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Query: UMLS:C0019829 (
Hodgkin's disease
)
30,247
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
From September 1984 to July 1987, 33 children received intraoperative radiotherapy as part of a multidisciplinary tumor treatment. Their age ranged from 2 to 17 years. Tumors types: Ewing's sarcoma (n = 11),
osteosarcoma
(n = 8), soft tissue sarcomas (n = 5), Wilms' tumor (n = 3), neuroblastoma (n = 3), malignant pheochromocytoma (n = 1),
Hodgkin's disease
(n = 1), and optic nerve glioma (n = 1). In 25 patients the disease was localized while 8 had distant metastases. Intraoperative radiotherapy was used in 26 previously untreated patients as part of a radical treatment program and in 7 cases as an effort to rescue local failures (5 in previously irradiated areas). The intraoperative radiation field included the surgically exposed tumor or tumor bed, and the single doses ranged from 10 to 20 Gy, with 6-20 MeV electrons. Patients with
osteosarcoma
and recurrent tumor in a previously irradiated area did not receive postoperative external beam radiotherapy. With a median follow-up time of 10 months (1 to 31 + months) 24 out of 33 patients are alive without local recurrence and 9 have died from tumor (5 with local disease progression). Intraoperative radiotherapy seems to be a feasible treatment which might promote local control in pediatric tumors.
...
PMID:Intraoperative radiotherapy in the multidisciplinary treatment of pediatric tumors. A preliminary report on initial results. 273 16
Postoperative course is reported in 52 children with malignant tumors (neuroblastoma, Wilms-tumor, non-
Hodgkin
-lymphoma,
osteosarcoma
etc.) who were operated on between 1979 and 1987. 26 children received chemotherapy prior to surgery, whereas 26 children were operated on without preceding chemotherapy (control group). Most children were under six years of age. 15 Children (57.7%) with preoperative chemotherapy developed early postoperative complications, such as sepsis, pneumonia, suture dehiscence, woundhealing disturbances and ileus, whereas this was the case in only 5 children (19.2%) without preoperative chemotherapy (P 0.0005). Four of the children with preoperative chemotherapy (15.4%) sustained late complications, such as local recurrence or mechanical bowel obstruction, whereas none of the control children did so. Lethality rate from underlying disease did not differ in both groups during follow-up (5 = 19.2% vs. 5 = 19.2%). This demonstrates that the surgeon must carefully be aware of an increased possibility of early and late complications in children who have to undergo surgery for malignant tumors following preoperative chemotherapy.
...
PMID:[Postoperative course in children with malignant tumors following preoperative chemotherapy]. 273 47
Between 1950 and 1984 out of 57.393 women who delivered at the First Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Catania University Medical School, Catania, Italy, 40 cases of malignant neoplasia were diagnosed with an incidence of one case in 1.434 deliveries. The most frequent neoplasias is cervix carcinoma (21 cases; 52.5%), followed by breast cancer (6 cases; 15%), ovarian cancer (4 cases; 10%) and leukemia (4 cases; 10%). There was very rare association with
Hodgkin disease
(2 cases; 5%),
osteosarcoma
(1 case; 2.5%), medulloblastoma (1 case; 2.5%), and skin melanoma (1 case; 2.5%). Since cancer of the uterine cervix is the most frequent neoplasia (one cases out of 2.733 deliveries), cervical smear should be performed during pregnancy in women that never performed it.
...
PMID:[Cancer and pregnancy. Retrospective study on the frequency in 57,393 deliveries]. 276 32
Investigations of long term survival and evidence concerning cure among children surviving at least three years after most of the more common childhood cancers treated in Britain between 1960 and 1981 are reported. The results indicate striking improvements in survival beyond three years for many childhood tumours over this period. For most childhood tumours considered over 80% of those who had survived at least three years were alive 10 years later. Comparison of mortality observed among survivors with that expected for the general population showed evidence of cure among those who had survived at least three years after non-
Hodgkin
lymphomas and non-genetic retinoblastoma. Survivors of other tumours, with sufficient cases surviving beyond 10 years to examine excess mortality, rarely experienced an excess that exceeded one extra death per 100 survivors per year. Children who had survived at least 10 years after other embryonal tumours, soft tissue sarcomas, or
osteosarcoma
never experienced an excess mortality exceeding one extra death per 200 survivors per year.
...
PMID:Long term survival and cure after childhood cancer. 277 14
Among a cohort of 10,106 three-year survivors of childhood cancer, 90 second primary tumours (SPTs) were observed. Within 25 years of 3-year survival about 4% developed a SPT, about 6-fold expected, the relative risk not varying much with increasing follow-up. Following genetic retinoblastoma we observed 30-fold the expected number of SPTs, and over 400-fold the expected number of osteosarcomas. The risk of SPT in the absence of radiotherapy and chemotherapy (inherent risk) following genetic retinoblastoma was 13-fold expected and over 200-fold the expected number of osteosarcomas were observed. There was evidence that both radiotherapy and cyclophosphamide were associated with an increased risk of SPT. After all first primary tumours (FPTs) excluding retinoblastoma we observed almost 5-fold the expected number of SPTs. The inherent risk was 4-fold expected, the relative risks associated with radiotherapy but no chemotherapy, and both radiotherapy and chemotherapy were 6- and 9-fold expected respectively. There were about 20-fold the number of malignant bone tumours expected, most were
osteosarcoma
; also 7-fold the number of central nervous system tumours expected. There were 8 basal cell carcinomas and it seems likely that radiotherapy was involved in the development of some of these. Radiotherapy appears to have been involved in the development of many of the SPTs observed following all FPTs excluding retinoblastoma, particularly after CNS tumours, Wilms' tumour and
Hodgkin's disease
. Currently there is insufficient follow-up to examine the risk following chemotherapy. After acute leukaemia there was 20-fold the expected number of central nervous system tumours, though this is based on only 3 cases; whether therapy is directly involved in their development is uncertain. The risks we report are rarely greater than those reported in previous large-scale studies; in most instances they are substantially less. It is very unlikely that many SPTs were missed with our follow-up system so alternative explanations require further investigation; in particular it is possible the lower risks in our data compared to series treated in the United States may be explained, in part, by less combination therapy and lower doses of radiotherapy.
