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Query: UMLS:C0027497 (
nausea
)
23,468
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
From April 89 to October 90, 41 patients operated for a
Dukes
B or C colorectal cancer were randomized to receive 6 courses of adjuvant treatment with (A) 5-FU alone (440 mg/m2 IV bolus 5/21 days) or (B) folinic acid (200 mg/m2 IV bolus 5/21 days) preceding 5-FU (370 mg/m2 in short infusion 5/21 days). Ten patients received also one course of immediate post-operative continuous portal infusion (5-FU 500 mg/m2/day x 7 followed by a 2 hours infusion of mitomycin C 10 mg/m2). The portal treatment was well tolerated (1 case of GI tract disturbances, 1 catheter obstruction). The toxicity of adjuvant systemic treatment was evaluated on 232 courses (125 A, 107 B). Hematologic and skin toxicities, alopecia and
nausea
-vomiting were mild. The limiting toxicities (expressed as percentages of courses) were stomatitis (grades 2-3: 11.4% A; 22.6% B) and diarrhea (grades 3-4: 7.3% A; 14.2% B; one toxic death was to deplore in arm B from a grade 4 diarrhea). The pilot study has demonstrated the feasibility of the adjuvant treatment proposed; a multicentric randomized trial (expected accrual: 800 patients) has therefore been activated on 11.01.90; all patients will also receive levamisole while radio-therapy will be mandatory for rectal cancer.
...
PMID:[Tolerance of adjuvant treatment combining postoperative intraportal chemotherapy and a systemic treatment based on 5-fluorouracil in colorectal carcinoma with a histologically poor prognosis]. 146 46
Turcot's syndrome is a rare, genetically transmittable disease in which patients with colonic polyposis (possibly complicated by the progression to adenocarcinoma) have malignant central nervous system neoplasms. Dominant, recessive, and sporadic cases have been described. A 26-year-old man is reported with no relevant family history who had intermittent abdominal discomfort in 1986. Sigmoidoscopy revealed numerous polyps, several of which showed carcinomatous change.
Dukes
' Stage C colorectal carcinoma was diagnosed. Treatment consisted of total colectomy with construction of a Koch's pouch. He remained well for 3 years until onset of headache,
nausea
, and vomiting. Computed tomographic scan disclosed a large, circumscribed, enhancing, right frontoparietal mass. After craniotomy and partial resection, histologic review disclosed anaplastic astrocytoma. He received cranial radiation therapy, 6000 cGy, by parallel opposed ports to the tumor bed, and carmustine 200 mg/m2 intravenously every 8 weeks. Flow cytometric DNA analysis was done on the paraffin-embedded archival material from the patient's normal colon, colonic adenocarcinoma, and anaplastic astrocytoma. DNA histograms revealed diploid distributions in all three samples. The G2/M fraction of the astrocytoma was elevated at 16%, and the S-phase fraction of the colonic adenocarcinoma was 19.4%.
...
PMID:Turcot's syndrome. Flow cytometric analysis. 165
The chemistry, pharmacology, pharmacokinetics, assay methodologies, adverse effects, and dosage of levamisole are described, and the clinical studies of levamisole therapy in patients with colorectal carcinoma are reviewed. Levamisole is a synthetic, orally active agent that has antihelmintic and immunomodulatory properties. It is capable of inducing T-cell differentiation and restoring depressed effector functions of peripheral lymphocytes and phagocytes to normal. The drug is well absorbed from the gastrointestinal tract after oral administration and is extensively metabolized by the liver. Gas chromatography and high-performance liquid chromatography are the most common methods used to measure concentrations of levamisole in biologic fluids. Levamisole combined with fluorouracil has been associated with a one-third reduction in recurrence and risk of death in patients with surgically resected
Dukes
stage C colon cancer; this combination is now recommended as standard therapy in these patients. Uses in patients with rectal carcinoma,
Dukes
stage B colon cancer, metastatic colon cancer, other malignancies, or nonmalignant disorders remain investigational. Common adverse effects include
nausea
, abdominal pain, vomiting, diarrhea, metallic or altered taste, flulike symptoms, mood elevation, insomnia, hyperalertness, dizziness, and headache. The most serious adverse effect associated with levamisole is granulocytopenia. The FDA-approved dosage of levamisole is 50 mg orally every eight hours for three days every two weeks. Levamisole therapy is to be initiated no earlier than 7 and no later than 30 days after surgery and is to be continued for one year. Levamisole combined with fluorouracil has been associated with a one-third reduction in recurrence and risk of death in patients with resected stage C colon cancer. Further research is needed to more clearly define the mechanism of action, optimum dose and scheduling, and clinical efficacy of levamisole in treating other malignancies.
