Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0024623 (gastric cancer)
36,219 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Patients with myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) show a relatively high incidence of developing cancers. However, it is extremely rare that synchronous double cancers develop in an MDS patient. We report a case of MDS that progressed rapidly into erythroleukemia (M6 by French-American-British classification) complicated by gastric cancer and carcinoma of the papilla of Vater. A 66-year-old man was admitted because of pancytopenia with peripheral blasts. A diagnosis of MDS (with refractory anemia with excess of blasts in transformation [RAEB-T]) was made by bone marrow examination. Chromosome analysis revealed 46,XY. An early gastric cancer was also diagnosed by endoscopic examination. The peripheral blasts gradually proliferated and the disease progressed to M6. A chromosome abnormality 46,XY,del(1)(q42) was detected at the leukemic transformation. A CAG (low-dose cytarabine and aclarubicin in combination with granulocyte colony-stimulating factor) regimen was started as a remission-induction therapy. However, obstructive jaundice developed and a marked dilatation of bile ducts was observed by abdominal computed tomography (CT). A carcinoma of the papilla of Vater was detected by endoscopy. As remission was achieved and the pancytopenia improved, the patient subsequently underwent a surgical jejuno-choledochostomy to manage the jaundice. However, the leukemia relapsed thereafter and additional chromosome abnormalities including der(5)t(5;10)(p15:q11) were observed.
...
PMID:Myelodysplastic syndrome progresses rapidly into erythroleukemia associated with synchronous double cancers of the stomach and the papilla of Vater. 1153 Aug 7

TS-1, a novel oral formation of 5-fluorouracil that consists of 1M tegafur (5-FU), 0.4M CDHP and 1M Oxo, is reported to achieve a higher response rate of 49% in patients with advanced gastric cancer in a late phase II study. We report a case of recurrent gastric cancer that responded significantly to the short-term administration of TS-1. A 73-year-old man, who had undergone a curative distal gastrectomy with D2 lymphadenectomy 2 years earlier, had presented with obstructive jaundice resulting from cancerous lymphadenopathy. PTCD was performed for drainage, but cholestasis disappeared completely through the two courses of oral administration of TS-1. The serum level of transaminase and bilirubin remained within normal limits, even with PTCD unequipped, until the patient died of the original disease. The adverse effects observed with the drug were anemia (grade 1) and skin pigmentation (grade 2), both of which improved soon after discontinuing the medication. In conclusion, TS-1 may be well-tolerable and effective in some cases of terminal-stage and/or recurrent gastric cancer, especially those associated with obstructive jaundice arising from the cancerous lymphadenopathy, in that patient QOL can be maintained to a much greater extent.
...
PMID:[Case report: a recurrent gastric cancer in the terminal stage, associated with obstructive jaundice which responded significantly to oral administration of TS-1]. 1168 Dec 55

Gastric cancer is rarely associated with obstructive jaundice, which is associated with poor survival. We describe five patients with gastric cancer who presented with jaundice. Two patients had primary gastric cancer and three had recurrent disease. The patients were treated by operation, chemotherapy, and percutaneous transhepatic biliary drainage (PTBD) according to the stage of the cancers. Although these treatments often fail to prolong survival, chemotherapy and PTBD can improve patient's quality of life.
Gastric Cancer 1999 May
PMID:Gastric cancer presenting with obstructive jaundice. 1195 75

We report 3 cases in which palliation was achieved with every-other-day administration of TS-1 for recurrent or non-curative advanced gastric carcinoma that had resulted in obstructive jaundice. Two patients had received MTX-5-FU chemotherapy as first-line therapy and showed progressive disease, presenting with obstructive jaundice 6-24 months later. One of them experienced obstructive jaundice 2 months after surgery. After lowering serum bilirubin via per-cutaneous transhepatic biliary drainage (PTBD), TS-1 was given not in full dose but every other day based upon Shirasaka's theory, as well as for fear of further liver damage. Palliation in terms of long NC and/or decreased serum CEA level persisted for 4-14 months without severe liver dysfunction. Other side effects of the drug were negligible. Shirasaka's theory stresses the difference in proliferation cycles between cancer cells and normal tissue cells (GI tract, bone marrow, etc.); therefore, with every-other-day administration of chemotherapeutic agents, the cytotoxic effects against tumors would be augmented while the adverse reactions in normal cells could be reduced. The present experience seems to support the theoretical and clinical feasibility of every-other-day TS-1 administration for unresectable gastric cancer.
...
PMID:[Every-other-day TS-1 administration for recurrent or non-curative advanced gastric carcinoma]. 1235 55

In the present report, we describe the treatment results of paclitaxel in patients with metastatic gastric cancer previously treated with TS-1 or combination chemotherapy of TS-1 and CDDP. Paclitaxel was administered to 4 patients at a weekly dose of 80 mg/m2/day for three weeks followed by a one week interval. Remarkable tumor reduction was observed in 2 patients. Case 1: A 52-year-old male patient with gastric cancer and multiple liver metastases was treated by weekly infusion of paclitaxel as a 2nd line chemotherapy. After 1 course, the tumor was remarkably reduced, and the reduction was judged PR. Case 2: A 31-year-old male patient presented with lymphoangitis carcinomatosa and obstructive jaundice resulting from cancerous lymphoadenopathy. After 1 course, chest radiographs and abdominal CT scan showed remarkable reduction of these lesions. The adverse effects observed with this drug were leucocytopenia and liver dysfunction, both of which improved soon. These results indicate paclitaxel is effective for advanced gastric cancer pretreated with TS-1.
...
PMID:[Treatment outcomes with paclitaxel for advanced gastric cancer patients previously treated with TS-1]. 1255 19

