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)

Major surgical resection is often the only curative treatment for cholangiocarcinoma. When imaging techniques fail to establish the accurate diagnosis, biopsy of the lesion is unavoidable. However, biopsy is not necessarily required for topography of the cholangiocarcinoma (intrahepatic or extrahepatic). 1) In extrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (ECC), clinical features and radiological imaging relate to biliary obstruction. Provided that between 8% and 43% of bile duct strictures are not ECC, the lesions mimicking ECC that should be ruled out are gallbladder cancer, Mirizzi syndrome, primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC), autoimmune pancreatitis and portal biliopathy. Systematic biopsy is usually difficult and has poor sensitivity, but a good knowledge of these mimicking ECC diseases, along with precise analysis of clinical and imaging semiology, may lead to a correct diagnosis without the need for biopsy. 2) Intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (ICC) developing in normal liver appears as a hypovascular tumour with fibrotic component and capsular retraction that can be confused with fibrous metastases such as breast and colorectal cancers. The lack of the primary site, a relatively large tumour size and ancillary findings such as bile duct dilatation may provide a clue to the diagnosis. If not, we advocate local resection with lymph node dissection, since ICC is the most likely diagnosis and surgery is the only curative treatment. In the event of adenocarcinoma from unknown primary, surgery is an effective treatment even if prognosis is poor.
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PMID:Is preoperative histological diagnosis necessary before referral to major surgery for cholangiocarcinoma? 1877 64

Gallbladder cancer is a disease with poor prognosis, especially when it is associated with distant metastasis. Here we report a rare case of a patient with gallbladder cancer with extensive local and distant lymph node metastases and multiple liver metastases who has survived for more than 13 years through aggressive treatments. A 54-year-old woman developed right upper quadrant pain. Computed tomography (CT) revealed a papillary tumor in the gallbladder. Low-density tumors in segments 4, 5, and 8 of the liver and extensive paraaortic lymph node swelling were observed. She underwent central hepatic bisectionectomy and paraaortic lymphadenectomy. Two months later, hepatic metastases were found in segments 2, 3, 6, and 7, and percutaneous ethanol injection and transcatheter arterial chemoembolization were performed. Twelve months after the first surgery, CT revealed lymph node swelling around the right external iliac artery and behind the left renal vein. Metastatic lymph node dissection and resection and reconstruction of the right external iliac artery and vein with artificial graft replacements were performed. Two months later, CT revealed a paraesophageal lymph node swelling, which was treated by radiotherapy. At present, 13 years after the first surgery, and 11 years after the last radiotherapy, she is alive without any sign of recurrence.
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PMID:A patient with gallbladder cancer with paraaortic lymph node and hepatic metastases who has survived for more than 13 years after the primary extended radical operation. 1898 37

We report port site and distant metastases of unsuspected gallbladder cancer after laparoscopic cholecystectomy diagnosed by positron emission tomography (PET) in two patients. Patient 1, a 72-year-old woman was diagnosed as cholelithiasis and cholecystitis and received laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Unsuspected gallbladder cancer was discovered with histological result of well-differentiated squamous cell carcinoma of the gallbladder infiltrating the entire wall. A PET scan using F-18-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG-PET) before radical resection revealed residual tumor in the gallbladder fossa and recurrence at port site and metastases in bilateral hilar lymph nodes. Patient 2, a 69-year-old woman underwent laparoscopic cholecystectomy more than one year ago with pathologically confirmed unsuspected adenosquamous carcinoma of stage pT1b. At 7-mo follow-up after surgery, the patient presented with nodules in the periumbilical incision. Excisional biopsy of the nodule revealed adenosquamous carcinoma. The patient was examined by FDG-PET, demonstrating increased FDG uptake in the right lobe of the liver and mediastinal lymph nodes consistent with metastatic disease. This report is followed by a discussion about the utility of FDG-PET in the gallbladder cancer.
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PMID:Port site and distant metastases of gallbladder cancer after laparoscopic cholecystectomy diagnosed by positron emission tomography. 1900 66

A 53-year-old woman presented with a diagnosis of advanced gallbladder cancer at our hospital. She was evaluated with CT scan and given a diagnosis of Stage IVb due to the multiple lymph nodes metastases and significant invasion to the artery. However, we underwent simple cholecystectomy followed by immunotherapy that was the hope of herself and her family. The serum level of DUPAN-2 was gradually elevated to 6,800 U/mL, and the metastases to the liver were detected. After we started the dendritic cell vaccine pulsed with autologous tumor-lysate with S-1, DUPAN-2 decreased to 980 U/ mL. The CT scan showed complete response (CR) in the liver metastases and partial response (PR) in the lymph node metastases. However, the serum level of CEA elevated since the MUC-1 peptide was used instead of autologous tumor- lysate, even DUPAN-2 did not. The liver metastases were in control, but the lymph nodes metastases had progressed. She died of the progressed lesion later in approximately one year from the operation. This case demonstrated a possibility of the tumor escape mechanism by changing their tumor-associated antigens.
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PMID:[The case of tumor escape mechanism by changing their tumor-associated antigens]. 2003

