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Query: UMLS:C0017636 (
glioblastoma
)
18,345
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We performed intraoperative radiotherapy (IORT) in 19 patients with various brain tumors. IORT was given for primary tumors in 2 patients with malignant glioma, but was used for treating recurrent tumors in the other 17 patients. The former 2 patients respectively received 33 Gy by IORT alone and 30 Gy by IORT in combination with 50 Gy of external beam radiotherapy (EBRT), and survived for 12 and 9 months. The latter 17 patients had received EBRT at 4 to 112 months before IORT. In this group, single doses of 23-40 Gy were delivered by IORT after removing as much tumor as possible. The median survival time after IORT was 12 months for 9 patients with
glioblastoma
or anaplastic astrocytoma, while it was 51 months for 8 patients with less infiltrative tumors (ependymoma, anaplastic ependymoma, and anaplastic
oligodendroglioma
). One patient with ependymoma and another with anaplastic ependymoma are currently alive with no evidence of disease at 7 and 11 years after IORT, respectively. Symptomatic brain necrosis occurred in 3 patients following IORT, but the symptoms were relieved in 2 of them by the removal of necrotic brain tissue. It is concluded that IORT combined with extensive tumor removal has an acceptable toxicity in previously irradiated patients and can be effective for selected recurrent malignant brain tumors.
...
PMID:Intraoperative radiation therapy for brain tumors with emphasis on retreatment for recurrence following full-dose external beam irradiation. 809 10
The cell-surface expression of major histocompatibility (MHC) antigens and the adhesion molecule intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (ICAM-1) is essential for target cell recognition by T lymphocytes. The expression of both classes of molecule is induced by various cytokines, notably interferon gamma (IFN gamma). Since transforming growth factor beta (TGF beta) has been recently reported to antagonise HLA-DR induction by IFN gamma we have examined, using a number of murine and human cell lines, the effect of TGF beta on IFN gamma-induced MHC class I and class II and ICAM-1 expression. All of the cell lines tested expressed elevated class I MHC following IFN gamma treatment. Class II MHC induction was seen on most but not all of the cells, the exceptions being among a panel of human colorectal carcinoma cell lines. A striking difference between cells of different origin was noted in the response to TGF beta. TGF beta was found to antagonise IFN gamma-induced class I and class II MHC expression on C3H 10T1/2 murine fibroblasts, early-passage BALB/c mouse embryo fibroblasts, a murine
oligodendroglioma
cell line, and on MRC5 human fibroblasts and two human
glioblastoma
cell lines. Class II MHC was much more strongly inhibited (sometimes completely) than class I MHC. TGF beta also inhibited induction of class I MHC expression by IFN alpha. However, TGF beta did not inhibit class I or class II MHC induction by IFN gamma in any of the nine colorectal carcinoma cell lines, although two of five of the lines tested were growth-inhibited by TGF beta. On the other hand, human ICAM-1 induction by IFN gamma was not affected by simultaneous treatment with TGF beta in any of the cell lines. The down-regulation of IFN gamma-induced MHC antigens by TGF beta is not, therefore, the result of a general antagonism of IFN gamma. Retinoic acid has recently been reported to induce ICAM-1 expression on human tumour cells. We have confirmed this observation on MRC5, and the two human
glioblastoma
cell lines, however six colorectal carcinoma cell lines tested did not respond. In contrast to IFN gamma-induced ICAM-1 expression, retinoic-acid-induced ICAM-1 expression was inhibited by TGF beta on two of the three responsive lines.
...
PMID:Interactions between interferon gamma and retinoic acid with transforming growth factor beta in the induction of immune recognition molecules. 810 Apr 85
Although intracranial gliomas carry a poor long-term prognosis, retreatment at the time of tumor progression may prolong survival and maintain or improve the quality of life. Thirty-three patients who underwent retreatment with surgery, radiotherapy, and chemotherapy were reviewed retrospectively. Median survival after initiation of retreatment was 8 months for
glioblastoma
, 13 months for anaplastic astrocytoma, 22 months for astrocytoma, and 47 months for
oligodendroglioma
/mixed glioma. Survival was significantly better for younger patients and for those with better functional status. One third of patients were neurologically improved by surgery. Surgical morbidity was minimal (2.1%); there was no surgical mortality. Chemotherapy and radiotherapy produced expected adverse reactions. Retreatment of intracranial gliomas carries acceptable risk and is beneficial in selected patients. Decisions regarding retreatment must be carefully individualized with consideration of the quality of life and the wishes of the patient and family.
...