An 18 cm x 16 cm x 10 cm tumor of the stomach, invading the left lobe of the liver, pancreatic body and tail, and transverse colon, with peritoneal deposits on the major omentum, was resected by total gastrectomy plus left hepatic lobectomy, transverse colectomy, distal pancreatectomy, splenectomy, and omentectomy. Histopathologically, the tumor consisted of large uniform cells with significant nuclear atypia, showing solid growth patterns with occasional small nests without adenocarcinoma components. Immunohistochemical investigations of the neoplastic cells confirmed the tumor as a neuroendocrine (NE) carcinoma. molecular analyses disclosed loss of heterozygosity at the MEN1 gene locus on chromosome 11q13. Recurrence occurred at the hepatic hilus and incurred obstructive jaundice 2 months after surgery. Following percutaneous transhepatic biliary drainage, intensive chemotherapy (20 mg/m(2) cisplatin on days 1-5 div, 100 mg/m(2) etoposide on days 1, 3, and 5 div, and 800 mg/m(2) 5-fluorouracil on days 1-5 bolus iv) was started. The recurrent tumor shrank dramatically, and could not be detected on image modalities after five courses of chemotherapy. The patient was well and free of symptoms without biliary drainage for 5 months. Then he began to present with jaundice again, and died of acute massive dissemination 7 months after surgery. An aggressive form of NE carcinoma has been known to be associated with an extremely poor prognosis. However, it is notable that treatment with extensive surgery and intensive chemotherapy could contribute to an improvement in quality of life even if the beneficial effect lasted for only half a year.
Gastric Cancer 2003
PMID:A case of aggressive neuroendocrine carcinoma of the stomach. 1267 27

A 64-year-old man underwent gastrectomy and partial liver resection for gastric cancer and liver metastasis, and was administered intra-arterial infusion chemotherapy for metastases of the remnant liver. This treatment was very effective against the liver metastases, but 13 months after the operation obstructive jaundice occurred. An examination revealed obstruction of the bile duct and choledocholithiasis. The choledocholithiasis was treated using a percutaneous transhepatic cholangio-scope, and choledocho-duodenostomy was performed for the obstruction of the bile duct. Findings from the operation suggested that the obstruction was caused by the intra-arterial infusion chemotherapy. At present, 2 years after the first operation, the patient is alive without the regrowth of the liver metastasis.
...
PMID:[A case of gastric cancer with liver metastasis in which obstruction of the bile duct and choledocholithiasis was caused by intra-hepatic arterial infusion chemotherapy]. 1272 86

An 83-year-old man was admitted to our hospital complaining of general fatigue, fever, and obstructive jaundice. Percutaneous transhepatic bile duct drainage was performed. Gastroduodenal fiberscopy revealed carcinoma of the ampulla of Vater, and early gastric cancer was suspected. A pancreatoduodenectomy with lymph node dissection was performed. Although a biopsy specimen from the gastric lesion was suspected to be well-differentiated adenocarcinoma, no cancerous lesion was found in a specimen resected from the stomach. The histopathologic findings of the ampullary lesion were compatible with a diagnosis of signet-ring cell carcinoma. This is a rare lesion, and a review of the literature revealed only three previous similar cases.
...
PMID:Signet-ring cell carcinoma of the ampulla of Vater: report of a case. 1276 76

Obstructive jaundice is a terminal symptom of gastric cancer. A 45-year-old female patient had a recurrent gastric cancer at the pancreas head and it caused obstructive jaundice. She was treated with percutaneous transhepatic cholangio-drainage, followed by radiotherapy and chemotherapy with cisplatin, epirubicin and 5-FU, which resulted in a prominent response and a self-expandable metallic stent was placed into the bile duct. After 11 months, however, the tumor recurred and the bile duct was obstructed again by an invading tumor. She was retreated with percutaneous transhepatic cholangio-drainage for jaundice, followed by chemotherapy with oral TS-1. Her recurrent tumor dramatically responded again, and cholangioscopic microwave coagulation therapy was applied for the first time through a cholangio-drainage route and an additional metallic stent was inserted into the bile duct. After these therapies she has been disease--free for more than 2 years. In conclusion, the placement of a self-expandable metallic stent in combination with cholangioscopic microwave coagulation therapy and TS-1 was very effective in managing the obstructive jaundice due to the local recurrence of gastric cancer.
...
PMID:A self-expandable metallic stent in combination with cholangioscopic microwave coagulation therapy and chemotherapy with oral TS-1 against obstructive jaundice due to recurrent gastric cancer: a case report of successful treatment. 1282 Apr 61

Many complications frequently occur in gastric cancer patients which require urgent treatment. Oncologic emergencies in gastric cancer vary widely and include hemorrhage, perforation and obstruction due to gastric cancer tumors, obstructive jaundice, hydronephrosis, intestinal obstruction and disseminated intravascular coagulation due to advanced metastatic, recurrent, or systemic tumors, and adverse effects secondary to chemotherapy. In gastric cancer treatment, we must recognize the occurrence of oncologic emergencies resulting from gastric cancer progression and recurrence. It is important that the knowledge of advanced stages and the prognosis of gastric cancer patients be taken into consideration when treating patients in a critical state.
...
PMID:[Oncologic emergencies in gastric cancer patients]. 1511 89


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 Next >>