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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (metastases)
103,950 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Adenocarcinoma of the uterine cervix appears to be more prevalent now than a decade ago, and currently constitutes 10-20% of invasive cervical cancers. Because precursor lesions arise within the endocervical canal, identification and diagnosis of invasive disease is often more difficult than for squamous carcinoma. There is disagreement regarding the optimal treatment of adenocarcinoma. Adenocarcinoma may have a poorer prognosis than squamous carcinoma because it may be more difficult to detect and because it tends to metastasize earlier in its course. The controversies in the diagnosis and management of adenocarcinoma and adenosquamous carcinoma of the uterine cervix are reviewed.
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PMID:Controversies in the management of cervical adenocarcinoma. 327 16

Three cases of breast cancer that metastasized to the uterine cervix are presented. A review of the literature disclosed 21 additional cases. Seventy-five percent of the patients presented with abnormal vaginal bleeding, 62% had no gross evidence of malignancy on examination, and in 89% the cervical metastases were a manifestation of widespread disease.
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PMID:Breast cancer metastasizing to the uterine cervix. 328 38

A total of 1054 patients with histologically confirmed invasive carcinoma of the uterine cervix were treated with radiation therapy alone between 1959 and 1982. All patients are available for a minimum of 3 years follow-up. Radiation therapy consisted of external irradiation to the whole pelvis (1000-2000 cGy) and parametria (for a total of 4000-6000 cGy) combined with two intracavitary radioactive source insertions (6000-7500 cGy to point A). Patients with Stage IIB, III, and IVA have been consistently treated with somewhat higher doses of external irradiation and intracavitary insertions. A small group of 54 patients with Stage IIB or IIIB had pelvic lymphadenectomy following the irradiation (1960-1964). There was a strong correlation between the tumor regression within 30 days from completion of radiotherapy and the incidence of pelvic recurrences or distant metastases for each of the anatomical stages. The 10-year survival rate for Stage IB was 76%, Stage IIA 60%, Stage IIB 45%, and Stage III 25%. Many of the deaths were due to intercurrent disease. Thus, the 10-year tumor-free survival was 80% for Stage IB, 60% for Stages IIA and IIB and 35% for Stage III. In Stage IB total doses of 6000 cGy or higher to point A resulted in 94% pelvic tumor control. In Stage IIA, the pelvic tumor control was 87% with doses of 6000 cGy to point A or higher. However, in Stage IIB the pelvic tumor control was 58% with doses below 6000 cGy, 78% with 6001-7500 cGy and 82% with higher doses. In Stage IIIB the pelvic tumor control was 42% with doses below 6000 cGy, 57% with 6001-7500 cGy and 68% with higher doses. Tumor control in the pelvis was correlated with the following 5 year survivals: Stage IB-95% (353 patients); Stage IIA-84% (116 patients); Stage IIB-84% (308 patients); Stage IIIB-74% (245 patients). The 5-year survival for patients that recurred in the pelvis was 30% for Stage IB, about 15% for Stages IIA-B and only 5% in Stage III. Patients with tumor control in the pelvis had a significantly lower incidence of distant metastases than patients who initially failed in the pelvis (9.3% vs. 58.6% in Stage IB, 21.6% vs 52.6% in Stage IIA, 19.8% vs 16.7% in Stage IIB, and 31.2% vs 50% in Stage III). In Stage IIB the figures were 19.8% and 16.7% because the initial pelvic recurrence was frequently concurrent with distant metastases.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Analysis of pelvic tumor control and impact on survival in carcinoma of the uterine cervix treated with radiation therapy alone. 335 Jul 17

Histological material was reviewed from the 213 patients who had undergone radical surgery for carcinoma of the uterine cervix stage I and IIA between 1967 and 1981. Squamous carcinoma was found in 179 patients (84.7%). In 39 patients (18%) there were lymph node metastases and in nine (4.2%) tumor spread into the parametrium. Vaso-invasion was present in 49 patients (22%). Prognostic factors were studied by Cox's regression analysis. Lymph node metastases and vaso-invasion were both found to be significantly related to survival rate (P = 0.0001 and P = 0.0008). Stage, cell type, differentiation and invasion depth were of no prognostic importance.
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PMID:Low stage invasive carcinoma of the uterine cervix stage I-IIA morphological prognostic factors. 336 Jan 61

