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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
)
103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We report a prospective study of 19 choroidal melanomas treated with iodine-125 plaque from 1984 to 1989. The mean tumor height was 5.8 mm, base diameter 11.6 mm, and tumor volume 80 to 510 mm3. The mean radiation dose to tumor apex was 70 Gy and scleral contact dose 355 Gy; tumor base was surrounded by contiguous laser or cryopexy lesions. Follow-up was 27 to 84 months (mean 60 months). All tumors regressed at least 50% in volume with no tumor regrowth within 27 months to 60 months. Late tumor regrowth, localized in the center, occurred in one eye after 65 and another after 69 months. One tumor was successfully replaqued; the other was not re-treated because the patient had had a recent heart attack. In 17 eyes radiation
retinopathy
developed after 1 1/2 years, the earliest in a diabetic eye. Despite primary recovery of preoperative vision, there was severe deterioration of visual acuity after 4 1/2 years in all the eyes. During follow-up, two patients died due to
metastases
after 28 and 71 months; one patient is alive with
metastases
after 17 months. None of the eyes had to be enucleated. There was no incidence of madaurosis, symblepharon, or dry eye.
...
PMID:Long-term follow-up of iodine-125 brachytherapy for choroidal melanomas. Part I: Anatomical results and life expectancy. 821 34
A patient operated for malignant melanoma developed night blindness and a sensation of shimmering light, strong enough to make him unable to work. Shortly afterwards, melanoma
metastases
became apparent. A full-field ERG examination showed absence of rod responses but normal cone amplitudes, suggesting a malfunctioning rod system in the retina. The patient was not on chemotherapy. A few similar cases have previously been reported. The disease appears to differ from the cancer-associated
retinopathy
(CAR) syndrome, which affects mainly the photoreceptor cells.
...
PMID:Full-field electroretinogram in a patient with cutaneous melanoma-associated retinopathy. 824 79
This study documents dosage to radiation sensitive organs/structures located outside the radiotherapeutic target volume for four treatment situations: (a) head and neck, (b) brain (pituitary and temporal lobe), (c) breast and (d) pelvis. Clinically relevant treatment fields were simulated on a tissue-equivalent anthropomorphic phantom and subsequently irradiated with Cobalt-60 gamma rays, 6- and 18-MV x-ray beams. Thermoluminescent dosimeters and diodes were used to measure absorbed dose. The head and neck treatment resulted in significant doses of radiation to the lens and thyroid gland. The total treatment lens dose (300-400 cGy) could be cataractogenic while measured thyroid doses (1000-8000 cGy) have the potential of causing chemical hypothyroidism, thyroid neoplasms, Graves' disease and hyperparathyroidism. Total treatment retinal (400-700cGy) and pituitary (460-1000 cGy) doses are below that considered capable of producing chronic disease. The pituitary treatment studied consisted of various size parallel opposed lateral and vertex fields (4 x 4 through 8 x 8 cm). The lens dose (40-200 cGy) with all field sizes is below those of clinical concern. Parotid doses (130-1200 cGy) and thyroid doses (350-600 cGy) are in a range where temporary xerostomia (parotid) and thyroid neoplasia development are a reasonable possibility. The retinal dose (4000 cGy) from the largest field size (8 x 8 cm2) is in the range where
retinopathy
has been reported. The left temporal lobe treatment also used parallel opposed lateral and vertex fields (7 x 7 and 10 x 10 cm). Doses to the pituitary gland (5200-6200 cGy), both parotids (200-6900 cGy), left lens (200-300 cGy) and left retina (1700-4500 cGy) are capable of causing significant future clinical problems. Right-sided structures received insignificant doses.
Secondary malignancies
could result from measured total treatment thyroid doses (670-980 cGy). Analysis of three breast/chest wall and regional nodal irradiation techniques demonstrated a 25-50% decrease in secondary lung dose with use of independent collimation compared to use of custom alloy blocking material. However, it is unlikely that a reduction in secondary dose of this magnitude would reduce the risk of treatment sequellae. In four-field "box" pelvic irradiation, secondary testes dose may result in temporary (clamshell shield) or permanent azoospermia, but is unlikely to impair androgen production.
...
PMID:Doses to radiation sensitive organs and structures located outside the radiotherapeutic target volume for four treatment situations. 840 17
Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), also known as vascular permeability factor (VPF) is a multifunctional cytokine which potently stimulates angiogenesis in vivo. VEGF/VPF expression is elevated in pathological conditions including cancer, proliferative
retinopathy
, psoriasis and rheumatoid arthritis. The angiogenesis associated with human tumors is likely a central component in promoting tumor growth and metastatic potential. The regulation of VEGF/VPF expression during tumor progression may involve diverse mechanisms including activated oncogenes, mutant or deleted tumor suppressor genes, cytokine activation, hormonal modulators, and a particularly effective activator, hypoxia. Understanding the diverse mechanisms by which tumor cells overexpress VEGF/VPF, and which mechanisms are operating in specific tumor types is important for the design of effective anti-cancer therapies.
Cancer
Metastasis
Rev 1996 Jun
PMID:Regulation of VEGF/VPF expression in tumor cells: consequences for tumor growth and metastasis. 884 88
Fourteen patients with posterior uveal melanomas were treated using single fraction stereotactic radiosurgery. In each case a dose of 70 Gy was administered to the periphery of the tumour. Regression of the tumour has been observed in 13 patients, whilst the lesion has remained unchanged in one patient. The visual acuity has deteriorated in all 14 patients. Significant radiation induced adverse reactions were noted in 13 patients and include;
retinopathy
, optic neuropathy, rubeosis iridis, and secondary glaucoma. Two patients have required enucleation because of intractable rubeotic glaucoma. One patient has died from proven
metastases
. Although stereotactic radiosurgery appears to be a practical and effective method of treating uveal melanomas, its usefulness is limited by a high incidence of radiation induced adverse reactions. Further work is required to refine the current treatment protocol and establish an optimal prescription dose.