...
PMID:Incidence of second primary tumours among childhood cancer survivors. 282 73
We report 16 cases seen in the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center (MSKCC) during the past 50 years. These patients had been treated with external radiation for
Hodgkin disease
and had developed sarcomas in the field 4-31 years after the diagnosis of
Hodgkin disease
. Most of the tumors (12 of 16) occurred in the chest wall. There were three tumors of the pelvis and an unusual
osteosarcoma
of the femur following treatment for a primary
Hodgkin disease
of the femur. The tumors were predominantly osteosarcomas (9). In addition, there were five malignant fibrous histiocytomas, one fibrosarcoma, and one chondrosarcoma. Prognosis was poor; the mean survival was 12 months. Survival of patients with other primary cancers who developed radiation sarcomas was not significantly different from that of patients with
Hodgkin disease
.
Hodgkin disease
is now the most common tumor among radiation-induced sarcomas in previously normal bone and has surpassed breast cancer, which was previously the most common original tumor.
...
PMID:Postradiation sarcoma of bone in Hodgkin disease. 282 14
A significant amelioration of treatment results is achieved by sequential chemotherapy and radiotherapy in patients with
lymphogranulomatosis
of stage IIb to IVb and in patients with non-
Hodgkin
's lymphomas in corresponding stages. Similar results will probably be obtained in patients with small cell bronchial carcinomas in a limited stage. Patients suffering from an initially inoperable ovarian cancer often reach an operable condition by sequential chemotherapy and radiotherapy. In the stages Dukes B2 and C of the rectum carcinoma, preoperative and/or postoperative irradiation significantly reduces the recurrence rates and increases the survival times. A considerable reduction of recurrence rates is obtained by postoperative radiotherapy in soft tissue sarcomas of the stages T1 to T3. Another improvement is anticipated by a neutron or neutron boost irradiation for stage T3 and by adjuvant chemotherapy for G3 tumors. In the
osteosarcoma
of adult persons, the results of the limb-sparing sequential therapy will not be worse than the results achieved by amputation. Retrospective analyses of the long-term results of radical mastectomy and conservative operation with postoperative irradiation in case of mammary carcinoma did not show any difference for the stages T1 to T3, N0 to N1.
...
PMID:[Combined therapy of tumors in adults]. 300 69
This article reports a patient with
Hodgkin's disease
in remission after combined modality therapy who developed metastatic pulmonary
osteosarcoma
, subsequently found to originate in soft tissue of the mediastinum, within a field irradiated 11 years previously. This patient developed a series of radiotherapy-induced complications in addition to
osteosarcoma
. Only 16 cases of extraskeletal
osteosarcoma
after radiation treatment have been reported, none originating in the mediastinum. To the authors' knowledge, this is the first reported case of extraskeletal
osteosarcoma
occurring in a patient previously treated for
Hodgkin's disease
and with the sarcoma originating within the irradiated field.
...
PMID:Mediastinal osteosarcoma with extension to lungs in a patient treated for Hodgkin's disease. 305 84
Studies of the presenting height of children with malignancies have produced conflicting results, from an excess of taller patients to an excess of shorter patients. The problems of measurement bias, inadequate comparison populations, small numbers of patients, subgroup analyses, and overreliance on simple significance tests are all possible reasons for the variation in results. To clarify this issue, we studied heights at diagnosis of 3657 children and adolescents aged under 18 years. Their malignancies included acute lymphoblastic leukaemia, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma,
Hodgkin's disease
, acute non-lymphoblastic leukaemia,
osteosarcoma
, retinoblastoma, neuroblastoma, Wilms' tumour, rhabdomyosarcoma, and Ewing's sarcoma. Compared with published standards for the heights of children in control populations, no significant deviation from population norms was found for patients in any of the 10 disease categories after proper adjustment for multiple significance testing.
...
PMID:Height at diagnosis of malignancies. 360 84
A multicentre registry of children who had been successfully removed from therapy for some common childhood cancers (
Hodgkin's disease
, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, neuroblastoma, nephroblastoma, acute lymphatic leukaemia and other leukaemias) was established in Italy in 1981. The present study describes mortality and occurrence of second primary malignancies (SPMs) among 1467 children who were alive when the registry was established. Follow-up ended on December 31, 1983 for mortality and 1 year later for the occurrence of SPMs. Sixty-seven deaths were recorded, 11 of which were due to causes other than progression of the original disease. Eleven incident SPMs were identified (i.e. 3 acute myeloid leukaemias, 3 thyroid carcinomas, 1 bilateral breast carcinoma, 1 liver malignant mesenchymoma, 1 astrocytoma, 1 chondrosarcoma and 1
osteosarcoma
) corresponding to an incidence rate of 2.1/1000 patient-years at risk. Anecdotal reports were collected regarding 2 further SPMs (a thyroid carcinoma and a myeloid leukaemia) as well as several benign tumours, including 2 mammary fibroadenomas.
...
PMID:Late deaths and second primary malignancies among long-term survivors of childhood cancer: an Italian multicentre study. 365 74
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