Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0017636 (glioblastoma)
18,345 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Among the 54946 post-mortem examinations carried out by the Pathological Institute of the Medical Academy of Erfurt in the years 1953 to 1976 with a total of 1491 DNS-tumours (2.7%), the temporal lobe was involved in the following 10 types of tumours: glioblastoma, ependymoma, oligodendroglioma, plexus papilloma, tumour-like gliosis, sarcoma, angioma and angioblastoma, epidermoid tumour, teratoma. Only tumours that had formed in the cerebral tissue proper were evaluated, so that meningiomas and other tumours of the meninges or tumours of the meninges in the middle cranial fossa were left out of consideration. In a total of 949 cases of the above mentioned 10 tumours types, the temporal lobe was involved in 327 (34.5%) cases; these were mainly astrocytomas and glioblastomas (86.5%). Only 63 of the 327 tumours (19.3%) were exclusively located in the temporal lobe. The age peak of the occurrence of temporal lobe tumours was in the 6th decennium. The male showed with 55.4 per cent a slightly greater incidence. CLinically, the left-sided temporal lobe tumours with 79 per cent of the observations were found more frequently than the right-sided ones (67%). Accordingly, left-sided tumours were operated on more frequently (49%) than tumours on the right-hand side (40%).
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PMID:[Localization of brain tumors in autopsy. Part I: Tumors of the temporal lobe]. 734 Mar 11

In 1955, Collins made the observation that tumor recurrence in children with Wilms' tumor was correlated with the child's age plus 9 months. This concept of a period of risk for recurrence was later applied to a variety of tumors in children and became known as Collins' Law (CL). The law has been a successful predictor of survival for some children with neural tumors within the central nervous system and a poor predictor for others. We tested Collins' concept of a period of risk for recurrence and extended it to survival for 14 childhood neural tumors described in the Childhood Brain Tumor Consortium (CBTC) database. The CBTC data describe clinical, surgical, and histological details (over a 49-year period in 10 institutions) from 3921 patients under the age of 21 years at the time of their first surgical procedure for a brain tumor. CL was considered to be a good predictor of survival if fewer than 10% of patients who die survive beyond the expiration of the period of risk for that child. We found that CL applied to tumors such as anaplastic astrocytoma, glioblastoma, pineoblastoma, medulloblastoma or "primitive neuroectodermal tumor," teratoma, and germinoma, as well as ependymoma, papilloma, and tumors that could not be classified; it had no predictive value in craniopharyngioma, oligodendroglioma, or plain, fibrillary, pilocytic, or protoplasmic astrocytoma. We had sufficient follow-up data to determine adherence to CL when the child's age at diagnosis was less than 8 years; it is likely that CL applies to older children with these tumors, but we did not have the data to show this unequivocally.
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PMID:The applicability of Collins' Law to childhood brain tumors and its usefulness as a predictor of survival. 764 86

Intracranial tumours, often presenting with progressive hydrocephalus, are rare congenital diseases accounting for 0.5-1.5 per cent of all cases of brain tumours diagnosed during childhood. The differential diagnosis includes vascular malformations, infarctions, and haemorrhages. Sonographic signs suggestive of glioblastoma, teratoma, and astrocytoma do not establish the histological diagnosis, however. We report a case of an undifferentiated fetal glioma detected at 29 weeks' gestation. The diagnosis of an undifferentiated brain tumour was suspected by sonography because of the lack of normal brain structures in conjunction with a diffuse echogenic central lesion and an external hydrocephalus. Because of the very poor prognosis, we induced labour by intravaginal and intravenous administration of prostaglandin E2 and achieved the vaginal delivery of a stillborn child whose head circumference corresponded to 38 weeks of pregnancy. Histological and immunochemical features of this undifferentiated congenital glioma (glioblastoma) are presented.
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PMID:Prenatal diagnosis of a highly undifferentiated brain tumour--a case report and review of the literature. 935 78

