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Query: UMLS:C0026764 (
multiple myeloma
)
36,148
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The risk of
cancer associated
with a broad range of organ doses was estimated in an international study of women with cervical cancer. Among 150,000 patients reported to one of 19 population-based cancer registries or treated in any of 20 oncology clinics, 4188 women with second cancers and 6880 matched controls were selected for detailed study. Radiation doses for selected organs were reconstructed for each patient on the basis of her original radiotherapy records. Very high doses, on the order of several hundred gray, were found to increase the risk of cancers of the bladder [relative risk (RR) = 4.0], rectum (RR = 1.8), vagina (RR = 2.7), and possibly bone (RR = 1.3), uterine corpus (RR = 1.3), cecum (RR = 1.5), and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (RR = 2.5). For all female genital cancers taken together, a sharp dose-response gradient was observed, reaching fivefold for doses more than 150 Gy. Several gray increased the risk of stomach cancer (RR = 2.1) and leukemia (RR = 2.0). Although cancer of the pancreas was elevated, there was no evidence of a dose-dependent risk. Cancer of the kidney was significantly increased among 15-year survivors. A nonsignificant twofold risk of radiogenic thyroid cancer was observed following an average dose of only 0.11 Gy. Breast cancer was not increased overall, despite an average dose of 0.31 Gy and 953 cases available for evaluation (RR = 0.9); there was, however, a weak suggestion of a dose response among women whose ovaries had been surgically removed. Doses greater than 6 Gy to the ovaries reduced breast cancer risk by 44%. A significant deficit of ovarian cancer was observed within 5 years of radiotherapy; in contrast, a dose response was suggested among 10-year survivors. Radiation was not found to increase the overall risk of cancers of the small intestine, colon, ovary, vulva, connective tissue, breast, Hodgkin's disease,
multiple myeloma
, or chronic lymphocytic leukemia. For most cancers associated with radiation, risks were highest among long-term survivors and appeared concentrated among women irradiated at relatively younger ages.
...
PMID:Radiation dose and second cancer risk in patients treated for cancer of the cervix. 318 29
We assessed the risk of occurrence of
cancer associated
with exposure to metronidazole in the 771 female residents of Rochester, Minnesota, who were treated with metronidazole for vaginal trichomoniasis during the period 1960 through 1969 and were followed up for a total of 12,628 person-years. Standardized morbidity and mortality ratios were determined by using an expected number calculated by applying age-specific incidence rates from Rochester studies and Cancer Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End-Results Reporting (SEER) data to the person-years of follow-up. The overall standardized morbidity ratios for cancer at all sites were 1.4 (Rochester, 1978 through 1983), 1.5 (SEER data for Iowa, 1978 through 1981), and 1.2 (SEER data for Connecticut, 1978 through 1981). By site of the cancers, the standardized morbidity ratios greater than unity were those for malignant lesions of the lung, breast, thyroid, bladder, brain, kidney, nasopharynx, and oral cavity, as well as for
multiple myeloma
and malignant melanoma; however, the only significantly elevated standardized morbidity ratio was that for bronchogenic carcinoma. After adjustment for smoking status, the standardized morbidity ratio for bronchogenic cancer was 2.5 (95% confidence interval of 1.3 to 4.4). The standardized mortality ratio for cancer at all sites was 1.4 (95% confidence interval of 0.9 to 2.2). The analysis of these data suggests no significant increase in cancer-related morbidity or mortality for women exposed to metronidazole for treatment of vaginal trichomoniasis.
...
PMID:Cancer after exposure to metronidazole. 333 6
Two hundred and thirty-six cases of multiple primary
cancer associated
with hematological malignancies, collected from 35 medical institutions in Japan, are reported. Based on the time interval between the first cancer and the second cancer, they were divided into three groups: synchronous cancer (94 cases), metachronous cancer subsequent to hematological malignancy (61 cases) and metachronous hematological malignancy subsequent to carcinoma (76 cases). The most common initial cancers were acute leukemia (including atypical leukemia and erythroleukemia), non-Hodgkin's lymphoma,
multiple myeloma
and chronic myelogenous leukemia of the hematological malignancies, and gastric cancer of the carcinomas. Patients with cancer of the uterus and breast in the metachronous cancer group metachronously developed hematological malignancies more frequently than those in the synchronous cancer group. Multiple primary cancer was observed more frequently in men than in women both in the synchronous cancer group and in the group with metachronous cancer subsequent to hematological malignancies. Acute leukemia was the most frequent disease type in incidence among the metachronous hematological malignancies. This secondary acute leukemia was characterized by a mostly granulocytic nature, poor response to chemotherapy and poor prognosis.
