Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (metastases)
103,950 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Between 1980 and 1985 we treated 21 patients with primary spinal cord tumors. There were two diffuse and ten localized ependymoma, six low grade astrocytoma and three malignant glioma. Surgery consisted of total resection in six patients, subtotal resection in three and biopsy in twelve patients. Radiation doses ranged 45-55 Gy. Median age was 55 years (34-70 years), and median follow-up after therapy was 5 years (1-9 years). For patients with localized ependymoma, overall survival and 5-year recurrence-free survival are 80%. Of two patients with diffuse ependymoma, one is alive with no evidence of disease 6 years after the initial diagnosis, while the other is dead. Overall survival and 5 years recurrence-free survival for patients with low grade astrocytoma are 83% and 67%, respectively. All three patients with malignant glioma died of local recurrence (one had diffuse craniospinal metastases, too) one year after the initial diagnosis. Radiotherapy is therapy of choice after surgery in primary spinal cord tumors in adults, although local recurrences remain the major problem.
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PMID:[Radiotherapy of primary spinal cord tumors in adults]. 146 70

Between 1978 and 1991, 31 patients with primary (n = 28) and recurrent (n = 3) ependymoma received external radiation after initial surgery. There were 26 cases of intracranial and five cases of spinal ependymoma. Histological grading revealed low-grade in 23 and high-grade tumors in eight patients. Craniospinal irradiation was given to 13 of 28 patients, whole cranial radiation with boost to posterior fossa in three and local treatment to twelve patients. Six of 28 patients received chemotherapy. Dose to the primary, tumor localisation, grading and extend of surgery did not significantly impact on survival and relapse-free survival. Age was a marginally significant prognostic factor for survival. In patients with intracranial ependymoma (n = 24) survival and relapse-free survival at five years were 54% and 42%, respectively. Patterns of recurrence showed a local recurrence alone in eight, a CNS-relapse with local recurrence in four and local recurrence with distant metastases in one case. Spinal seeding occurred in two of 13 after craniospinal irradiation and two of twelve patients after local treatment. The main problem in the treatment of ependymoma remains local control, the use of spinal irradiation does not seem to improve treatment results.
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PMID:[Prognostic factors and results after the combined surgical and radiotherapy treatment of ependymomas]. 148 Nov 16

Two cases of saccrococcygeal chordoma that were diagnosed on the basis of smear preparations are presented. Only one case showed typical physaliferous cells. In both cases the final diagnosis was greatly facilitated by applying peroxidase-antiperoxidase immunocytochemistry techniques to the cytologic specimens. Chordomas coexpress epithelial markers, such as intermediate filaments of the cytokeratin type, epithelial antigens (such as tissue polypeptide and epithelial membrane antigen), intermediate filaments of the vimentin type and S-100 protein. This antigenic spectrum may greatly facilitate the differential diagnosis of chordoma from filum terminale ependymoma, chondroma and chondrosarcoma, metastases of clear cell-type carcinomas and schwannomas, and neurofibromas, even when the only specimens available are from aspiration cytology.
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PMID:Value of immunocytochemistry in aspiration cytology of sacrococcygeal chordoma. A report of two cases. 154 18

The aim of this study was to determine the specificity and sensitivity of the commercially available, monoclonal anti-melanoma antibody HMB-45 in brain tumours and peripheral nerve sheath tumours. Hence, a series of 155 different non-melanotic tumours of the central and peripheral nervous system were examined immunohistochemically. The brain lesions consisted of primary tumours and metastases from various carcinomas. Twenty melanotic tumours (cerebral metastases of malignant melanomas, meningeal melanomatosis, meningeal melanocytomas) and dermal blue cell naevi served as controls. All melanotic tumours stained positive. Furthermore, a positive immunohistochemical reaction was observed in the following non-melanotic tumours: gliosarcomas, primitive neuroectodermal tumours, ependymoma, malignant schwannomas and different intracranial hamartomas. Two plasmacytomas and 4 metastatic carcinomas also revealed positive staining for HMB-45. Our results confirm the necessity for cautious interpretation of HMB-45 immunoreactivity as a tool in the immunohistochemical characterization of nervous system tumours.
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PMID:Melanoma-associated antigens in tumours of the nervous system: an immunohistochemical study with the monoclonal antibody HMB-45. 154

Thirty-one consecutive intradural extramedullary spinal tumors examined with MR at 0.3 T were reviewed. In 13 of the patients myelography had been performed. There were 11 patients with meningeoma, 14 with neuroma, one ependymoma, 3 metastases, and 2 lipomas. All tumors were surgically removed and verified by histology. The intradural extramedullary location of the tumors was accurately assessed by MR imaging in all patients and by myelography in 10 of 13. The MR diagnoses were in accordance with the histologic findings in 74% of cases. Compression of the spinal cord or cauda equina with widening of the subarachnoid space above and below the mass or outward displacement of epidural fat was characteristic of the intradural extramedullary tumors. The signal intensity of meningeoma as well as of neuroma was slightly lower or equal to that of the cord on T1-weighted images, and equal to or higher than cord signal on T2-weighted images. Neuroma had a lower signal intensity on T1-weighted images and a higher signal intensity on T2-weighted images than meningeoma. Meningeoma appeared more homogeneous than neuroma and had a broad base towards the dura.
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PMID:MR imaging of intradural extramedullary tumors. 159 Nov 21