The authors retrospectively reviewed 48 patients treated at Seoul National University Hospital (SNUH) between 1986 and 1995. There were 35 children and 13 adults, accounting for 10.1% of 345 pediatric and 0.68% of 1914 adult brain tumors in SNUH during the same period. The 48 cases consisted of 33 cases of germ cell tumor (69%, GCT); 6 of pineoblastoma (PB, 12.5%); 3 of pineocytoma (PC, 6.3%); 3 of anaplastic astrocytoma (6.3%); 1 of astrocytoma; 1 of glioblastoma; and 1 of ependymoma. The median age was 13 years (range 1-59) and the male-to-female ratio was 3.36:1. The most frequent presenting symptom was due to increased intracranial pressure (90%), followed by Parinaud syndrome or diplopia (50%). Patients with a benign tumor, such as teratoma (TE), astrocytoma, or ependymoma, underwent surgery by the occipital transtentorial approach (OTT) for attempted radical resection without adjuvant therapy, while patients with immature teratoma (imTE), PC, and anaplastic astrocytoma underwent regional radiotherapy (RT) after debulking via OTT. Seven patients with nongerminomatous malignant GCT (NG-MGCT) and 3 with germinoma (GE) underwent craniospinal radiation only, 6 with GE, a NG-MGCT, and 2 with GE+TE received craniospinal radiotherapy (CSRT) after debulking via OTT. Three patients with GE, 4 with NG-MGCT, and 3 with PB underwent radiochemotherapy after debulking via OTT. Forty-four patients were followed up after treatment. The median follow-up period was 36 months. All patients with GE were alive after RT at 36 months (median) of follow-up (range 7-70 months). All with GE+TE and TE were alive. Three patients with PC or astrocytoma were also alive with stable or no evidence of disease. In 1 of the 3 cases of imTE there was a recurrence. However, 4 patients with NG-MGCT died, all of whom had undergone CSRT only; 2 PB patients were alive (12, 19 months), 1 in a moribund status (36 months), and 2 were dead (6, 60 months). The overall mean survival time with pineal tumors was 66 months and the 3-year survival rate was 84% with minimal posttreatment complications. It is concluded that pineal region tumors have male and childhood predominances, and the most common tumor is GCT. The majority of pineal region tumors are malignant. Pineal region tumors can be approached safely and effectively and the surgical complications are mostly transient. Their prognosis is dependent on the pathologies and treatment modalities.
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PMID:Pineal tumors: experience with 48 cases over 10 years. 954 42

Malignant change to glioblastoma multiforme in a mature cystic teratoma (dermoid cyst) is exceptionally rare. Besides a report on such a case we give a brief review of the literature on this subject and a comment on treatment. The reported case is about a 41-year-old woman with a mature cystic teratoma of the ovary with transformation to glioblastoma multiform. The tumor was limited to the ovary and completely excised by salpingo-oophorectomy. Three and a half years after surgery the patient is alive without evidence of recurrent disease. For limited stage Ia tumors we found support in the literature for expectant management after surgery, without adjuvant chemotherapy.
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PMID:Glioblastoma multiforme in a dermoid cyst of the ovary. A case report. 1041 Aug 81

Various histological types of tumors arise in the pineal region. The most common tumors are pineal parenchymal tumors and germ cell tumors. Pineal parenchymal tumors are divided into pineocytoma, pineal parenchymal tumor with intermediate differentiation and pineoblastoma. Pineocytomas are well-differentiated tumors and retain the morphological and immunohistochemical features of pineal parenchymal cells. Lobular architectures and pineocytomatous rosettes are also typical features. In contrast, pineoblastomas are embryonal tumors resembling primitive neuroectodermal tumors (PNET). However, pineoblastomas are distinct from PNET in other sites due to their exhibiting photosensory differentiation including Flexner-Wintersteiner rosettes and fleurettes. Although pineal cysts are tumor-like lesions, and not true neoplasms, they are occasionally difficult to distinguish from pineocytoma and astrocytoma. From the therapeutic aspect, a precise differential diagnosis is critical. The pineal region is the most common site of the brain in which germ cell tumors occur. Germinoma, teratoma, embryonal carcinoma, yolk sac tumor and choriocarcinoma are encountered, and the latter three types of tumors usually constitute elements of mixed germ cell tumors. The morphological and immunohistochemical features of intracranial germ cell tumors are very similar to those of gonadal germ cell tumors, although there are some differences in germinoma. Pineal germinoma may exhibit carcinomatous differentiation. Other types of tumors are occasionally observed, including fibrillary and pilocytic astrocytoma, glioblastoma, ependymoma, melanoma, meningioma and so on. Metastatic pineal tumors are also rare. The most common site of origin for pineal metastasis is the lung.
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PMID:Pathology of pineal region tumors. 1176 90