...
PMID:Multiple primary cancers associated with hematological malignancies. 400 83
Twenty-one patients with
multiple myeloma
were examined in close time relation with skeletal X-ray survey and bone scanning using technetium diphosphonate. Results indicate that X-ray is superior to bone scan in detecting myelomatous bone lesions. Approximately twice as many lesions were detected by X-ray as by bone scan. An exception to this general finding is the lumbar spine and rib
cage
, in which the two methods are equally reliable. Thus, a negative bone scan does not exclude the possibility of a myelomatous bone lesion.
...
PMID:Skeletal scintigraphy with technetium diphosphonate in multiple myeloma--a comparison with skeletal x-ray. 644 30
Amyloid fibrils from two cases of
cancer-associated
, systemic amyloidosis with renal cell carcinoma and mesothelioma as the respective underlying disorders were studied. The immunochemical studies suggested strongly that amyloid A comprised a principal fibril component in both cases of
cancer-associated
amyloidosis. This was definitively proven by amino acid sequence analyses, which revealed structural homology between a purified subcomponent of the amyloid fibrils from both of the two cases of
cancer-associated
amyloidosis and previously sequenced amyloid A proteins. The chemical composition of the amyloid fibrils from systemic amyloidosis associated with cancer thus corresponded to that seen in amyloidosis reactive to inflammatory diseases and Hodgkin's disease. Amyloid proteins of immunoglobulin light chain type, which are found associated with
myelomatosis
, macroglobulinemia, and idiopathic (primary) amyloidosis, were not found in the two amyloid preparations. Renal cell carcinoma appears to be an effective stimulator of amyloid formation, while only one case of amyloidosis associated with mesothelioma has been reported previously.
...
PMID:Amyloid A in systemic amyloidosis associated with cancer. 706 30
The sensitivity of radionuclide imaging for detecting skeletal lesions was compared with that of radiography by evaluating 573 different anatomical sites in 41 patients with
multiple myeloma
. Radiography revealed a significantly greater number of
myeloma
-related bone lesions than did radionuclide imaging. Of the 179
myeloma
-related bone lesions detected when both techniques were applied, 163 were seen by radiography and 82 by radionuclide imaging. Ninety-seven lesions were detected by radiography alone and 16 lesions seen by scintiscanning only, yielding a sensitivity of 91% for the former and of 46% for the latter technique. Radionuclide imaging proved superior to radiography only occasionally in the rib
cage
, and rarely in other anatomical sites. These findings suggest that radiography is the method of first choice in obtaining a skeletal survey in patients with
multiple myeloma
. In cases with continued pain, unexplained by standard radiography, the skeletal survey should be supplemented by tomography and radionuclide imaging.
...
PMID:Radiography and bone scintigraphy in multiple myeloma: a comparative analysis. 706 17
Normal skeletal integrity is maintained by physiological bone turnover through a coupled process of bone resorption, mediated by osteoclasts, followed by new bone formation, mediated by osteoblasts. Major features of the pathogenesis of
cancer-associated
skeletal destruction are enhanced osteoclast-mediated bone resorption and disruption of normal bone formation. In this article, the literature on the pathogenesis and clinical manifestations of metastatic bone disease is discussed. Animal and clinical trials investigating novel bone targeted agents, emphasizing the bisphosphonates, are critically assessed. The most frequent clinical manifestations of bone metastases are pain, fracture, immobility, spinal cord compression, and hypercalcemia. New treatments under study for patients with bone metastases include agents specifically targeted to the skeleton such as bone-seeking radioisotopes and bisphosphonates. Studies in animal models of metastatic bone disease show that these bisphosphonates are able to inhibit tumor-induced osteolysis and are potentially useful in this condition. Bisphosphonates have been investigated in several clinical trials of patients with skeletal metastases from breast cancer, prostate cancer, and
multiple myeloma
. Overall, the studies investigating bone targeted radioisotopes or bisphosphonates for the treatment of morbidity due to skeletal metastases have been inconclusive. An improved understanding of the pathogenesis of metastatic bone disease and preclinical studies with bisphosphonates suggest that these agents may have a role in the treatment of this disorder. Additional trials of new generation bisphosphonates, employing a rigorously controlled, randomized study design with adequate numbers of subjects, are needed to demonstrate the safety and efficacy of this class of agents in this setting.