PMID:Retreatment of intracranial gliomas. 811 86
We studied the immunohistochemical expression of integrin alpha and beta chains in the normal and neoplastic human brain. Normal astrocytes expressed alpha 2, alpha 3, alpha 6, beta 1, and beta 4 chains in some areas facing major interstitial tissues, but they were consistently negative for the other integrins examined (alpha 4, alpha 5, alpha V, alpha L, alpha M, alpha X, beta 2, beta 3). Neoplastic astrocytes in vivo and in vitro showed increased expression of alpha 3 and beta 1, and some also of alpha 5, alpha V, beta 3, and beta 4. Neoexpression of alpha 4 and reduced levels of beta 4 were detected in
glioblastoma
vascular proliferations compared with normal endothelial cells.
Oligodendroglioma
, ependymoma, choroid plexus papilloma, pituitary adenoma, and meningioma cells showed the same integrin pattern as their normal counterparts. Adhesion assays using the astrocytoma cell lines U-138 MG and U-373 MG revealed strong attachment to collagen types I to VI and undulin, which was inhibited by antibodies to beta 1, but not by those to alpha 2, alpha 3, alpha 6, and alpha V. We conclude that astrocytomas show increased levels or neoexpression of various integrins and strong attachment to various extracellular matrix components, which appears to be almost exclusively mediated by beta 1-integrins.
...
PMID:Characterization of integrin receptors in normal and neoplastic human brain. 831 46
The extraneural spreading of gliomas is an infrequent occurrence which is not necessarily related to either tumor histology or site. This paper reports two cases, a
glioblastoma
and an
oligodendroglioma
, both presenting extradural diffusion. In the first case, where there was severe intracranial hypertension, the tumor found its way out from the neurocranium, far from the site of the operation, perforating the dura and the bone of the cranial base. In the second case, the operation may have facilitated the extraneural invasion. This unusual behaviour of glial tumors is probably less rare than presumed. It may go unnoticed if the attention is concentrated on the usually severe neurological syndrome which is present in these patients.
...
PMID:The transdural extension of gliomas. 845 64
Intracranial neoplasms are an uncommon cause of symptomatic Parkinsonism and rest tremor. We found an incidence of 0.3% in a prospective evaluation of 907 patients with supratentorial tumours. Eight patients with Parkinsonism and rest tremor secondary to supratentorial tumours sparing the basal ganglia are reported. Neuro-imaging revealed compression and distortion of the basal ganglia by large tumours which were identified histopathologically as meningiomas in four patients and as an epidermoid, a fibrillary astrocytoma, an anaplastic
oligodendroglioma
and a
glioblastoma
. Six patients underwent tumour removal by craniotomy, in two the histopathology was obtained by stereotactic biopsy. Four patients were free of Parkinsonian symptoms and signs on long-term follow-up. The possible pathophysiological mechanisms involved are discussed. Since some of these patients closely resemble cases of idiopathic Parkinson's disease, and the movement disorder can precede other symptoms and signs or will remain isolated in the further course, the diagnosis of an intracranial neoplasm was generally delayed in these patients. Increased awareness of this rare entity may lead to an earlier diagnosis. Early computed tomography in patients with Parkinsonism might help to detect these patients with a potentially curable cause of their condition.
...
PMID:Parkinsonism and rest tremor secondary to supratentorial tumours sparing the basal ganglia. 856 Oct 31
We present the results of a retrospective survey of 1,218 patients treated at the Norwegian Radium Hospital during the years 1980-94 for primary tumours of the central nervous system. Median survival for patients with
glioblastoma
(n = 492) was 12 months, for patients with anaplastic astrocytoma (n = 83) 25 months, astrocytoma (n = 260) 95 months,
oligodendroglioma
(n = 85) 74 months, mixed glioma (n = 68) 65 months, and medulloblastoma (n = 53) 109 months. Median survival for patients with brain stem tumours (n = 37) was nine months, while 74% of patients with tumours in the pineal region (n = 38) survived for five years. The histology and localisation of the tumour, as well as age and functional status, are important prognostic factors for survival in patients with primary CNS tumours.
...