Immature teratomas of the ovary represent less than 1% of all ovarian teratomas. They contain several tissues that derive from the three embryological layers: ectoderm, mesoderm and endoderm. They are rarely associated with peritoneal implants that are essentially composed of mature glial tissue, and of benign evolution. We report the case of a 37-year- old woman who presented an immature teratoma of the right ovary that recurred seven years later as a malignant neuroepithelial peritoneal tumor resembling a glioblastoma. Glioblastoma was diagnosed at a second recurrence six months later. We discuss the histopathogenesis of peritoneal implants secondary to immature teratomas.
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PMID:[Peritoneal glioblastoma: recurrence of ovarian immature teratoma (report of a case)]. 1212 96

Immature teratomas of the ovary represent less than 1% of all ovarian teratomas. They contain several tissues that derive from the three embryologic layers: ectoderm, mesoderm, and endoderm. We report the case of a 17-year-old girl who presented with an immature teratoma of the left ovary that recurred 3 months later as an inoperable malignant neuroepithelial peritoneal tumor resembling a glioblastoma. She died 3 weeks after the second explorative operation. The very aggressive course and fast lethal outcome could be explained by the patient's refusal to receive chemotherapy after the initial operation.
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PMID:Immature ovarian teratoma in a young girl: very short course and lethal outcome. A case report. 1582 30

Congenital brain tumors are rare. Clinically, they often result in macrocrania, hydrocephalus, and focal neurologic deficits. Fetal onset may result in dystocia and stillbirth. Antenatal detection is becoming more common as the result of neuroimaging, and modalities such as magnetic resonance imaging can assist in narrowing the pathologic differential diagnoses. Teratomas and astrocytomas appear to be the most common congenital neoplasms. Amongst the latter, all grades and many subtypes are represented in the congenital time period, including the diffusely infiltrative forms of astrocytoma. Gliosarcoma is currently considered a variant of glioblastoma (i.e., astrocytoma, World Health Organization grade IV) that exhibits genetically similar yet phenotypically separate histologic regions of high-grade astrocytoma and sarcoma. Only rare instances of congenital gliosarcoma have been reported. We detail the case of a 1-day-old term male who presented with macrocrania, hydrocephalus, and signs of increased intracranial pressure. Pathology revealed evidence of a classic gliosarcoma.
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PMID:Congenital gliosarcoma: detailed clinicopathologic documentation of a rare neoplasm. 1988 37

Gliosarcoma is a rare variant of glioblastoma with a biphasic pattern showing glial and mesenchymal differentiation. It is seen in adults during their fifth to sixth decades of life and is extremely rare in children. We report a case of primary gliosarcoma with fibrosarcomatous differentiation in an 11-year-old boy presenting with headache and vomiting. Imaging showed a contrast-enhancing isodense space-occupying lesion with areas of calcification in the right temporoparietal cortex. A total excision was done and, on histopathologic examination, a differential diagnostic consideration of gliosarcoma and teratoma with malignant transformation was made. After immunohistochemical analysis, a final diagnosis of gliosarcoma with fibrosarcomatous differentiation was then made. Primary gliosarcoma is a very rare tumor in children with a poor prognosis.
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PMID:Pediatric gliosarcoma with fibrosarcomatous differentiation: report of a rare case. 2345 94


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