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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
)
103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A review of the literature on
penis cancer
has been undertaken. The disease is rare and most of the cumulative experience is reported in retrospective series. Multi-institutional international collaboration will be needed to study prospectively facets of this disease where controversy presently exists. Suggested areas of research are in the treatment of early invasive tumours, the diagnosis and treatment of inguinal
metastases
, the improvement of radiotherapy techniques, and the development of effective chemotherapy and effective combinations of therapies. This will potentially lead to a greater degree of organ sparing. Studies of palliation, and aspects of quality of life, are also needed. Public education about the condition and genital hygiene, including the necessity for the early treatment of phimosis, may further reduce the incidence of
penis cancer
.
...
PMID:Penis cancer: a review by the Joint Radiotherapy Committee of the European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) Genitourinary and Radiotherapy Groups. 264 76
Ultrasonography clearly visualized the extent of primary tumor and the presence or absence of inguinal node
metastases
in two patients with
penile cancer
. These findings enabled us to decide an appropriate level for penile amputation and the indication for lymphadenectomy.
...
PMID:Ultrasound in penile cancer. 268 54
Most premalignant penile lesions should be completely locally excised. Giant condyloma frequently cannot be distinguished from fungating carcinoma and usually requires limited penectomy. Cancers other than epidermoid carcinomas are very rare and, except for basal cell carcinoma, have a generally poor prognosis. Prognosis of squamous cell carcinoma, however, depends on the stage of disease as determined by both local invasion and by involvement of inguinal nodes. The three-year survival rates for 55 patients were: stage I, 95 percent; stage II, 67 percent; stage III, 29 percent; and stage IV, zero percent. Most primary lesions were treated by partial penectomy, and no patient developed local recurrence. There is a significant discrepancy between initial clinical and histologic staging, due to the difficulty of determining lymph node
metastases
. Current methods of radiation therapy indicate that it has a role for management of primary
penile cancer
, especially in young men with small lesions. The management of inguinal lymph nodes is still debated. Although the reliability of the sentinel node biopsy has not been established, it may be appropriate in patients with noninvasive primary lesions and no detectable inguinal
metastases
. The need for immediate or prophylactic lymph node dissection in patients with invasive primary tumors is controversial. Successful management depends on careful and frequent follow-up examinations, with early intervention for suspicious adenopathy. In view of the poor prognosis for advanced lymph node
metastases
, we prefer to use early lymph node dissection when the primary lesion is deeply invasive. Limited bilateral pelvic lymph node dissection is associated with minimal morbidity and seems to be an appropriate prelude to groin dissection. Extensive pelvic
metastases
are a sign of incurability and abrogate the need for groin dissection. We prefer to perform the inguinal dissection at the time of lymph node dissection through a separate curve groin incision.
...
PMID:Carcinoma of the penis. 309 13
Assessment of the inguinal lymph nodes for
metastases
in patients with
penile cancer
is inaccurate. About 50 per cent of patients with node enlargement have no tumor on histologic examination, and 20 per cent of patients with clinically negative nodes have micrometastases. Lymph-node biopsies, including sentinel-node biopsy, are of limited staging value. Patients with lesions that do not invade the corpora and who have no palpable nodes should be followed carefully after excision of the primary tumor at 2- to 3-month intervals. If compliance with such a follow-up is doubtful, bilateral superficial groin-node dissection seems appropriate. Those with persistent adenopathy should undergo superficial lymph-node dissection first, and if positive nodes are found, bilateral deep-node dissection should then be performed. Bilateral inguinal and pelvic lymphadenectomy is recommended for patients with lesions invading the corpora with clinically negative or positive nodes because of the high incidence of lymph-node
metastases
in such cases. Where adenopathy persists after excision of the primary tumor, we advocate first limited pelvic dissection. If the pelvic nodes are negative or are not extensively involved, bilateral groin dissection should be performed, preferably in two stages. Percutaneous fine-needle aspiration of palpable or nonpalpable nodes can improve preoperative staging in patients with
penile cancer
.
...
PMID:Early versus delayed lymph-node dissection versus no lymph-node dissection in carcinoma of the penis. 331 64
The cancer-related 5-year survival was 80% in 79 patients with
penile cancer
treated at the Norwegian Radium Hospital from 1974 to 1985 (N0 = 61, N1-2 = 12, N3 = 6). Sentinel node biopsy (SLN) of the inguinal lymph nodes medial to the saphenous vein helps to identify patients with early regional spread. The survival for these N+ patients is favourable if radical lymph node dissection is performed immediately. A tumour-negative SLN biopsy does, however, not exclude the subsequent development of inguinal lymph node
metastases
. These were found equally often during follow-up in patients with or without primary performance of SLN biopsy. Five of 6 patients, relapsing with groin
metastases
, were cured by secondary lymph node dissection. Most of the small primary tumours (T1/T2) can be treated radically by primary radiotherapy, but frequent follow-up is necessary to detect surgically curable penile recurrences (3 of 11 patients). Combination treatment of chemotherapy, radiotherapy and surgery represents a good palliation treatment in advanced cases.
...
PMID:Cancer of the penis. Experience at the Norwegian Radium Hospital 1974-1985. 342 20
Penile tumors represent a difficult group of neoplasms requiring effective and curative treatment while minimizing tissue loss to prevent cosmetic and functional deformity. Over the past 6 years, we have treated 20 patients with
penile cancer
utilizing the fresh tissue technique of Mohs micrographic surgery. Tumors were excised with an average of 2.25 stages. Most defects (80%) were allowed to heal by second intention. Since surgery, four patients have developed
metastatic disease
in their regional lymphatic system, and one patient has died from metastatic spread. One patient has developed local recurrence. Micrographic surgery is a very useful treatment modality for patients with penile tumors. Patients with SCC of the penis should be considered for elective regional lymph node biopsy and/or dissection in conjunction with micrographically controlled excision of the primary tumor.