PMID:[Prognosis in primary tumors of the central nervous system. A patient material from the Norwegian Radium Hospital 1960-94]. 865 12
Tumor growth depends on cell division and cell death. To investigate the role of apoptosis in tumor cell death, we examined 83 cases of glial tumors using in situ nonradioactive tailing of DNA breaks. In addition, since p53 protein may participate in the regulation of apoptosis in
glioblastoma
, we compared the apoptosis ratio (AR) with the labeling index (LI) of p53 protein immunopositivity. The AR in glial tumor parenchyma ranged from 0 to 1.4%: mean AR +/- standard deviation was 0.4 +/- 0.4% (range, 0-1.4) for
glioblastoma
, 0.3 +/- 0.3% (range, 0.01-0.83) for anaplastic astrocytoma, 0.1 +/- 0.1% (range, 0-0.41) for low-grade astrocytoma, 0.006 +/- 0.008% (range, 0-0.02) for pilocytic astrocytoma, 0.2 +/- 0.2% (range, 0-0.62) for
oligodendroglioma
and 0.003 +/- 0.004% (range, 0-0.01) for ependymoma. ARs were significantly higher in higher-grade astrocytic tumors than in lower-grade tumors (Mann-Whitney U test: P = 0.0003), although wide variability in each group resulted in overlapping between the groups. p53 protein immunopositivity (more than 25% of nuclei) was found in 15 of 32
glioblastoma
cases, while in the remaining 17 none or only a low percentage (up to 6%) of the nuclei were positive. In p53 protein-positive cases mean AR (0.51 +/- 0.47%) was not significantly higher than that in p53 protein-negative cases (0.22 +/- 0.23%; P = 0.1681).
...
PMID:Apoptosis in glial tumors as determined by in situ nonradioactive labeling of DNA breaks. 877 55
At the time of recurrence, the majority of low-grade cerebral gliomas transform to a higher grade of histologic malignancy. The purpose of this study was to determine the survival outcome for patients whose anaplastic gliomas began as low-grade tumors compared with patients with de novo high-grade gliomas. Seventy-seven (11.5%) of 667 patients with anaplastic gliomas consecutively treated at the University of Alabama at Birmingham had histologically proven prior low-grade tumors. As a group, the patients with prior low-grade tumors would be expected to have a relatively favorable outcome, as they were younger and had a lower proportion of glioblastoma multiforme than the patients with de novo anaplastic gliomas. The provide a valid comparison, we performed a matched case-control study. We matched 68 patients from the prior low-grade group one-to-one with patients from de novo group for tumor histology, age, Karnofsky performance scores, and type of surgery, without knowledge of outcome. The two groups received comparable radiotherapy and chemotherapy. For the 68 patients with prior low-grade tumor, median actuarial survival from the time of diagnosis of malignant degeneration was 19.7 months and the 5-year survival rate was 22%, compared with 22.0 months and 28% for the 68 matched de novo patients. Kaplan-Meier survival curves for the two group did not significantly differ (p = 0.24 by logrank test). There were no significant survival differences between the patient subsets of prior low-grade versus de novo with
glioblastoma
, anaplastic astrocytoma, or anaplastic
oligodendroglioma
/mixed anaplastic glioma. The data indicate that the currently available treatment options, the survival outlook for patients with anaplastic gliomas, whose tumors arose from transformation of low-grade gliomas, is equivalent to the prognosis for patients with de novo anaplastic gliomas.
...
PMID:The prognostic impact of prior low grade histology in patients with anaplastic gliomas: a case-control study. 879 65
The role of inflammatory reactions in brain tumors is still unclear. In particular, there is little information about the participation of the microglia/macrophage cell system. We therefore investigated 72 surgical biopsy samples of brain tumors (astrocytoma,
glioblastoma
,
oligodendroglioma
, ependymoma, medulloblastoma, cerebral lymphoma, gangliocytoma, neurocytoma and germinoma) and the brains of eight cases with malignant gliomas that came to autopsy, using immunohistochemical markers for the monocyte/macrophage lineage (Ki-M1P, HLA-DR, KP1, My4, My7, Ki-M1, Ki-M6, EBM 11). These markers allowed us to characterize four subtypes of the microglia/macrophage cell system: ramified microglia, ameboid microglia, perivascular microglia and brain macrophages. Among the different tumors, glioblastomas and anaplastic gliomas showed the largest number of mixed cell populations, which consisted of macro-phages and ramified and ameboid microglia. In glial tumors of low malignancy fewer, predominantly ameboid, microglia were found. Neuronal tumors showed only a mild increase of microglia. Cerebral lymphomas contained macrophages diffusely distributed within the tumor center, while activated microglia were prominent at the border zone and in the adjacent brain tissue. The autopsy cases were used to study the morphometric distribution of microglia/macrophages. There was a significant increase of microglia/macrophages within the tumor, but no differences were seen between central and peripheral tumor areas. The non-neoplastic gray and white matter contained more microglial cells than controls. We conclude that the distribution pattern of ameboid and ramified microglial cells and macrophages is distinct in most of the investigated tumor types, underlining the complex immunological function of the microglia/macrophage cell system.
...
PMID:Distribution and characterization of microglia/macrophages in human brain tumors. 887 Aug 31
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