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)

Hemangiopericytoma is a rare tumor with uncommon location in the central nervous system. It has only recently been included (WHO classification 1993) in a specific group of CNS tumors and subsequently (WHO classification 1997 and 2000) as a group by itself, while before it was confused with meningeal tumors. We report on a case of a 48-year-old woman affected by this tumor. The neoplasm was located in the posterior fossa. The patient underwent primary surgery in 1990, not followed by any adjuvant therapy because of the histopathological diagnosis of meningioma. After being free from disease for eight years she developed a local recurrence in 1998. Subtotal excision of the tumor, which was finally identified as a hemangiopericytoma, was carried out, followed by adjuvant radiotherapy (64 Gy). After six months multiple metastases were found in the liver and right kidney. A radical metastasectomy was performed, followed by systemic chemotherapy. One year later (2001) the tumor recurred again intracranially and a metastases was detected in the right breast, so the patient again underwent cranial irradiation (40 Gy) and second-line chemotherapy. She died in September 2002, 12 years after the diagnosis. We may conclude that, despite the tumor's natural tendency to recur several times and the ability of intracranial hemangiopericytoma to spread outside the CNS, it is possible to ensure a long survival time.
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PMID:Recurrent intracranial hemangiopericytoma with extracranial and unusual multiple metastases: case report and review of the literature. 1523 97

Central nervous system (CNS) cancers are the second most frequent malignancy (and the most common solid tumor) in childhood. In recent years, significant advances in surgery, radiotherapy, and chemotherapy have improved survival in children with these tumors. However, a significant proportion of patients with CNS tumors suffer progressive disease despite such treatment. Advances in the understanding of the nature of the blood-brain/tumor barrier, chemotherapy resistance, tumor biology, and the role of angiogenesis in tumor progression and metastases have led to the advent of newer therapeutic strategies that circumvent these obstacles or target specific receptors that control signal transduction and/or angiogenesis in tumor cells. Ongoing clinical trials will determine whether these novel treatment modalities will improve outcomes for children with brain tumors.
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PMID:Recent advances in the treatment of pediatric brain tumors. 1564 97

Direct extension and hematogenous metastasis of primary non-CNS malignant tumors to the CNS are rare complications in children. The authors analyzed the incidence and outcome of these complications in Hungary. During a 14-year period between 1989 and 2002, 406 patients younger than 18 years were studied at Semmelweis University, Second Department of Pediatrics, in Budapest. Among the 406 patients with non-CNS solid tumors, nine hematogenous metastases and five direct tumor extensions to the CNS occurred. Primary tumors included rhabdomyosarcoma, neuroblastoma, tumors of the Ewing sarcoma family, non-Hodgkin lymphoma, and malignant chordoma. Mean interval between the initial diagnosis and the diagnosis of CNS involvement was 11.4 months. Despite intensive treatment, the mean survival after detection of CNS involvement was 10.4 months. The frequency of CNS involvement in non-CNS tumors is low, with a very poor survival.
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PMID:Incidence and survival of central nervous system involvement in childhood malignancies: Hungarian experience. 1575 Apr 42

"Rhythmic palisading" is a striking histologic pattern infrequently encountered in a variety of central nervous system (CNS) tumors. We present the case of an infant with a large spinal cord lesion wherein all sampled tissue showed columnar arrangements of palisaded cells, typical of polar spongioblastoma. The tumor was briskly proliferative, focally necrotic, and variably expressed S100, glial fibrillary acidic protein, neuron specific enolase, and p53 by immunohistochemistry. Fluorescence in situ hybridization failed to reveal isochromosome 17q, EGFR amplification, or deletions of 1p, 19q, 22q11.2, 10q, or p16. Despite chemotherapy and decadron, he developed lesional necrosis and intracranial metastases and died less than 1 mo from presentation. This case illustrates polar spongioblastoma as a distinctive histologic pattern that can occur in embryonal CNS tumors. Discrimination of these rare aggressive lesions from other CNS tumors with focal palisaded architecture is crucial as the treatment and prognosis of the latter may differ significantly.
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PMID:Polar spongioblastoma of the spinal cord: a case report. 1680 41

