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

This study evaluates the anti-tumor effect of cisplatin-loaded microspheres (CDDP-MS) against peritoneal carcinomatosis using human tumor xenografts. The incorporated CDDP was released from CDDP-MS for 3 weeks in vivo as well as in vitro. CDDP-MS at a dose of 35 mg/kg (at maximal tolerable dose (MTD)) showed effective anti-tumor activity (tumor growth inhibition rate (IR)=70.3%) against Li-7 (human liver cancer) xenografts transplanted into the peritoneal cavity. This procedure also resulted in increased life span (ILS (%)=47.2%), whereas CDDP dissolved in saline solution (CDDP-SOL) at a dose of 8 mg/kg (at MTD) was ineffective (IR=15.7%, ILS=2.6%). Likewise, CDDP-MS (35 mg/kg) significantly prolonged the mean survival time (ILS=50.8%) compared with a CDDP-SOL group (8 mg/kg) (ILS=13.1%) in the mice with Li-7 xenografts transplanted into the spleen. Furthermore, CDDP-MS showed markedly effective anti-tumor activity (IR=82.2%) against H-154 (human stomach cancer) xenografts, in which CDDP-SOL was effective (IR=69.5%) at the MTDs. The suppressive effect of CDDP-MS on accumulation of malignant ascites was intimately related to unchanged CDDP concentration in ascites. These results demonstrated that the administration of CDDP-MS resulted in an unchanged CDDP concentration in ascites, and induced a sustained tumor growth inhibition along with a prolonged survival time.
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PMID:Anti-tumor effect of intraperitoneal administration of cisplatin-loaded microspheres to human tumor xenografted nude mice. 1194 6

In this study, we evaluated and compared the value of spiral computed tomography, transabdominal ultrasonography, laparoscopy, and laparoscopic ultrasonography in staging gastric cancer in 37 patients; there was a special interest in the additional information provided by laparoscopic ultrasonography. Although laparoscopy was unreliable or hindered by adhesions in 11% of the patients, the benefit of laparoscopy for staging was evident especially for the detection of peritoneal carcinomatosis that was missed by the other diagnostic modalities. Laparoscopic ultrasonography did not change the stage of the disease nor the decision whether to proceed with laparotomy for any of the patients. The decision whether to proceed with laparotomy was correctly predicted in 95% of the cases.
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PMID:Staging of gastric cancer: a study with spiral computed tomography, ultrasonography, laparoscopy, and laparoscopic ultrasonography. 1194 91

Although ureteral obstruction is rarely noted in patients with gastric cancer at an advanced stage or at autopsy, the condition caused by authentic ureteral metastasis of gastric cancer is extremely rare. We experienced a case of gastric cancer in a 51-year-old woman who showed bilateral ureteral metastasis. The patient initially complained of right flank pain, caused by right ureteral obstruction, and was referred to our hospital, where she underwent a right nephroureterectomy, with suspicion of primary ureteral neoplasm. Histopathological examination of the resected specimen showed that metastatic growth of adenocarcinoma in the ureteral wall had caused the obstruction, and the subsequent extensive search for the primary lesion revealed asymptomatic gastric cancer. Soon after the nephroureterectomy, the patient developed left hydronephrosis, possibly caused by left ureteral metastasis, and a left percutaneous nephrostomy was performed. She then received chemotherapeutic reagents. However, she finally developed peritoneal carcinomatosis, and died of the disease about 1 year after the onset of the disease. In this report, we also review true ureteral metastasis from the stomach, and discuss the clinicopathologic features.
Gastric Cancer 2000 Sep 29
PMID:Gastric cancer recognized by metastasis to the ureter. 1198 19

