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)

Carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) in plasma is useful for the detection of recurrent colonic or gastric cancer and the monitoring of plasma in patients with recurrent cancer displaying therapeutic effect. We report a sharp decline of CEA in a patient with recurrent gastric cancer by 6 months oral administration of UFT. The patient was an 81-year-old male who had undergone gastrectomy for advanced gastric cancer. Eight months post-operatively, the plasma CEA began to rise logarithmically, and recurrent tumor in the remnant stomach and liver metastasis were detected by fibergastroscope (FGS) and abdominal CT. After administration of UFT at a dose of 300 mg per day, CEA abruptly declined logarithmically and normalized in 6 months. Presently marked reduction of recurrent foci and metastases were found by FGS and abdominal CT. Therefore sequential changes in plasma CEA in this patient can be considered to reflect the effect of therapy for recurrent gastric cancer by UFT.
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PMID:[Sharp decline in plasma CEA and reduction of liver metastasis after UFT administration in a patient with recurrent gastric cancer]. 141 17

Careful patient selection for hepatic resection of colorectal cancer metastases is essential to improve current poor results. Carcinoembryonic antigen level and number of metastases were significant preoperative prognostic indicators of 5-year disease-free survival in patients selected clinically for hepatic surgery. Surgical margin, weight of hepatic tissue resected, carcinoembryonic antigen level, and flow cytometry were significant postoperative prognostic indicators. Patients with a carcinoembryonic antigen level less than 200 ng/mL, 1-cm surgical margins, and less than 1,000 g of liver tissue removed had a greater than 50% estimated 5-year disease-free survival rate. If the metastases were diploid on flow cytometry, an additional survival advantage may have been gained. Inadequate surgical margins led to high rates of liver-only recurrence. Nonhepatic recurrence was unrelated to surgical margins. Intraoperative liver examination by ultrasound during primary colon cancer resection and adjuvant chemotherapy may offer earlier selection of biologically appropriate patients and improved outcome; both recommendations require clinical trials.
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PMID:Technical and biological factors in disease-free survival after hepatic resection for colorectal cancer metastases. 157 26

Carcinoembryonic antigen is the most common tumor marker in use today. Plasma CEA has no role as a screening tool for large patient populations but does correlate with tumor stage, prognosis, and extent of surgical resection for individual patients. Serial monitoring of plasma CEA levels can detect tumor recurrence prior to clinical or radiologic evidence of disease. An elevated or progressively rising post-operative CEA level is a definite indication for surgical reexploration, with the intent to surgically resect locally recurrent or metastatic disease. Finally, anti-CEA antibodies may be used in the future to improve preoperative staging and to treat colorectal carcinoma.
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PMID:An evaluation of the clinical usefulness of CEA in colorectal cancer. 183 5

Percutaneous ethanol injection (PEI) was performed under ultrasound (US) guidance in the outpatient department in 14 patients with 21 metastases 1.0-3.8 cm in diameter. The primary cancer was colorectal adenocarcinoma (seven patients), adenocarcinoma of the stomach (four patients), abdominal leiomyosarcoma (one patient), gastrinoma of unknown origin (one patient), and bronchial carcinoid (one patient). The indicators of therapeutic efficacy were US, computed tomography, fine-needle biopsy, and serologic markers. No complications occurred after a total of 175 treatment sessions. Complete response was obtained in 11 lesions, nine of which were less than 2 cm in diameter, and in all endocrine metastases (four lesions in two patients) with a maximum, recurrence-free follow-up of 38 months. Carcinoembryonic antigen values decreased in all patients but one for a 2-6-month period. The natural course of metastatic disease strictly limits the applicability of PEI, a local treatment. Single, metachronous, nonoperable metastasis of adenocarcinoma and endocrine metastases seem to be the only indications for PEI.
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PMID:Liver metastases: results of percutaneous ethanol injection in 14 patients. 202 79

Carcinoembryonic antigen has been demonstrated to be a valuable clinical aid in the management of patients with colorectal carcinoma. Its elevation in the serum prior to evidence of clinical recurrence in up to 80% of patients highlights its utility. CEA has also been found to be elevated in the serum of patients with other epithelial malignancies, but these have not been as well studied as has colorectal carcinoma. In patients with breast cancer CEA elevations may be found in 40-73% of patients presenting with disease in stages I-IV. In addition, 80% of patients will have a CEA elevation 3-10 months prior to clinical symptoms of recurrence. Seventy-seven percent of patients with bronchogenic lung cancer will have an elevated preoperative value. However, cigarette smoking also causes an increase in the CEA assay level and, thus, differentiation between benign and malignant conditions is more difficult. In small cell carcinoma of the lung, CEA assay levels above 10 ng/ml correlate highly with metastatic disease, while values less than 2.5 ng/ml correlate with localized disease. Pancreatic and gastric malignancies demonstrate CEA level elevations in just over 50% of cases. But these, however, have not been clinically useful. Epithelial neoplasms of the female reproductive tract (cervix, uterus, and ovary) also produce CEA in 47-75% of cases and may correlate with stage of disease at diagnosis and level of cellular differentiation. CEA assay levels are elevated in a variety of tumors and correlate with tumor stage, degree of differentiation, and effectiveness of therapy; they may also be the earliest marker of recurrence.
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PMID:CEA in tumors of other than colorectal origin. 206 50

