were symptomatic and 20 patients had elevated serum and/or urine markers. Octreotide scintigraphy was positive in 23 of 25 patients. Lanreotide was administered as intramuscular injections at the dose of 30 mg every 2 weeks until there was objective, biochemical, or symptomatic tumor progression. Objective partial responses (PRs) were documented in 2 patients (8%), whereas 10 patients (40%) had tumor stabilization. The PRs were observed in patients with midgut carcinoids, of whom one was pretreated with subcutaneous octreotide. The response duration was 21+ and 24+ months in responding patients; the median duration of disease stabilization was 8.5 months (range, 4-21+). The overall biochemical response rate was 42%, including 2 complete responses (CRs) (10.5%) and 6 PRs (31.5%); all biochemical responses were observed mostly in patients with carcinoid tumors; the duration of response was 18+ and 30+ months for CRs; the median duration of biochemical response was 7 months (range, 4-18+) for PRs. The overall symptomatic response rate was 70% with a median duration of 7.5, 18, and 18+ months for diarrhea, abdominal pain, and flushing, respectively. Median duration of lanreotide treatment was 10 months (range, 2-30+). No significant side effects were reported. Depot lanreotide 30 mg shows significant efficacy in terms of objective response rate and in biochemical and symptomatic control, in pretreated patients as well as nonpretreated patients with advanced NETs. Tolerability is good, with good patient compliance.
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PMID:Long-acting depot lanreotide in the treatment of patients with advanced neuroendocrine tumors. 1095 74

Carcinoid tumors are very rare and originate mainly in the gastrointestinal tract. The tumor histology is ambiguous and malignancy is determined by metastases. Carcinoid tumors affect both sexes equally and have been found in all age groups. Many carcinoid tumors are found incidentally or from symptoms related to the hormones that the tumor produces. Carcinoid syndrome occurs when vast quantities of hormones are produced from GI carcinoid metastases or a non-GI primary tumor. The classic "carcinoid triad" associated with the syndrome includes flushing, diarrhea, and cardiac involvement. The hormone largely responsible for most of these symptoms is serotonin. Treatment consists of a wide-resection for local primaries and usually palliative, medical support for patients with metastases. The tumors are very slow-growing and patients have lived for up to 30 years after metastasis is diagnosed. Somatostatin analogue (lanreotide and octreotide) administration controls many of the carcinoid symptoms. Somatostatin is a naturally occurring gastrointestinal peptide (hormone) which can augment or counteract a wide variety of other peptides. This article provides an overview of carcinoid tumor and carcinoid syndrome including diagnosis and treatment. Aspects important to patient care will also be addressed.
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PMID:Carcinoid tumors and syndrome. 1205 78

Patients with clinically evident medullary thyroid cancer should have a total extracapsular thyroidectomy with bilateral central neck dissection and an ipsilateral prophylactic or therapeutic modified (functional) radical neck dissection when the primary tumor is greater than 1 cm and when the central neck nodes are positive. A prophylactic contralateral neck dissection should be done when the primary tumor is bilateral and when there is extensive lymphadenopathy on the side of the primary tumor. Patients who have gross, unresectable residual medullary thyroid cancer should receive postoperative external radiotherapy. Patients who are carriers of germ-line RET proto-oncogene point mutations or have an elevated (basal or stimulated) calcitonin levels on screening should have a prophylactic total thyroidectomy before age 6 years. In patients with an elevated basal or stimulated plasma calcitonin level and an intrathyroidal nodule on ultrasound, a total thyroidectomy and central neck lymph node dissection should be done. Patients with persistent or recurrent medullary thyroid cancer should have a complete thyroidectomy (if not done initially) and bilateral central and modified radical neck dissection, including upper mediastinal lymphadenectomy. Patients who are symptomatic from distant medullary thyroid cancer metastases (diarrhea, flushing, weight loss, or bone pain) should be treated with somatostatin analogs. Bone metastases should be resected if possible, and symptomatic lesions that are unresectable should be treated with external radiotherapy. Cytoreductive procedures such as radiofrequency ablation or cryoablation for liver metastases should be considered in symptomatic patients to reduce tumor burden. Localized pulmonary metastases should be resected. Chemotherapy or radioactive immunotherapy (iodine 131 labeled carcinoembryonic antigen monoclonal antibody) protocols should be considered in patients with nonoperative widely metastatic progressing medullary thyroid cancer.
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PMID:Medullary thyroid cancer. 1205 61

