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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
)
103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Melanoma is rare in Singapore with an age-standardised rate (ASR) of 0.4-0.8 per 100,000 per year. Thirteen patients with metastatic or locally advanced melanoma were referred to the Department of Medical Oncology, Singapore General Hospital between Feb 1991 and Nov 1993. Ten patients were given combination chemotherapy comprising carmustine (BCNU), cisplatin, dacarbazine (DTIC) and tamoxifen. The remaining 3 patients either rejected chemotherapy or were too ill to receive chemotherapy. Patient characteristics were as follows: there were 6 males and 4 females; age range 29-75 years; all were Chinese; sites of primary disease: extremities 8, retroorbital 1, vagina 1; sites of
metastases
: lymph nodes 6, skin 2, pulmonary 3, liver 1. All received the same combination chemotherapy comprising iv BCNU 150 mg/m2 q8wk, iv DTIC 220 mg/m2 x 3 days q4 wk, iv cisplatin 25 mg/m2 x 3 days q4 wk and tab tamoxifen 40 mg daily. There were 6 partial responses and no complete responses, giving a response rate of 60% with a median survival of 11.5 months. Three patients with sites of disease in the vagina, retroorbital region and metastatic
liver disease
had progressive disease despite chemotherapy and one died of treatment related sepsis. The 6 responders include those with
metastases
to the skin, nodes and/or lung. Treatment was generally tolerable. Two patients experienced delays of their subsequent cycles of treatment by 1-2 weeks due either to neutropenia and/or thrombocytopenia. This regimen is a fairly active combination against metastatic melanoma, particularly those with
metastases
to the nodes, skin and the lung. Those with involvement of other sites tend to respond poorly.
...
PMID:Combination chemotherapy (dacarbazine, carmustine, cisplastin, and tamoxifen) in advanced melanoma. 894 55
Our goal was to assess the utility of manganese dipyridoxyl diphosphate (MnDPDP) as a negative hepatic contrast agent in short inversion time IR MRI (STIR). Twenty patients with focal liver lesions (15 with
metastatic disease
, 5 with hemangiomas) underwent MRI (T1-weighted SE, breath-hold GE, and STIR sequences) before and after infusion of MnDPDP (5 mumol/kg). We then compared the results obtained with each sequence for hepatic parenchymal enhancement, lesion-to-liver contrast-to-noise ratio (C/N) measurements, and the number of focal liver lesions observed in pre- and postcontrast images. Hepatic enhancement values of 25.3 +/- 9.7 and 33.6 +/- 2.7% (mean +/- SEM) were obtained for the T1-weighted SE and GE sequences, respectively. The STIR sequence showed 78.9 +/- 2.1% negative enhancement (decrease of parenchymal signal intensity). Although a significant (p < 0.0001) C/N increase was seen after MnDPDP administration for all sequences, STIR showed the highest increase (149.0 +/- 25.5%) compared with T1-weighted SE (58.5 +/- 12.7%) and GE (83.3 +/- 7.2%) sequences. Similarly, more lesions for all sequences were detected, but again STIR showed the greatest postcontrast increase (29.0%). MnDPDP is an effective hepatic contrast agent. As both the negative hepatic enhancement and the increase in lesion-to-liver C/N were superior with the STIR sequence when compared with the positive enhancement and C/N values produced by the T1-weighted sequences, it should be considered for inclusion in the imaging protocol for patients with focal
liver disease
.
...
PMID:MnDPDP as a negative hepatic contrast agent: evaluation of STIR imaging compared with T1-weighted SE and GE techniques. 902 76
Pseudocystic liver metastases are rare and mainly described in neuroendocrine or ovarian tumors. We report the case of a 46-year-old woman who presented with multiple hepatic
metastases
mimicking polycystic
liver disease
. Carcinoma of the uterine cervix had been diagnosed 9 years earlier, and initially treated by radiumtherapy and surgery. Although histological post mortem examination of the pseudocystic liver metastases was not characteristic, they were related to the uterine cervix carcinoma for the following reasons: no other primary tumor was discovered, especially carcinoid or ovarian tumors: immunostains were positive for epithelial cells and negative for the neuroendocrine panel: the cystic cerebellum metastasis had a typical histologic aspect. Uterine cervical carcinoma must thus be included in the list of tumors which may form cystic hepatic
metastases
.
...
PMID:[Pseudocystic metastases of carcinoma of the uterine cervix mimicking polycystic liver disease]. 903 57
Computed tomographic (CT) examination of patients who have undergone pancreaticoduodenectomy (Whipple procedure) for pancreatic adenocarcinoma is complex. The radiologist's assessment of the three surgically created anastomoses, as well as of subtle abnormalities that are the earliest signs of recurrent disease, is substantially aided by the volume acquisition capability of spiral CT and use of overlapping reconstruction intervals. Normal postoperative findings on spiral CT scans include ill-defined increased attenuation in the fat of the pancreatic bed and surrounding the superior mesenteric artery and pneumobilia. The most frequent sites of tumor recurrence are local disease in the pancreatic bed and
metastases
in the liver; concurrent local and
liver disease
may also be the initial manifestation of recurrent pancreatic adenocarcinoma. CA 19-9 is a tumor-associated antigen whose level is frequently elevated in patients with recurrent pancreatic cancer, and correlation of CT findings and the serum CA 19-9 level is helpful in differentiating between recurrent disease and postoperative changes. Correlation of CT appearances with clinical parameters, such as the type and position of surgically created anastomoses and knowledge of the radiation port in those patients receiving adjuvant radiation therapy, aids interpretation and helps one avoid false-positive diagnoses in the setting of complex anatomic and persistent postoperative changes inherent in this patient population.