We report a case of a male 64 years old with acute abdomen who was operated with the presumptive diagnosis of complicated acute appendicitis. However the patient had black stools for two months, associated with epigastric pain. Endoscopic diagnosis was: Advanced Gastric Cancer: Borrmann II. Histology was informed as: Infiltrating adenocarcinoma intestinal type middlingly differentiated. Surgery findings were: peritonitis with perforated appendicitis in its base: Free coprolites and carcinomatosis. Histology was reported as: ulcerated mucous in caecal appendix, necrosis and perforation of the muscular wall in the base. Mesentery samples were informed with fat tissue involvement by infiltration of tubular adenocarcinoma.middlingly differentiated, suitable with primary gastric cancer.
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PMID:[Complicated acute appendicitis as intercurrent disease in patient with advanced gastric cancer]. 1217 Feb 89

The peritoneal carcinomatosis is considered an unlikely treatable disease using standard procedures as surgery or systemic chemotherapy. New improvements in the knowledge of the peritoneum are inducing to consider the mesothelium of the abdominal cavity as an organ similar to the other body organs. This new consideration, unified with the understanding of conditions permitting the implant of the tumor cell into the peritoneal space previous or during the surgical manipulation of the abdominal cancers, leads to the application of news strategies as the advanced cytoreduction with every nodes reduced less than 2.5 mm followed by the chemohyperthermic peritoneal perfusion (CHPP). Last papers indicate improvements in overall survival and quality of the life in ovarian, colonic and gastric cancer treated with an extensive surgical debulking plus CHPP. These results induce surgeons and oncologists to avoid incorrect strategies in the treatment of peritoneal carcinomatosis originating from ovarian and gastrointestinal tumors. In case of malignant untreatable ascites a peritoneo-venous shunt allows a control of the ascites avoiding several hospital admissions for continuous fastidious and sometime dangerous paracentesis. A palliative surgical operation in selected patients effected by trained surgical group permits an improvement of the patient's conditions in more than 80% with a positive feed back on his or her psychological behavior.
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PMID:[Peritoneal carcinomatosis: new strategies for more efficacious treatment]. 1235 81

We analyzed patients who underwent multimodal treatment with peritonectomy as an aggressive treatment for peritonitis carcinomatosis. Peritonectomy was treated in eighteen cases (eleven gastric cancer, seven colon cancer). Out of these eighteen cases, nine were initial operation, six were recurrence after first operation and three were for relief after palliative operation for peritoneal dissemination. Five cases of recurrence included ileus. Of all eighteen patients, ten had received preoperative chemotherapies. Peritonectomy made complete resection possible principle, and the procedure included resection of the primary lesion, subtotal colectomy and peritonectomy. An intestinal stoma was needed in nine cases, consequently. All patients cases underwent continuous hyperthermic peritoneal perfusion (CHPP). Early postoperative peritoneal chemotherapy was given in five cases. By peritonectomy for a first time operation, macroscopically complete resection was possible in six cases. In relief and recurrence cases few tumor cells remained in five cases. Ileus due to peritoneal carcinomatosia was eliminated in all cases, and caloric intake became possible. Fourteen cases had postoperative complication (morbidity 78%), and treatment-related death occurred in three cases (mortality 17%). It became possible to resect even the peritoneal dissemination that was inoperable by conventional surgery, and improvement of QOL was achieved by peritonectomy in cases of carcinomatous peritonitis. However, postoperative care is important since aggression becomes more intense.
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PMID:[Significance of peritonectomy for peritonitis carcinomatosis]. 1248 30

Leptomeningeal carcinomatosis caused by metastatic gastric adenocarcinoma has been rarely reported in the United States. We present eight cases of patients with gastric cancer who subsequently developed meningeal carcinomatosis. On average, patients presented with symptoms of leptomeningeal disease (LMD) 12 months after the initial diagnosis. Distinguishing features include a predominance of poorly differentiated histology, typically associated with signet ring cells, a diffuse pattern of primary organ involvement, systemic dissemination in the form of peritoneal carcinomatosis, and development of LMD despite responsiveness to chemotherapy elsewhere in the body. The natural history of these patients, with or without treatment, was uniformly poor. Although previously thought to be an extremely rare event, LMD in the setting of gastric adenocarcinoma may be a problem on the rise, possibly due to the increasing survival times of patients. Physicians should have a high index of suspicion since no single test can reliably diagnose this entity in all cases. Furthermore, the striking clinical picture of patients with LMD raises interesting questions about the biology and metastatic behavior of certain subclasses of gastric cancer.
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PMID:Leptomeningeal carcinomatosis originating from gastric cancer: report of eight cases and review of the literature. 1271 89