Carcinoids are rare endocrine tumors that can develop in several organs in the body. Clinically, patients can have a wide spectrum of signs and symptoms that range from incidental findings of a polyp during endoscopy to the carcinoid syndrome characterized by severe flushing, diarrhea, abdominal cramping, and life-threatening right-sided heart failure. Most carcinoid tumors are indolent but can metastasize to regional lymph nodes and to other organs, including the liver, bone, and the central nervous system. Treatment is determined by tumor location and by the presence of distant metastasis. Surgical resection of the tumor is advocated in patients with localized disease and can often be curative. Long-acting somatostatin analogs, including octreotide, octreotide long-acting repeatable, and lanreotide prolonged release, are effective in providing symptom relief in patients with the carcinoid syndrome. Patients with metastatic disease to the liver that is refractory to somatostatin treatment should be considered for hepatic artery occlusion. Overall, 5- and 10-year survival rates in patients with metastatic disease are favorable, although tumors can be resistant to most forms of medical or surgical therapy.
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PMID:Carcinoid tumors. 1207 68

Pancreatic carcinoids are very rare and usually have a poor prognosis. We describe a case of a pancreatic carcinoid with liver micrometastases in a female of 54 years of age in whom the tumor was without pronounced symptoms apart from rare episodes of flushing. The patient had been treated since November 1995 with the somatostatin analogue octreotide 200 micrograms twice daily for the first 2 years, with the long-acting analogue lanreotide 30 mg every 10 days for the following year, and then with octreotide LAR 20 mg every 28 days until the present. The flushing episodes disappeared completely, and the patient was well. Moreover, the dimensions of the tumor and the liver micrometastases remained stable during the observation period. As far as we known, this is the first case of a pancreatic carcinoid treated successfully with somatostatin analogues and having a satisfactory prognosis.
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PMID:Carcinoid of the pancreas. 1212 97

Neo-adjuvant chemotherapy of epirubicin plus paclitaxel was administered to 23 patients with locally advanced breast cancer (including 13 cases of stage IIb, 6 of stage IIIa, and 4 of stage IIIb). All patients were female. They were treated with epirubicin 60 mg/m2, on day 1, by i.v. followed paclitaxel 150 mg/m2 by 3 hours continuous infusion on day 2 and every 3 weeks repeatedly. Premedication with dexamethasone, ondansetron, diphenhydramine and cimetidine were administered to prevent gastroenteric and allergic reactions before chemotherapy. Two to 4 cycles were used. Ten out of 23 patients had a complete response, 10 had partial response, and 3 had no change. The response rate was 87% (20/23). Six out of 23 patients underwent breast conserving surgery as tumor size had become smaller and downstaging was realized after neo-adjuvant chemotherapy. The major toxicities included neutropenia, myalgia, arthralgia, nephrotoxicity, gastroenteric reactions, alopecia and flushing to the face. However, these were well tolerated in these patients.
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PMID:[Clinical evaluation of effects from neo-adjuvant chemotherapy with epirubicin plus paclitaxel in cases of locally advanced breast cancer]. 1214 94

The therapeutic efficacy of weekly paclitaxel infusion for relapsed breast cancer patients is not known. We assessed safety, feasibility, and therapeutic efficacy in a pilot study of weekly 1-h low-dose paclitaxel infusion for relapsed breast cancer in an outpatient clinic. Eighteen patients with relapsed breast cancer who had received prior chemotherapy regimens, including anthracyclines, mitomycin, and 5-fluorouracil beyond a second line of treatment were enrolled into the study. The dose of paclitaxel was between 40 mg/m(2) and 80 mg/m(2) per week in a 1-h infusion, and a treatment cycle was 4 weeks until there was no evidence of progressive disease. When a dose of 80 mg/m(2) was administered, the treatment cycle was weekly infusion three times with a 1-week interval per 4-week cycle. The mean treatment period was 5.5 months and the maximal length of administration was 8 months. The overall response rate was 44.4%, including 2 cases of complete response and 6 cases of partial response. Tumor response was observed in 3 of 7 cases of lung metastases (42.8%), 6 of 12 cases of soft tissue metastases (50.0%), and 1 of 3 cases of liver metastases (33.3%), whereas 8 cases with bone metastases did not respond. The mean time to response was 1.8 months and the mean response duration was 4.3 months. The dose between 31.5 mg/m(2)/wk and 79.7 mg/m(2)/wk was not associated with tumor response. Toxicities associated with weekly 1-h low-dose paclitaxel infusion were tolerable, and most were less than grade 2, including alopecia (100%), neutropenia (88.8%), flushing (66.6%), face edema (61.1%), numbness (55.5%), and myalgia (38.8%). There was 1 case of grade 3 neutropenia. Weekly 1-h low-dose paclitaxel might be a therapeutically effective, safe infusion and feasible as a salvage chemotherapy for relapsed breast cancer patients following failure of prior chemotherapy.
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PMID:Feasibility and therapeutic efficacy of weekly 1-h low-dose paclitaxel infusion for relapsed breast cancer. 1246 61