...
PMID:Recurrent pancreatic adenocarcinoma: spiral CT evaluation following the Whipple procedure. 908 73
Resection, when possible, is still the best hope for cure of colorectal metastasis to the liver. Poor prognostic indicators for survival include heavy tumor burden, the presence of extrahepatic disease, synchronous metastasis, and the inability to perform resection with a 1-cm margin. Questionable poor prognostic indicators include multiple
metastases
(more than three), bilobar disease, and the need to transfuse patients during resection. Preoperatively, a patient must be evaluated for the extent of
liver disease
and the presence of extrahepatic disease with a CT of the abdomen and routine studies of the chest. Intraoperatively, a surgeon should be able to perform or obtain ultrasonography of the liver to detect occult
metastases
and delineate anatomy. The surgeon should be experienced in wedge, segmental, and lobar resection. Equipment for cryotherapy and arterial infusion devices should be available, and staff experienced in these modalities should be present. If all of these factors are present, the options for the invasive treatment of colorectal metastasis to the liver can be carried out in a manner that should provide the most benefit at a low morbidity to this population of patients.
...
PMID:Invasive therapy of metastatic colorectal cancer to the liver. 909 16
Clinical information must be combined with radiologic features to evaluate focal or diffuse
liver disease
effectively, and MR examinations need to be tailored appropriately. If there are characteristic radiologic findings, in many cases a correct diagnosis is possible; however, radiologic methods may provide an exact description of disease extent, vascular supply, infiltration,
metastases
, and tumor changes like necrosis or hemorrhage, without providing a definitive diagnosis. In these situations interventional radiologic techniques (such as percutaneous biopsy) have a potential role in diagnosis.
...
PMID:MR imaging of the liver--a practical approach. 911 83
Metastatic infiltration of the liver is an uncommon cause of acute hepatic failure. We describe the case of a 55-yr-old man who presented with signs and symptoms of
liver disease
. Diagnostic testing revealed a small cell carcinoma of the lung with massive hepatic
metastases
.
...
PMID:[Acute liver failure as presentation form of small cell carcinoma of the lung]. 923 81
At the University of California, San Francisco, 17 patients who met the following criteria-hepatic tumor unresectable because of location or inadequate liver reserve, no
metastases
, HBsAg negative, no tumor larger than 5 cm in diameter, and no more than three tumors--were enrolled prospectively in a protocol employing preoperative chemoembolization to assess whether orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) could cure a majority of highly selected patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Thirteen patients had biopsy-proven HCC, 2 had the fibrolamellar variant, and 2 had radiological findings of HCC but no biopsy confirmation. Fourteen had underlying
liver disease
. All arteriographically apparent lesions were chemoembolized using a mixture including Gelfoam powder, doxorubicin, mitomycin-c, and cisplatin. Eight patients with poor hepatic reserve were chemoembolized when a donor organ became available, whereas 9 patients were chemoembolized and then placed on the waiting list. The only complication of chemoembolization was a gangrenous gallbladder in 1 patient. Thirteen patients underwent liver transplantation (2 patients without prior histological confirmation of carcinoma had no identifiable tumor at OLT); 3 patients developed
metastases
between the time of enrollment and donor organ availability and subsequently died; and 1 patient underwent a trisegmentectomy. Ten of the 11 patients with biopsy-proven HCC who underwent transplantation remain free of recurrent cancer at a median of 40 months; 1 patient died at 6 months of lymphoproliferative disease with no cancer found at autopsy. Although the role of chemoembolization is uncertain, these data show that the majority of carefully selected patients with HCC may achieve long-term survival with OLT.
...
PMID:Liver transplantation for hepatocellular carcinoma: results with preoperative chemoembolization. 934 74
A common site of metastasis due to various forms of primary malignancies, is the liver. At present, increased screening of patients at risk has allowed early detection of the disease. Consequently, surgeons have started to perform hepatic resection for
metastatic cancer
, with the help of new or improved techniques with an enlarged spectrum of indications. New therapeutic modalities have also become available with the use of anti-cancer drugs, via new delivery devices, prior or after liver resection. Locoregional transarterial immuno-chemotherapy and isolated liver perfusion belong to this form of therapy. Although prognosis has improved impressively and low mortality and morbidity have emerged through improved surgical procedures, many patients still succumb to the disease due to locoregional recurrence of metastatic
liver disease
.
...
PMID:Metastatic liver disease--a review. 935 77
Approximately half of patients with colorectal cancer will develop hepatic
metastases
and it is estimated that up to 10% of that group will have resectable
liver disease
. Surgical resection remains the first line treatment option of metastatic liver tumors and has yielded a 20 to 40% five year survival rate. Selection of appropriate patients for resection is critical to a successful outcome. The best results are obtained in patients with isolated
metastases
. Factors that are associated with a poorer results are the presence of four or more lesions or a surgical margin less than 1 cm. Endocrine
metastases
can be resected in a palliative fashion but each case has to be individualized. This is also true for non colorectal-nonendocrine
metastases
. For this tumors the experience is anecdotal and confined to limited reported series. Adjuvant treatment (infusional chemotherapy and chemoembolization) can also have a role in treatment as well as cryotherapy.
...
PMID:[Metastatic disease of the liver: surgical perspective]. 948 May 32
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