...
PMID:New bisphosphonates in the treatment of bone metastases. 824 77
Rib lesions in 14 patients with
multiple myeloma
were evaluated by 99mTc-phosphorous compound bone scintigraphy and 67Ga scintigraphy. In the present study, in order to accurately detect rib lesions in
multiple myeloma
, bone and 67Ga scintigraphy were performed in 14 patients with
multiple myeloma
. The patterns of radionuclide accumulation in rib lesions on bone scintigraphy were classified by their grade, type, and site, and the findings were compared with the results of 67Ga scintigraphy. Thus, in cases of
multiple myeloma
, it was important to consider carefully both the intensity and the design of bone scintigraphy in combination with follow-up study by 67Ga scintigraphy. As a result of such consideration, we found that bone and 67Ga scintigraphy were useful in distinguishing invasive lesions from benign degenerative changes in the rib
cage
in cases with suspected rib involvement of
multiple myeloma
.
...
PMID:Bone and 67Ga scintigraphy in the evaluation of rib lesions in patients with multiple myeloma. 837 40
Genes that play roles in malignant transformation have often been found proximate to
cancer-associated
chromosomal breakpoints. Identifying genes that flank chromosomal reconfigurations is thus essential for cancer cytogenetics. To simplify and expedite this identification, we have developed a novel approach, based on simultaneous spectral karyotyping and fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) which, in a single step, can identify gross chromosomal aberrations as well as detect the involvement of specific loci in these rearrangements. Signals for specifically queried genes (FISH probe) were easily detectable in metaphase cells, together with the signals from painted chromosomes (spectral karyotyping probes). The concentration and size of the FISH probes could cover a wide range and still be used successfully. Some of the nucleotide-bound dyes used for the labeling, as Cy3, Spectrum Orange, Alexa 594, Texas Red, and Rhodamine 110, were particularly efficient. More than one gene can be queried in the same metaphase, because multiple FISH probes could be hybridized simultaneously. To demonstrate this technique, we applied it to the
myeloma
cell line Karpas 620, which has numerous chromosomal rearrangements. The approach that we present here will be particularly useful for the analysis of complex karyotypes and for testing hypotheses arising from cancer gene expression studies. Published 2000 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
...
PMID:Spectral karyotyping combined with locus-specific FISH simultaneously defines genes and chromosomes involved in chromosomal translocations. 1071 73
Anti-HER2/neu therapy of human HER2/neu-expressing malignancies such as breast cancer has shown only partial success in clinical trials. To expand the clinical potential of this approach, we have genetically engineered an anti-HER2/neu IgG3 fusion protein containing GM-CSF. Anti-HER2/neu IgG3-(GM-CSF) expressed in
myeloma
cells was correctly assembled and secreted. It was able to target HER2/neu-expressing cells and to support growth of a GM-CSF-dependent murine myeloid cell line, FDC-P1. The Ab fusion protein activated J774.2 macrophage cells so that they exhibit an enhanced cytotoxic activity and was comparable to the parental Ab in its ability to effect Ab-dependent cellular cytotoxicity-mediated tumor cell lysis. Pharmacokinetic studies showed that anti-HER2/neu IgG3-(GM-CSF) is stable in the blood. Interestingly, the half-life of anti-HER2/neu IgG3-(GM-CSF) depended on the injected dose with longer in vivo persistence observed at higher doses. Biodistribution studies showed that anti-HER2/neu IgG3-(GM-CSF) is mainly localized in the spleen. In addition, anti-HER2/neu IgG3-(GM-CSF) was able to target the HER2/neu-expressing murine tumor
CT26
-HER2/neu and enhance the immune response against the targeted Ag HER2/neu. Anti-HER2/neu IgG3-(GM-CSF) is able to enhance both Th1- and Th2-mediated immune responses and treatment with this Ab fusion protein resulted in significant retardation in the growth of s.c.
CT26
-HER2/neu tumors. Our results suggest that anti-HER2/neu IgG3-(GM-CSF) fusion protein is useful in the treatment of HER2/neu-expressing tumors.
...
PMID:Recombinant anti-human HER2/neu IgG3-(GM-CSF) fusion protein retains antigen specificity and cytokine function and demonstrates antitumor activity. 1104 42
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