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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (metastases)
103,950 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) is the most common tumor of the penis. The natural history and its proclivity to spread via regional lymphatics has been well defined. Laser ablation of the primary tumor has a prominent role in patients with a superficial tumor as a penis-conserving approach. Patients with deeper infiltrating tumors, should undergo (partial) penile amputation. For patients presenting with proven metastatic nodes complete (ilio-) inguinal lymphadenectomy should be performed. During the last two decades, the management of penile carcinoma patients with impalpable regional lymph nodes has improved due to better knowledge of risks for metastases, the introduction of modified lymphadenectomy, and sentinel node biopsy. Future perspectives in penile cancer comprises continuing research to reduce mutilation without jeopardizing clinical outcome.
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PMID:Contemporary management of penile squamous cell carcinoma. 1561 38

Cancer of the penis is rare in Europe, accounting for less than 0.5% of all cancers. Phimosis and poor hygiene are strong risk factors whereas neonatal circumcision is a contributing factor in the prevention of this disease. More than 95% of penile carcinomas are squamous cell carcinomas. Early disease (stage I-II) is curable in most patients, who can be treated by conventional penile amputation or, in selected cases, by organ preserving techniques, including Moh's micrographic surgery, laser ablation or radiation therapy (external-beam, brachytherapy). For more advanced primary tumours, penile amputation is required. Survival of patients with penile cancer is strongly related to the presence and extent of nodal metastases. Bilateral inguinal lymphadenectomy is recommended for palpable lymph nodes that persist 3 or more weeks after removal of the primary tumour and a course of antibiotic therapy. In patients with proven inguinal lymph node metastases, bilateral ileoinguinal dissection should be performed. When the nodes are clinically negative, "prophylactic" inguinal lymphadenectomy may be a reasonable approach in patients with invasive tumours (T2 or greater), high grade tumours, or tumours exhibiting vascular invasion. The role of chemotherapy, as adjuvant and neoadjuvant or primary treatment in metastatic disease, needs to be further explored in prospective clinical trials.
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PMID:Cancer of the penis. 1566 66

Computed tomography (CT) imaging is the standard method for the assessment of lymph node metastases in renal cell and testicular cancer. In bladder cancer and prostate cancer the results of CT are not convincing due to a large number of false-negative findings and the prognostic relevance of undetected metastases. For both entities recent studies revealed that MR lymphography using iron oxide particles allows the detection of small metastatic lymph nodes. For penile cancer reliable results for imaging of lymph node metastases do not exist. PET imaging using [(18)F]-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) is the modality of choice in therapy control of seminomas but has no defined value in other urological malignancies. PET with [(11)C] choline and [(11)C] acetate offers great potential in staging and restaging of prostate cancer. Further investigations are necessary to determine the role of these new methods.
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PMID:[Value of imaging for lymph node metastases from renal cell, bladder, prostate, penile, and testicular cancers]. 1590 89

Penile cancer is a rare tumor entity but penile carcinoma is characterized by a high recurrence rate regarding local, lymphatic, and hematogenous recurrence. The critical period for tumor recurrence is in the first 5 years. Therapeutic options for tumor recurrence can be differentiated by the type of recurrence and the preceding therapy. The prognosis of local or small lymphatic recurrence-if detected early and diligently diagnosed-can be improved significantly by radical surgery. On the other hand, systemic therapy of advanced lymphatic recurrences and hematogenous metastases will influence disease progression only marginally. Based on these considerations, the follow-up of penile cancer should be risk adapted but close as suggested by our algorithm. With a reduced, but close follow-up we can offer our patients aftercare with the consequence of improved prognosis.
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PMID:[Penile cancer--aftercare with results. How much is necessary?]. 1607 97