The present multimodal treatment approach was designed to achieve prolonged tumor control in advanced gastric cancer. A total of 26 patients with stage IV gastric cancer (metastatic disease n=25), ECOG performance status 0-3 and laparoscopically evaluated peritoneal status received a modified EAP schedule to prove chemosensitivity and to mobilize autologous peripheral blood stem cells (aPBSC). Patients without progressive disease proceeded to tandem high-dose chemotherapy (HD-CT) and aPBSCT. Patients with >50% reduction of the target lesion received a second cycle of HD-CT. Responders were selected for local R0 resections (D2 resection) according clinical criteria. Of 26 patients, 20(77%) achieved partial remission after dose-intensive chemotherapy: local R0 resection was achieved in 12 out of 14 patients selected for surgery (46% of all patients). Eight of these R0-resected patients initially had peritoneal carcinomatosis. With a median follow-up of 3.2 years, four patients are still alive. The median overall survival was 8.4 months (CI 2.5-14.4 months), for histologic regression grade 3 (seven out of 25 patients, 28%) 29 months (CI 12-46 months). The combined treatment approach is tolerable and feasible in advanced disease and opens a therapeutic window for a significant proportion of patients, even in cases with histologically proven peritoneal carcinomatosis.
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PMID:A multimodal treatment approach including high-dose chemotherapy in very advanced gastric cancer: evidence for control of metastatic disease. 1313 Mar 13

A case of distant metastasis to mesh-plug prosthesis in gastrointestinal cancer is presented herein. An 88-year-old man had received mesh-plug repair with high ligation for a recurrence of a right inguinal hernia. Six months later, advanced gastric cancer and advanced transverse colon cancer were detected, and therefore a distal gastrectomy and partial colectomy were performed. Two weeks after the operation, the patient complained of right groin tenderness, and the mesh-plug prosthesis was removed to control any infection. A histopathological investigation demonstrated adenocarcinoma in the plug prosthesis. The patient died of carcinomatosis peritonei 45 days after the last operation.
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PMID:Distant peritoneal metastasis to a mesh-plug prosthesis in a gastrointestinal cancer patient: report of a case. 1460 60

Gastric cancer disseminates by hematogenous, lymphatic, and transcoelomic routes. For maximal containment of the malignant process, perioperative intraperitoneal chemotherapy is necessary in two groups of patients in whom the primary cancer can be resected. Those patients who have been resected for cure and have a high likelihood of microscopic residual disease require intraperitoneal chemotherapy. This includes all T3 and T4 patients, and patients with N2 nodes present. A series of randomized and nonrandomized clinical studies have established the benefits of perioperative intraperitoneal chemotherapy in this group of patients. Patients with stage IV disease who are able to undergo a palliative resection require these treatments if peritoneal seeding is observed. Systemic chemotherapy is largely ineffective for peritoneal seeding, while intraperitoneal chemotherapy is most likely to produce a response with small volume, surgically debulked carcinomatosis. In addition, intraperitoneal chemotherapy can eliminate the future development of debilitating ascites. Sufficient data are available from the gastric cancer literature to support the use of these combined treatments on a routine basis if the primary cancer is resectable and gastrointestinal function can be reestablished.
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PMID:Gastrectomy, peritonectomy, and perioperative intraperitoneal chemotherapy: the evolution of treatment strategies for advanced gastric cancer. 1464 81


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