...
PMID:Levamisole in the adjuvant treatment of colon cancer. 200 37
Levamisole, an anthelmintic agent with a wide range of immunomodulatory actions, has been used successfully as monotherapy and an adjunct to treatment in a variety of diseases. Since 1990, combination therapy of levamisole and fluorouracil has played an important role in the treatment of resected
Dukes
stage C adenocarcinoma of the colon. Because of its immunomodulating effects levamisole has been used in a wide range of diseases with and without success. In dermatologic disease levamisole has been successfully used in the treatment of parasitic, viral and bacterial infections including leprosy, collagen vascular diseases, inflammatory skin diseases and children with impaired immune a variety of reasons. It has also been used in combination with other drugs for treating a number of dermatologic disorders, e.g. in combination with cimetidine for treating recalcitrant warts, with prednisolone for treating lichen planus, erythema multiforme and aphthous ulcers of the mouth. Adverse affects of levamisole are mild and infrequent and include rash,
nausea
, abdominal cramps, taste alteration, alopecia, arthralgia, and a flu-like syndrome. It can rarely cause agranulocytosis. More studies need to be undertaken to study the full potential of levamisole in dermatologic diseases.
...
PMID:Levamisole in dermatology : a review. 1510 74
(1) The standard treatment for colon cancer is surgical excision, but without additional treatment nearly 50% of surgically treated patients die from relapse and metastatic disease progression. Adjuvant chemotherapy is designed to reduce the risk of post-surgical relapse. (2) The standard adjuvant chemotherapy is a combination of fluorouracil + folinic acid administered intravenously for 6 months (de Gramont protocol). (3) In patients with stage III disease (corresponding to
Dukes
stage C: lymph node involvement but no metastases), the 5-year survival rate after a 6-month course of fluorouracil + folinic acid is significantly higher than with placebo (63% versus 51%). The efficacy of this treatment has not been established in patients with stage II disease (no lymph node involvement or metastases), for whom the overall 5-year survival rate is about 80%. (4) In one trial a combination of oxaliplatin + fluorouracil + folinic acid (FOLFOX 4 protocol) failed to increase the overall 3-year survival rate more than the fluorouracil + folinic acid combination. It increased the event-free survival rate (72.2% versus 65.3%) but had more severe adverse effects, including: neuropathies (in about 12% of patients), neutropenia (41%), and gastrointestinal disturbances (5% to 10% of patients had
nausea
, vomiting and diarrhoea). (5) Capecitabine, a fluorouracil precursor, does not appear to be more effective than fluorouracil, but it does provide an alternative oral treatment with a slightly different profile of adverse effects (more frequent erythrodysesthesia, etc.). (6) In practice, adjuvant treatment with fluorouracil + folinic acid should be offered to patients with surgically treated stage-III colonic cancer.
...
PMID:Adjuvant chemotherapy of colon cancer: lymph node involvement without metastases. 1676 2
Adjuvant chemotherapy (ACT) is standard therapy in
Dukes
' C colorectal carcinoma (CRC) in several countries. Several studies have documented a significant improvement in overall survival, but the clinical efficacy on quality of life (QoL) has been doubted. To clarify this item, we performed a study on QoL in 94 CRC patients diagnosed between 1993-96 and randomised to surgery with or without ACT. 82 'survivors' were mailed the EORTC QLQ C-30. Sixty-two patients (76%) responded. They reported a high level of functioning and a low frequency of symptoms. ACT did not improve global QoL, and tended to cause less pain (p=0.023) and more
nausea
/vomiting (p=0.065).
...
PMID:Quality of life in Dukes' B and C colorectal carcinoma. 2159 Jan 16