This report describes the case of a patient undergoing conventional cholecystectomy and incidentally in the study of pathology was detected gallbladder cancer infiltrating to the muscular plane (T1b). Its evaluation on post operatory of the stage disease, CT was negative for metastases and after five months later underwent wedge resection of gallbladder bed with 2 cm. margin of hepatic parenchyma, plus extensive lymph node disecction. The literature show these cases occur relatively frequently, being important his re-resection timely in order to provide better survival and / or cure.
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PMID:[Gallbladder cancer-surgical strategy: incidental re-resected case at Hospital Rebagliati]. 2006 24

Resection is a means of improving survival in patients with gallbladder cancer. A more aggressive surgical approach, including resection of the gallbladder, liver, and regional lymph nodes, is advisable for patients with T1b to T4 tumors. Aggressive resection is necessary because a patient's gallbladder cancer stage determines the outcome, not the surgery itself. Therefore, major resections should be offered to appropriately selected patients. Patients with advanced tumors or metastatic disease are not candidates for radical resection and thus should be directed to more suitable palliation.
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PMID:Management of gallbladder cancer. 2047 89

Gallbladder cancer has an extremely poor prognosis because it is often diagnosed at an advanced stage. We describe a 63-year-old woman who was treated 4 years previously for gallbladder cancer, with laparoscopic cholecystectomy and secondary hepatectomy after presenting with acute cholecystitis and gallbladder rupture. At her second presentation, she had a left lower gingival tumor and deep neck infection. Incision and drainage and tumor biopsies were performed, and pathology at both sites revealed adenocarcinoma. Positron emission tomography revealed other tumors in the left breast and left lower lung field, which were both proven to be adenocarcinoma by biopsy. The patient's presentation with a metastatic oral tumor was rare. Although the incidence is very low, physicians should consider the possibility of metastatic cancer in a patient with a history of cancer, who presents with new oral tumor or deep neck infection.
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PMID:Metastatic gallbladder cancer presenting as a gingival tumor and deep neck infection. 2095 Jul 82

We herein report two patients with unresectable malignant biliary stricture who underwent stenting with a newly developed fully-covered metal stent. In the first case of lower-middle bile duct cancer, a stent was placed through the stenosis. In the second case of middle bile duct stricture due to lymph node metastases from gallbladder cancer, a stent was placed in the bile duct across the stenosis. No procedure-related complications were observed. Unevenness of the outer surface and a low shortening ratio are expected to lessen the occurrence of complications characteristic of covered metal stents such as stent migration and bile duct kinking.
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PMID:Newly developed fully covered metal stent for unresectable malignant biliary stricture. 2098 Dec 88

The aim of this study was to elucidate gender-specific markers for postresectional long-term survival of gallbladder cancer (GBC) based on a cohort of Chinese patients. Clinicopathological records of 81 patients (27 males and 54 females) after surgical resection for GBC were reviewed retrospectively. The influence of each variable on survival was determined using the Kaplan-Meier method and log-rank test. For females, Cox regression analysis was also adopted. Univariate analysis showed that the absence of lymph node and distant metastases, differentiation grade, and curative resection were associated with prolonged survival for all males, whereas tumor size, differentiation grade, and the presence of lymph node metastases influenced the overall or disease-free survival of patients after curative resection (all P < 0.05). On the other hand, Nevin stage was an independent marker for both overall survival for all females and overall and disease-free survival for female patients who underwent curative resection. Additionally, resection type and differentiation grade were of independent prognostic significance for different subgroups of females (all P < 0.05). Our data suggested that tumor-related factors affect prognosis of both male and female patients with GBC after resection. Of these factors, tumor differentiation status might be more significant for males, but Nevin stage had a stronger predictive potential for females.
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PMID:Gender-specific prognostic markers of patients with gallbladder cancer after surgical resection. 2114 Jun 97

Even after extensive preoperative assessment, staging laparoscopy may allow avoidance of non-therapeutic laparotomy in patients with radiographically occult metastatic or locally unresectable disease. Staging laparoscopy is associated with decreased postoperative pain, a shorter hospital stay and a higher likelihood of receiving systemic therapy compared to laparotomy but its yield has decreased with improvements in imaging techniques. Current uses of staging laparoscopy include the following: (1) In the staging of pancreatic adenocarcinoma, laparoscopic staging allows for the identification of sub-radiographic metastatic disease in locally advanced cancer in approximately 30% of patients and, in radiographically resectable cancer, may identify metastatic disease in 10%-15% of cases; (2) In colorectal liver metastases, selective use of laparoscopic staging in patients with a clinical risk score of over 2 identifies unresectable disease in approximately 20% of patients; (3) In hepatocellular carcinoma, laparoscopic staging could be selectively used in high-risk patients such as those with clinically apparent liver cirrhosis and in patients with major vascular invasion or bilobar tumors; and (4) In biliary tract malignancy, staging laparoscopy may be used in all patients with potentially resectable primary gallbladder cancer and in selected patients with T2/T3 hilar cholangiocarcinoma. Because of the decreasing yield of SL secondary to improvements in imaging techniques, staging laparoscopy should be used selectively for patients with pancreatic and hepatobiliary malignancy to avoid unnecessary non-therapeutic laparotomy and to improve resource utilization. Each individual surgeon should apply his or her threshold as to whether staging laparoscopy is indicated according to the quality of preoperative imaging studies and the availability of resources at their own institution.
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PMID:Role of staging laparoscopy in peri-pancreatic and hepatobiliary malignancy. 2116 Aug 97


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