We report a unique case of a patient with a neuroendocrine tumor localized to the bone marrow. The patient had a history of hairy cell leukemia, and the neuroendocrine tumor was detected in a bone marrow biopsy specimen obtained to assess response to 2-chlorodeoxyadenosine therapy. The neuroendocrine tumor was present as nodules that replaced approximately 15% of the bone marrow medullary space and was composed of round cells with fine chromatin, indistinct nucleoli, and relatively abundant, granular, eosinophilic cytoplasm. Histochemical stains showed cytoplasmic reactivity with Grimelius and Fontana-Masson stains, and immunohistochemical studies showed positivity for keratin and chromogranin. The histologic, cytochemical, and immunohistochemical features resembled a carcinoid tumor, and metastasis to the bone marrow was considered initially. The patient was asymptomatic without diarrhea, flushing, or cardiac valve disease. Serotonin production, assessed by the measurement of serum 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid and substance P levels, was normal. Extensive clinical and radiologic work-up and endoscopy of the gastrointestinal tract to detect a primary site other than the bone marrow were negative. Follow-up bone marrow biopsy 7 years after the initial diagnosis was positive for persistent neuroendocrine tumor. The patient has not received any therapy specific for the neuroendocrine tumor and has had no clinical symptoms or evidence of progression after 9 years of clinical follow-up. We suggest that this neuroendocrine tumor may have arisen in the bone marrow.
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PMID:Indolent neuroendocrine tumor involving the bone marrow. A case report with a 9-year follow-up. 1268 82

We report a potential pitfall of 123I-metaiodobenzylguanine (MIBG) scan. Magnetic resonance imaging performed for other reasons, showed 2.5 cm tumor in the left adrenal gland. On questioning patient had episodic palpitations, flushing and hypertension suggestive of pheochromocytoma. Urinary metanephrine level was of borderline value but serum chromogranin A level was clearly elevated. 123I-MIBG scan showed accumulation of the tracer in the upper left abdomen and the finding was suspected to be intra-adrenal pheochromocytoma. During operation two separate tumors, adrenocortical adenoma in the left adrenal gland, and another smaller, extra-adrenal paraganglioma locating very close to the adenoma, were found. Thus the positive MIBG finding was caused by a paraganglioma with the concurrent presentation of nonfunctioning adrenocortical adenoma.
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PMID:A pitfall of metaiodobenzylguanidine scan: paraganglioma in close proximity to adrenocortical adenoma. 1295 37

We report the case of a 62-year-old woman with parkinson's disease and depression. Her symptoms included episodes of flushing, palpitations and hypertension, giving rise to the suspicion of the existence of a phaeochromocytoma. The levels of adrenaline and vanillymandelic acid in the urine were moderately elevated, the noradrenaline level was high- normal. Upon further examination, there was no evidence of a phaeochromocytoma or a carcinoid tumor. In the literature, there are reports of pseudophaeochromocytoma in patients receiving levodopa. Elevated levels of catecholamins and their metabolites can be caused by the metabolic process of levodopa and levodopa can influence the outcome of laboratory tests. The patient's depression resolved and the flushing disappeared after treatment with antidepressants and after changing the Parkinson regime.
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PMID:[Pseudophaeochromocytoma in a Patient with Parkinson's Disease and Depression] 1313 Mar 38


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