Estimates of the gain in survival, if all local failures were eliminated, indicate that many more patients could be cured provided the efficacy of treatment of the primary and regional disease were substantially improved. The expected gain in survival is assumed to be the gain in local control, less the loss due to distant metastases and intercurrent disease among the new local control subjects. The observed incidence of DM among local failure patients may be higher than among local control patients; this excess in incidence of DM is assumed to result from metastases established secondary to the persistent or recurring tumor. A powerful argument that higher local control rates would result in more cured patients is the high incidence of long-term survivors after salvage surgery for local failures. Examples of higher survival associated with more effective local therapy are presented from the literature for medulloblastoma, ependymoma, carcinoma of the oral cavity-oropharynx, carcinoma of the urinary bladder, carcinoma of the prostate and carcinoma of the rectum. For Stage I-II cancer of the breast, the reduction of an already low local failure rate by combining surgery and radiation has a very small impact. For tumors, such as, early stage breast cancer, where the possible decrease in local failure is small and the loss due to DM is high, a demonstrable gain in survival is not likely. The potential increase in number of survivors among the U.S. cancer population, if the primary-regional disease were regularly treated successfully, indicates large gains for patients with cancer of the uterine cervix, oral cavity-oropharynx, ovary, colo-rectum, non-oat cell cancer of lung, prostate cancer, and bladder cancer. These provide powerful bases for aggressive investigation of new approaches to improvement of local-regional therapies.
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PMID:Impact of improved local control on survival. 351 48

There is a 100-fold increase in the incidence of carcinomas of the vulva and anus in renal transplant recipients compared with the general population. Anogenital (anus, perianal skin, and external genitalia of both sexes) carcinomas occurred in 65 of 2150 renal transplant recipients who presented with 2298 different types of malignancy. Two-thirds of the patients were female and one-third male. They were much younger than persons with similar tumors in the general population. The average age of the females at the time of diagnosis was 37 years (range, 20-64) and of the males, 45 years (range, 34-62). The neoplasms occurred late after transplantation, an average of 88 months (range, 9-215), compared with an average of 56 months (range, 1-225.5) for all other post-transplant malignancies. The lesions involved the vulva, penis, scrotum, anus, or perianal area. Two patients also had involvement of the urethral meatus. In several female patients, there was a "field effect" with multiple tumors of the squamous epithelium of the anogenital area, vagina, or uterine cervix. Lesions ranged from in situ carcinomas (in one-third of the cases) to those with invasion of adjacent organs and lymph node metastases. Treatment varied from local excisions to radical vulvectomy, abdominoperineal resection, or penile resection, sometimes combined with excision of the inguinal lymph nodes. In several patients, there was a previous history either of condyloma acuminatum or herpes genitalis, suggesting a possible viral etiology of these tumors.
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PMID:Cancers of the anogenital region in renal transplant recipients. Analysis of 65 cases. 352 88

A collaboration between gynecologist, radiologist, and gynecologic radiotherapist is necessary in order to diagnose relapses and therapy effects in uterine cervix carcinoma. New imaging methods such as computed tomography, ultrasonography including endo-sonographic procedures and multiple spin echo imaging have to be applied for clinical check-up which is based on the fundamental investigation performed after primary therapy. These methods allow a very precise demonstration of lymph node relapses greater than 2 cm in the wall of the small pelvis as well as of remote metastases. The problem remains to reveal lymph node metastases below 2 cm and beginning recurrences in the cervical and parametrial region after irradiation.
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PMID:[Radiologic diagnosis of recurrences and sequelae to therapy of cervical cancer]. 352 2