...
PMID:The use of single fraction Leksell stereotactic radiosurgery in the treatment of uveal melanoma. 901 41
A 51-year-old white male suffering from metastatic malignant melanoma of the skin presented with lymph node
metastases
and paraneoplastic
retinopathy
4 years after resection of the primary tumour. There were no cerebral
metastases
. Ocular symptoms consisting of night blindness and sensations of 'shimmering lights' persisted after total resection of the inguinal lymph node
metastases
and administration of dacarbazine and prednisone. Perimetry of both eyes was abnormal with concentric restriction. Electroretinography showed significantly reduced amplitudes in both eyes. Only 11 patients with melanoma-associated
retinopathy
(MAR) have been described. High titres of autoantibodies against whole retina extract were detected by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) reactions. Indirect immunohistochemistry showed strong autoantibody activity against retinal bipolar cells.
...
PMID:Melanoma-associated paraneoplastic retinopathy: case report and review of the literature. 934 50
Twenty patients with malignant uveal melanoma were treated at the The Svedbergh cyclotron in Uppsala from 1989 to 1991. Each tumour received a total dose of 54.6 Gy in four equal fractions on four following days. After treatment the melanoma in all eyes showed decrease in size combined with irradiation
retinopathy
. In eight patients the treatment was successful after five years. Nine eyes had to be enucleated, two due to recurrence and seven due to neovascular glaucoma. Three patients died, two from
metastases
and one from heart disease. In all patients the visual acuity was dependent on the distance between the irradiation field and the macula or optic nerve. Each patient suffered from transient post irradiation skin erythema and permanent loss of eyelashes and eyebrows when these were included in the irradiation field. The development of secondary glaucoma was positively correlated with tumour volume, but not to the age or sex of the patients. Histological examination of all the enucleated eyes revealed residual viable tumour without obvious radiation damage: mitotic figures were not identified. MRI examination, performed before and after treatment, demonstrated a marked shift in water binding properties after irradiation. The final visual acuity was dependent on the location of the tumour.
...
PMID:Proton irradiation of malignant uveal melanoma. A five year follow-up of patients treated in Uppsala, Sweden. 1005 9
The term "paraneoplastic neurological syndromes" encompasses a number of uncommon disorders associated with systemic malignancies. In order to be classified a paraneoplastic neurological syndrome, the malignancies must not invade, compress, or
metastasize
to the nervous system. They can either focally or diffusely involve the central and peripheral nervous system or the neuromuscular junction. This paper reviews the neuropathology of the syndrome. It will first describe the clinical presentation and give an account of the systemic tumors most commonly associated with the various types of disorders. Then it will review the general pathological features that consist of an inflammatory process predominantly affecting the gray matter. Finally, it will describe in detail the main clinico-pathological types, including 1) encephalomyelitis, 2) cortical cerebellar degeneration, 3) peripheral neuropathy, 4) opsoclonus-myoclonus and 5)
retinopathy
. The Lambert-Eaton myasthenic syndrome will be dealt with separately in another paper in this symposium.
...
PMID:The neuropathology of paraneoplastic syndromes. 1021 43
Cancer may affect the eye and orbit by a direct effect of metastatic neoplastic infiltration or compression or by circulating antibodies involving paraneoplastic retinal degeneration. Metastatic tumor to the uvea is the most common form of an intraocular malignant process. The choroid is the most common site for uveal metastasis;
metastases
to the ciliary body, iris, retina, optic disc, and vitreous are rare. Approximately one third of patients have no history of primary cancer at the time of ocular diagnosis. Breast and lung carcinomas for women and lung and gastrointestinal carcinomas for men most commonly
metastasize
to the eye and orbit. The short-term prognosis for vision is usually good but the systemic prognosis is poor. The visual paraneoplastic syndromes encompass several distinct clinical and pathologic entities including carcinoma-associated
retinopathy
, melanoma-associated
retinopathy
, and bilateral diffuse melanocytic uveal proliferation. The first affects photoreceptors, the second is thought to affect bipolar cell function, and the third targets the uveal tract. Identification of circulating antibodies against retinal proteins (recoverin, 23-kD retinal protein; 46-kD and 60-kD retinal proteins) serves to recognize the paraneoplastic nature of the patient's symptoms, which frequently develop before the cancer is diagnosed. No therapy exists to stop the inexorable progressive loss of vision.
Metastasis
to the eye and orbit and paraneoplastic disorders represent a very bad prognostic sign. Recognition of their visual symptoms and ocular findings should alert the ophthalmologist to the possibility of cancer and systemic evaluation should be pursued.
...
PMID:Ocular manifestations of cancer. 1038 28
Patients with systemic cancer may have a variety of ocular complaints. Most commonly these are
metastases
or adverse effects of therapy. Paraneoplastic syndromes, like cancer-associated
retinopathy
, rarely cause ophthalmic symptoms. We describe a patient with a malignant mixed mullerian tumor and cancer-associated
retinopathy
who had circulating serum antibodies to recoverin and cells positive for recoverin in the tumor. We discuss the typical clinical symptoms as well as the pathophysiology of this uncommon disorder.
...
PMID:Cancer-associated retinopathy. 1060 71
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