Primary spinal primitive neuroectodermal tumor (PSPNET) is extremely rare and only 25 cases have been reported in the world literature so far. Three patients of 8, 9 and 18 years of age, who presented with variable grades of neurological deficit were diagnosed as having a dorsal intramedullary lesion, a holocord lesion and cervical extradural tumor with extraspinal extension, respectively, and were operated at our institute. The histopathology of all 3 children revealed PNET. The clinical course, image characteristics and outcome of the 3 children are described, and the relevant literature is reviewed. The following conclusions were drawn from the present study and review of the literature. PNET may manifest itself as a primary lesion of the spine unlike the more common drop metastases from an intracranial lesion. PSPNET may be intramedullary, intradural and extradural with variable extraspinal extension. PSPNET may present as holocord intramedullary lesion, an entity which has not been described earlier. These lesions have a short history, significant neurological deficits and rapid course of illness. PSPNET, though an established entity, did not find a place in the WHO 2000 classification of CNS tumors. Hence its status has to be defined.
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PMID:Primary spinal primitive neuroectodermal tumor: case series and review of the literature. 1719 Sep 80

Brain tumors may lead to symptomatic epilepsy. A retrospective analysis was undertaken to evaluate the frequency of seizure as the presenting symptom leading to brain tumor diagnosis in adults. One hundred and forty-seven consecutive patients with newly diagnosed brain tumors were analyzed regarding the frequency of seizures as the initial presenting symptoms and those subsequently developing seizures. One hundred twelve patients had primary central nervous system tumors (CNS) and 35 had metastatic lesions. Statistical evaluation was carried out using the Chi-square test with p values of <0.05 considered to be statistically significant. Astrocytomas and meningiomas were the most common primary CNS tumors in this study. Of these, oligodendrogliomas and grade 2 astrocytomas were significantly more likely to present with seizures (p<0.001). Seizures were a frequent presenting symptom, occurring in over 38% of those with primary brain neoplasms and 20% of those with cerebral metastases. Primary location of tumor also correlated amongst primary CNS tumors and was associated with a trend in seizure risk: parietal (80%); temporal (74%); frontal (62%); and occipital (0%) (p<0.5). The findings highlight the importance of obtaining appropriate evaluation for underlying malignancy in adults with new-onset seizures as well as provide more information to the patient for prognosis and counseling.
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PMID:Frequency of seizures in patients with newly diagnosed brain tumors: a retrospective review. 1760 58

Most hemangiopericytomas (HPC) are located in the musculoskeletal system and the skin, while the location in the central nervous system (CNS) is rare. The latter represents 2 to 4% in large series of meningeal tumors, thus accounting for less than 1% of all CNS tumors. In the central nervous system, tumors with a hemangiopericytomatous histolopathological pattern can be either hemangiopericytomas or solitary fibrous tumors. CNS-HPCs have a relentless tendency for local recurrence and metastases outside the CNS. Metastasis can also appear many years after adequate treatment of the primary tumor. We present a pathological study of eight patients with CNS-HPC and compare our results with corresponding published data. The CNS-HPC group consisted of three males and five females with a mean age of 36.75 years. The tumors were supratentorial in four cases, infratentorial in two cases, tentorial in one case and located in the spinal cord in the last one. Histologically, CNS-HPCs were similar to their soft tissue counterparts. One case demonstrated increased cellularity, marked nuclear hyperchromasia and marked cellular pleomorphism with infiltration of the cerebellum. All patients underwent surgery with gross-total resection in all cases. No patients received postoperative radiation therapy. Only four patients recurred locally after six, seven and eight months, and five years. Our study presents the pathological features of CNS-HPC as a distinct entity from both meningioma and solitary fibrous tumors. A comparative review of literature with our results is discussed.
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PMID:Hemangiopericytoma in the central nervous system. A study of eight cases. 1830 45