A prospective randomized study in selected patients with Stage IB and IIA carcinoma of the uterine cervix was carried out at Washington University between January 1966 and December 1979. Patients were randomized to be treated with irradiation alone consisting of 1000 cGy whole pelvis, additional 4000 cGy to the parametria with a step wedge midline block, and two intracavitary insertions for 7500 mgh; or irradiation and surgery, consisting of 2000 cGy whole pelvis irradiation, one intracavitary insertion for 5000-6000 mgh followed 2 to 6 weeks later by a radical hysterectomy with pelvic lymphadenectomy. A total of 40 patients with Stage IB and 16 with Stage IIA were randomized to be treated with irradiation alone. A similar group of 48 patients with Stage IB and 14 with IIA were randomized to the preoperative radiation and surgery group. The 5-year, tumor-free actuarial survival for Stage IB patients treated with radiation was 89% and with preoperative radiation and surgery 80%. In Stage IIA, the tumor-free actuarial 5-year survival was 56% for the irradiation alone group and 79% for the patients treated with preoperative radiation and radical hysterectomy. In the patients with Stage IB treated by irradiation alone only one pelvic failure combined with distant metastasis occurred, and 3 patients developed distant metastasis. In the 48 patients treated with combined therapy, there were six pelvic failures (12.5%) all combined with distant metastases and two distant metastases alone. In the 16 patients with Stage IIA treated with radiotherapy alone, there were four pelvic failures (all parametrial), three of them combined with distant metastasis. In the 14 patients treated with irradiation and surgery, two developed a pelvic recurrence, and one distant metastasis. In the preoperative radiation group, the incidence of metastatic pelvic lymph nodes was 6.3% in Stage IB and 7.1% in Stage IIA. Major complications of therapy in the patients treated with radiation alone (10%) consisted of one rectovaginal fistula, two vesicovaginal fistulas, and one rectal stricture. In the preoperative radiation group, three ureteral strictures and two severe proctitis-rectal strictures were noted (8%). The present study shows no significant difference in therapeutic results or morbidity for invasive carcinoma of the uterine cervix Stage IB or IIA treated with irradiation alone or combined with a radical hysterectomy and lymphadenectomy.
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PMID:Randomized study of preoperative radiation and surgery or irradiation alone in the treatment of stage IB and IIA carcinoma of the uterine cervix: final report. 357 53

We are presently involved in a prospective study of the relationship between DNA content profiles, and their changes during treatment, determined by flow cytofluorometry, and patient prognosis and response to therapy for cancer of the uterine cervix. To date, 348 patients have been included in the study over a 54-month period. Data on these patients have shown that DNA aneuploid tumours are significantly more radioresponsive than diploid cervix tumours. Analysis of the data on 213 patients with a minimum follow-up time of 15 months has, however, failed to show an overall more favourable prognosis conferred by tumour DNA aneuploidy. Analysis of the relationship between clinical stage and disease state and tumour DNA ploidy, however, suggests that aneuploid tumours metastasize to distant sites at an earlier stage of the disease than diploid tumours and local recurrence rates for diploid tumours, in late stage disease, are double those for aneuploid tumours. Improved staining procedures, and instrument modification, has also shown that cervix tumour heterogeneity is of considerably greater frequency than at first appeared to be the case (approximately 75% of DNA aneuploid tumours show heterogeneity.
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PMID:Flow cytofluorometric evidence for the differential radioresponsiveness of aneuploid and diploid cervix tumours. 357 88

Basing on the results of lymphographic investigation of 1070 patients some regularities of lymphogenous metastatic spreading of uterine cervix and body cancer, prostatic, bladder and rectal cancer were determined. With a local spread of a malignant tumor the frequency and volume of metastasizing increased. More frequently metastases were located in the external and common iliac lymph nodes. Involvement of the pelvis and lumbar region on both sides was noted irrespective of the site of a primary tumor and direction of its growth. Great importance was attached to the results of lymphography for the choice and planning of therapeutic measures, indications for its use were defined.
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PMID:[Lymphography of malignant tumors of organs of the small pelvis]. 358 11


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