A case of malignant ependymoma with extracranial metastases is reported. A 59-year-old male was admitted to our hospital with vomiting and ataxia. Following computed tomographic (CT) scanning indicating a ring-like enhanced mass in the cerebellum, the tumor was subtotally removed in December, 1985. Histological diagnosis was malignant ependymoma. A second operation was performed in February, 1987, due to recurrence of the tumor in the fourth ventricle. Postoperative radiation therapy at a total dose of 7780 rads was given over 2 years. Eleven months after radiation therapy was completed, he reported cough and multiple skin metastases. Chest x-rays showed metastases at the right hilus. Repeated CT scans revealed separate frontal cerebral metastatic tumors. He died of respiratory insufficiency. Extracranial metastases of infratentorial ependymoma to the skin and lung are rare pathological entities.
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PMID:Extracranial metastases of malignant ependymoma--case report. 169 51

A review of the clinical literature on ependymoma, published between 1969 and 1989, was carried out to assess the influence of tumor grade and site, tumor control at the primary site, and extent of irradiation on the incidence of spinal seeding after initial treatment. The pooled data show that the incidence of seeding was 8.4% (7/83) for high grade tumors and 4.5% (6/132) for low grade tumors. Seeding occurred more frequently in infratentorial tumors than in supratentorial tumors. For high grade tumors the incidence was 0% (0/26) for supratentorial and 15.7% (6/38) for infratentorial lesions; for low grade tumors the respective incidence was 2.7% (1/37) and 5.5% (4/73). Spinal seeding was 9.5% (15/157) in the event of failure at the primary site compared to 3.3% (4/122) when local control was achieved. The development of spinal metastases was not influenced by the extent of irradiation. For high grade tumors the incidence was 9.4% (5/53) with spinal irradiation and 6.7% (2/30) without prophylactic treatment; for low grade tumors the respective values were 9.3% (4/43) and 2.2% (2/89). These results indicate that tumor grade, tumor localization, and control of the tumor at the primary site are all factors which may influence the risk of spinal seeding. On the present evidence spinal metastases are not prevented by prophylactic spinal irradiation, regardless of tumor grade and site.
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PMID:The role of prophylactic spinal irradiation in localized intracranial ependymoma. 183 Nov 93

The invasiveness of human intracranial tumours was studied in an organ culture system. Biopsies from six glioblastomas, four astrocytomas, two mixed gliomas, one ependymoma, four meningiomas and two carcinoma metastases were cut into fragments of 0.5 mm diameter, and placed in agar overlay tissue culture. The tumour specimens formed spheroids which were co-cultured with cell aggregates or fragments from fetal rat brain for up to 10 days in vitro. The invasiveness of the glioblastoma spheroids was characterised by a gradual destruction of normal brain tissue by tumour cells, followed by replacement of normal tissue by these cells. Co-cultures from two glioblastomas showed lesions in the normal brain tissue in areas removed from the tumour cells. Tumour spheroids from four glioblastomas totally destroyed the normal brain tissue without any change in the original tumour spheroid configuration. The low-grade gliomas were less invasive than the glioblastomas. The meningiomas and the metastases were non-invasive. This organ culture assay appeared to reflect the in situ invasive behaviour of the brain tumours examined. It is suggested that it may be used for evaluating the aggressiveness of individual brain tumours with the specific aim of correlating clinical data with the biological character of the tumour.
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PMID:Interaction between human brain tumour biopsies and fetal rat brain tissue in vitro. 208 53

Ependymomas originating in the sacrum or extraspinal parasacral soft tissues are rare tumors. The majority are of the myxopapillary type and may be locally destructive. Even though metastases are not uncommon in retrosacral ependymomas, they have been rarely described in intrasacral locations. A case is reported of a large intrasacral ependymoma with metastases to several vertebrae. Radiologic and pathologic studies are presented. Treatment options are discussed.
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PMID:Metastatic ependymoma of the sacrum. 234 20

During the 30 year period from 1957 to 1986, 42 patients with primary tumors arising from the spinal cord or cauda equina received postoperative irradiation at the University of California, San Francisco. Twenty-one patients had ependymomas: 18 were localized to one site, and 3 diffusely involved the cord. There were 12 patients with low grade astrocytomas and 3 with highly anaplastic astrocytoma or glioblastoma multiforme. All astrocytomas were localized at presentation. In 6 cases tissue was insufficient to permit a histologic diagnosis. Thirty-nine patients (93%) received total radiation doses ranging between 45.0-54.7 Gy using standard fractionation. The 10-year actuarial disease-specific survival rate for patients with localized ependymoma was 93%; 33% of these tumors recurred locally. The corresponding rate for diffuse ependymomas was 50%; the spinal disease was controlled in all 3 patients, but one developed a cerebral metastasis despite prophylactic cranial irradiation. Low-grade astrocytoma patients had a 10-year actuarial disease-specific survival rate of 91%, with 33% of these tumors recurring locally. No patient with highly anaplastic astrocytoma or glioblastoma multiforme survived longer than 8 months; all of these tumors recurred locally, and two of the three also developed diffuse craniospinal axis metastases. Local recurrence for ependymoma was delayed as long as 12 years following treatment, while all but one astrocytoma failure occurred within 3 years of treatment. No significant dose-response relationship with respect to local control was noted for either localized ependymomas or low grade astrocytomas. One patient developed radiation myelitis after receiving 50.4 Gy with standard fractionation. These results indicate that patients who undergo postoperative irradiation for low grade spinal astrocytomas and localized spinal ependymomas achieve excellent survival. However, despite treatment with total radiation doses taken to the practical limit of spinal cord tolerance, local failure remains common.
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PMID:Postoperative radiotherapy of primary spinal cord tumors. 254 94


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