...
PMID:Penile tumors: their management by Mohs micrographic surgery. 366 59
Aspiration biopsy cytology is an accurate, safe, innocuous alternative to excisional biopsy in diagnosing the nature of concomitant superficial nodules or lymphadenopathy in patients with known cutaneous malignancy. In patients with
penile cancer
, aspiration biopsy cytology may avoid the morbidity (30-50%) and mortality (3%) of groin dissection staging. A positive aspirate is conclusive of Stage III tumor and, in patients with occult nodal
metastases
, may lead to early curative lymphadenectomy. In the present study of 28 patients with known cutaneous malignant melanoma, the aspiration biopsy cytology of 31 superficial nodules resulted in a cytologic diagnosis of metastasis in 29 nodules from 26 patients. In the management of patients with known melanoma, the positive cytology of superficial nodules is conclusive of
metastatic disease
and requires an accurate radiologic study to establish or exclude disseminated disease. Surgical removal of a metastatic superficial nodule is indicated when the lesion is considered localized disease and the patient, having been accurately examined, is determined to be apparently free of disease in other sites and organs. When systemic diffuse melanoma is found, the excision of metastatic superficial nodules is unnecessary. Positive aspiration cytology may avoid risk from ill-judged surgical procedures and indicate appropriate palliative treatment of the disease.
...
PMID:Aspiration cytology of cutaneous metastatic melanoma and epidermoid carcinoma of the penis. 381 21
Sixty-one patients with clinical low-stage (Jackson Stage I) and 22 patients with clinical high-stage (Jackson Stage II or III or T3-4N0-1M0) carcinoma of the penis who were seen between 1952 and 1979 and followed for at least 3 years or until death were reviewed. The majority of patients with Stage I cancer were treated with partial penectomy, either with or without ilioinguinal lymphadenectomy. The remainder of patients with these early small lesions were treated with local excision or circumcision. Forty-one of the patients with this early
penile cancer
(Jackson Stage I or Tcis, T1N0M0 or T2N0M0) survived at least 3 years and were considered cured. The other 20 patients died of cancer (12 cases) or unrelated disease (8 cases). If the patients who died of other diseases are excluded, the corrected 5-year survival rate was 77%. Treatment failure was primarily due to metachronous inguinal
metastases
after initial treatment of the primary tumor and failure of response of
metastatic disease
to salvage treatment. Four factors probably were associated with a poor prognosis: large primary tumor, moderately to poorly differentiated cancer, younger age at onset, and inadequate initial treatment. In advanced (Jackson Stages II and III) disease, treatment by partial or total penectomy alone or in combination with radiation to inguinal nodes after penectomy produced 3-year or longer survival in only 2 of 9 patients, whereas treatment by early extended excision of both the primary lesion and the ilioinguinal lymph nodes produced 3-year or longer survival in 11 of 13 patients. The results suggest that local excision is appropriate only for carcinoma in situ. Partial penectomy and monthly follow-up for at least 1 year is appropriate for patients with small, well-differentiated primary tumors. Patients who have large or moderately to poorly differentiated primary tumors probably should undergo partial or total penectomy and immediate ilioinguinal lymphadenectomy.
...
PMID:Cancer of the penis. Prognosis and treatment plans. 397 57
Knowledge of the status of the pelvic lymph nodes is vital for accurate staging and adequate treatment of patients with urologic cancer. Noninvasive techniques for assessing the lymphatic spread of urologic neoplasms have proved to be of limited value. Bipedal lymphangiography and percutaneous fine needle aspiration cytology under fluoroscopic guidance were performed for staging purposes in 71 patients with clinically localized bladder, prostatic and
penile cancer
from 257 nodal chains. The overall diagnostic accuracy was 93% and the correct aspiration of 186 lymph nodes was surgically confirmed. There were 11 (6%) false-negative biopsy results and no false-positive diagnoses. Aspiration cytology is a safe, well tolerated, accurate, and rapid method of determining the presence of
metastatic disease
in lymphangiographically visualized pelvic nodes. In the management of prostatic carcinoma, positive cytologic results are diagnostic of nodal metastatic involvement and spare the patients unnecessary surgical staging. Negative cytologic findings may be considered diagnostic of localized disease in the patients with well differentiated prostatic carcinoma (2-4 Gleason's sum). Since most surgeons are reluctant to perform a staging lymphadenectomy in the management of invasive bladder carcinoma, aspiration cytology can provide accurate staging, thus permitting an appropriate treatment plan. In patients with carcinoma of the penis, a positive aspirate permits an early and even curative lymphadenectomy in cases with clinically negative but pathologically positive nodes.
...
PMID:Aspiration cytology in the staging of urologic cancer. 401 5
Eighteen sentinel lymph node biopsies were performed in 10 patients with invasive squamous carcinoma of the penis. Five of 15 biopsies associated with inguinal lymphadenopathy and 2 of 3 biopsies associated with palpably normal inguinal nodes were positive. Among 7 ipsilateral regional lymphadenectomies undertaken because of a positive biopsy, additional lymph node
metastases
were uncovered in only 1 instance. Among 5 patients with negative biopsies bilaterally, none had other superficial inguinal lymph node
metastases
and all but one have remained free of tumor (mean follow-up 26 months). These data support the possibility that the sentinel lymph node is often the first site of regional lymphatic metastasis in
penile cancer
.
...
PMID:Sentinel lymph node biopsy for staging penile cancer. 671 Jul 10
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