Carcinoembryonic antigen and some liver function tests (alkaline phosphatase, gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase, lactic dehydrogenase and cholinesterase) were evaluated in patients with primary colorectal cancer in order to define their role in the pre-operative detection of liver metastases. The records of 278 consecutive patients admitted to the Istituto Nazionale Tumori of Milan between January 1982 and December 1983 who were suffering from primary invasive colo-rectal cancer and who underwent laparotomy were retrospectively analyzed. At laparotomy, liver metastases were found in 38 pts (13.7%). Considering single tests, CEA was the most sensitive (71%); no single test was found to be reliably predictive, when the result was abnormal. On the contrary, the normal value of each test was associated with a good prediction. When we considered all the five tests together in the single patient their predictive value, when abnormal, proved to be quite good only if four or five results were abnormal. On the other hand, liver metastases in the presence of all normal tests were found only in two patients, so giving a negative predictive value of about 97%. So we conclude that, in the lack of an infallible imaging technique for liver evaluation, in the presence of all normal tests any other investigation on the liver could be avoided. However, when liver tests are pathologic, some other imaging technique should be performed in order to supply the surgeon with information about the extent and the spread of the metastases.
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PMID:The role of CEA and liver function tests in the detection of hepatic metastases from colo-rectal cancer. 209 Jan 87

Eighty-four carcinoids of the colon and rectum were studied with emphasis on prognostic features, immunohistochemical characteristics, and pitfalls in diagnosis. Follow-up data were available on 35 patients. Tumors with adenocarcinomatous components, or those resembling small cell carcinomas of the lung, were excluded. Eighty-one tumors were in the rectum and three tumors were in the distal sigmoid colon. Neuron-specific enolase, chromogranin, and Leu-7 were positive in 87%, 58%, and 53% of the tumors, respectively. Hormones were positive in the following percentages: serotonin, 45%; pancreatic polypeptide, 46%; glucagon, 10%; gastrin, 3%; somatostatin, 3%; adrenocorticotrophic hormone, 1%; cholecystokinin, 0%; calcitonin, 0%; and insulin, 0%. Many tumors elaborated more than one hormone. Fifty-five percent of the tumors were argyrophil and 28% were argentaffin. Carcinoembryonic antigen was present in 24% of the tumors; 82% of the tumors contained prostatic acid phosphatase. Three patients had liver metastases; their tumors ulcerated, invaded muscularis propria, and had more than 2 mitoses per 10 high-power fields (HPF). One patient with a 2.5-cm tumor without mitoses had regional lymph node metastases. All non-metastasizing tumors had less than one mitosis in 10 HPF. We conclude that large bowel carcinoid tumors are essentially limited to the rectum and sigmoid, that they are indolent if mitotically inactive and smaller than 2 cm, and that most show production of a selected group of endocrine markers.
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PMID:Rectal and colonic carcinoids. A clinicopathologic study of 84 cases. 229 59

The serum levels of Carcinoembryonic antigen, CA 19-9 and CA 50 were assessed in 60 patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the esophagus during the course of the disease. In 53 patients, the effect of preoperative or final treatment on tumor marker levels could be analysed, and the change in tumor marker levels discriminated significantly the patients who showed tumor mass/symptom regress from the patients who displayed progress or undecided change. Progress later in the course of the disease was reflected by a statistically significant increase in all three tumor marker assays, and in 8/18 (44%) patients the tumor marker increase was seen prior to other signs of tumor progression. The appearance of distant metastases was associated (11/12) with increase in CEA levels.
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PMID:Carcinoembryonic antigen, CA 19-9 and CA 50 in monitoring human squamous cell carcinoma of the esophagus. 236 87

Patients with human colorectal carcinoma have a poor prognosis when serum carcinoembryonic antigen level exceeds 5 ng/mL. The hypothesis that carcinoembryonic antigen enhances metastasis by promoting the attachment of tumor cells to Kupffer cells and hepatocytes was tested in an experimental metastasis model in which colorectal carcinoma cells were injected into the spleens of BALB/c athymic nude mice and liver colonies counted 5 weeks later. Pretreatment with systemic injections of carcinoembryonic antigen significantly increased the metastatic potential of a poorly metastatic colorectal carcinoma cell line KM-12c, but did not induce the nonmetastatic colorectal carcinoma cell line HC 2998 to produce metastases, nor did carcinoembryonic antigen make the highly metastatic colorectal carcinoma cell line mHC 1410 more metastatic. Carcinoembryonic antigen did not stimulate proliferation of colorectal carcinoma but appeared to be a cofactor for metastasis possibly as an adhesion factor.
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PMID:Carcinoembryonic antigen enhances metastatic potential of human colorectal carcinoma. 240 25

This study demonstrates the unique clinical and histologic aspects of fibrolamellar hepatic carcinoma, a rare variant of hepatocellular carcinoma. Three cases are reviewed and an extensive study of immunologic and intracellular substances defining this tumor is presented. Length of survival was considerably longer than typical hepatoma. The cause of death generally is due to a lack of control of the primary tumor. Successful treatment appears to relate to the ability to perform a total excision of the primary hepatic tumor. Chemotherapy should be used only in the presence of metastatic disease. Surgical resection of metastatic disease, unlike the usual hepatocarcinoma, may have some beneficial use. Fibrinogen was found in all tumors. It is possible that this tumor produces fibrinogen to create its unique histologic appearance. Carcinoembryonic antigen is described for the first time in this tumor. Both deposits of alpha-1 antitrypsin and copper were found in most of the tissues studied. The presence and amounts of these substances differ markedly from the common type of hepatoma. This unique composition of intracellular components may both facilitate histologic diagnosis, particularly if the amount of tissue is limited, and give further insight into the etiology of this tumor.
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PMID:Fibrolamellar carcinoma of the liver. Review of three cases and the presentation of a characteristic set of tumor markers defining this tumor. 240 35


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