Metastasis is the process by which cancer cells disseminate from the primary neoplasm and invade surrounding tissue and distant organs, and is the primary cause of morbidity and mortality for cancer patients. Most conventional cancer therapies are ineffective in managing tumor metastasis. This has been due in large part to the absence of in vivo metastatic models that represent the full spectrum of metastatic disease. Here we identify 3 new spontaneously arising tumors in the inbred VM mouse strain, which has a relatively high incidence of CNS tumors. Two of the tumors (VM-M2 and VM-M3) reliably expressed all of the major biological processes of metastasis to include local invasion, intravasation, immune system survival, extravasation and secondary tumor formation involving liver, kidney, spleen, lung and brain. Metastasis was assessed through visual organ inspection, histology, immunohistochemistry and bioluminescence imaging. The metastatic VM tumor cells also expressed multiple properties of macrophages including morphological appearance, surface adhesion, phagocytosis, total lipid composition (glycosphingolipids and phospholipids) and gene expression (CD11b, Iba1, F4/80, CD68, CD45 and CXCR4). The third tumor (VM-NM1) grew rapidly and expressed properties of neural stem/progenitor cells, but was neither invasive nor metastatic. Our data indicate that spontaneous brain tumors can arise from different cell types in VM mice and that metastatic cancer can represent a disease of macrophage-like cells similar to those described in several human metastatic cancers. The new VM tumor model will be useful for defining the biological processes of cancer metastasis and for evaluating potential therapies for tumor management.
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PMID:Metastatic cancer cells with macrophage properties: evidence from a new murine tumor model. 1839 29

The common childhood cancers are leukemia, CNS tumors, lymphomas, soft-tissue tumors (such as rhabdomyosarcoma and fibrosarcoma), neuroblastoma, malignant bone tumors, germ cell tumors with neoplasms of gonads and hepatic tumors. Usually the conventional imaging modalities, such as x-ray, ultrasound, computed tomography (CT) and MRI, are being routinely used for the management of these pediatric malignancies. However, most of these modalities provide structural information and are lacking in functional/metabolic status of these malignancies. Recently, PET and PET/CT have emerged as a functional diagnostic imaging modality for the management of various cancers in adult population. Up to now most of the data published in the literature are on PET alone. PET used in conjunction with CT is useful as it provides an enhanced view of the anatomical details and the malignant focus then can be located with highest accuracy. PET and PET/CT has been found to be useful in, for example, CNS tumors, lymphomas, soft-tissue tumors, neuroblastoma, malignant bone tumors and germ cell tumors. PET/CT has a limited role in early diagnosis, however, it plays an important role in initial staging, treatment response evaluation and detection of metastatic disease in these cancers. Despite the fact that PET/CT has better diagnostic value when compared with conventional imaging, such as CT and MRI, in the management of many pediatric cancers, there are certain limitations. PET/CT has a limited role in detection of lesions smaller than 5 mm, well-differentiated tumors and tumors with low metabolic rate. Many infections and inflammation can lead to false-positive PET/CT results. In the present review we will discuss the various clinical indications of PET and PET/CT in pediatric cancers.
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PMID:Clinical applications of PET and PET/CT in pediatric malignancies. 2047 7

Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is a malignant primary brain neoplasm with poor survival. Extracranial GBM dissemination is very uncommon, but is increasingly being recognized. The imaging features of metastatic pleural GBM are not specific for a primary central nervous system neoplasm. In this case, extracranial GBM metastases presented as circumscribed posterobasal pleural nodules. Diagnoses may be established with percutaneous or thoracoscopic biopsy. Radiologists should be familiar with the possibility of the extracranial spread of GBM because as therapeutic improvements provide increased local control of the primary tumor, improving patient survival, extracranial spread of disease will be increasingly encountered on thoracoabdominal imaging studies.
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PMID:Pleural metastatic disease from glioblastoma multiforme. 2063 62


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