A review of the clinical applications of sentinel lymph node (sN) biopsy has been performed with the aim of defining the rationale, the methods of detection, the accuracy, and the current indications to sN biopsy in different solid neoplasms. In melanoma patients, sN biopsy represents a standard procedure for staging purpose, although its therapeutic value is still under examination. The sN is an accurate method for the pathologic staging of the axilla in patients with early stage breast cancer, and it can be useful for the selection of patients with axillary metastasis who should undergo standard axillary dissection. In gynecologic malignancies, appreciable results are available in patients with vulvar and cervical cancer only. Patients with squamous cell vulvar cancer may benefit by sN biopsy because a complete bilateral inguino-femoral lymph-node dissection may be avoided whenever the sN is free of metastasis. As regards to cervical cancer, further studies are required with the combined technique (blue dye injection and gamma-probe guided surgery), which seems more promising, before abandoning pelvic lymphadenectomy in patients with histologically-negative sN. The experience in urologic cancer deals mainly with penile and prostate cancer; the modern procedures for the dynamic detection of sN are going to clarify its role in the surgical management of penile cancer; as regards to prostate cancer, very preliminary results suggest that the sN biopsy may enhance the pathologic staging of this neoplasm compared to modified pelvic lymphadenectomy, due to the individual variability of the lymphatic drainage of this cancer. In patients with clinically node-negative squamous head and neck cancer, the reliability of sN-guided neck lymph node dissection seems promising. The sN biopsy is also technically feasible in patients with differentiated thyroid cancer; however, the future role of this procedure in the clinical decision-making of these patients remains to be defined due to the questionable biological meaning of nodal metastases. Patients with non-small-cell lung cancer should be investigated by means of radiotracers injected at the time of thoracotomy or under CT-scan guidance in order to achieve a satisfactory identification rate (over 80%); the focused histopathologic staging of the sN improves current pathologic staging by conventional bi-valve assessment of all the lymph nodes of the surgical specimen; moreover, the prognostic role of isolated N2 metastasis can be better elucidated. In patients with gastrointestinal malignancies, the intraoperative lymphatic mapping with sN biopsy have suggested that the lymphatic drainage of the gastrointestinal tract is much more complicated than other sites, skip metastasis being rather frequent. In patients with gastric cancer, current data show that it can be detected by means of peritumoral injection of indocyanine green; the detection of tumor positive lymph nodes beyond the perigastric area could select patients amenable to D2 lymphadenectomy. As regards to colorectal cancer patients, the focused analysis of the sN may reveal disease that might otherwise go undetected by conventional surgical and pathological methods, and those patients which are upstaged can benefit by adjuvant chemotherapy. Finally, in patients with Merkel cell carcinoma, notwithstanding the limited experiences with sN biopsy, sN histology seems to predict regional lymph node status and may aid in selecting which patients are amenable to therapeutic lymph node dissection.
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PMID:Clinical applications of sentinel lymph-node biopsy for the staging and treatment of solid neoplasms. 1616 21

The aim of this article is to define the therapeutic advances in the treatment of penile cancer over the past 2 decades. A literature search was conducted for articles in which a major change in therapy was documented as beneficial. Case records were then reviewed in patients who underwent such procedures. Major advances have involved less disfiguring treatment of the primary lesion in selected cases and the recognition of improved survival by altering the timing of groin dissection for those at risk for metastatic disease.
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PMID:Advances in the treatment of carcinoma of the penis. 1619 17

The assessment of penile cancer on the basis of clinical findings alone can often result in inaccurate staging and suboptimal treatment. Imaging of primary penile cancer and metastatic lymphadenopathy can help optimize planning of both primary tumor resection and treatment for lymph node metastases. Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging is the most accurate imaging modality in the assessment of primary penile cancers, which usually manifest as solitary, ill-defined infiltrating tumors that are hypointense on both T1- and T2-weighted MR images. T2-weighted MR imaging allows delineation of the tumor margin and of any extension into the penile shaft. On gadolinium-enhanced T1-weighted images, the tumors enhance to a greater extent than do the corpora cavernosa. In addition, the recently introduced technique known as lymphotrophic nanoparticle-enhanced MR imaging can help identify metastatic lymph node disease. However, further studies will be needed to determine the role of this imaging technique in clinical practice. Computed tomography does not clearly depict the local extension of primary penile cancer; however, it is useful in assessing metastases and postoperative complications.
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PMID:Imaging of penile neoplasms. 1628 39

Four patients with penile carcinoma are described. A 60-year-old man with a T1-tumour underwent penis-conserving laser treatment. Two men, aged 52 and 65 years old, with T2-tumors and clinically node-negative groins underwent penile amputation. Sentinel-node biopsy (SNB) revealed no metastases in the 52-year-old patient. High-resolution ultrasound-guided fine-needle aspiration cytology revealed bilateral metastases in the other patient, who underwent bilateral inguinal lymphadenectomy. In the fourth patient, a 73-year-old man with a T3-tumor, a pathological lymph node was palpated in one groin. Inguinal lymphadenectomy revealed 3 positive nodes and an additional pelvic lymphadenectomy was performed. SNB on the other side was positive and inguinal lymphadenectomy followed. No additional positive nodes were found in the dissection specimen. All patients were alive without evidence of disease 4, 3, 3 and 4 years later, respectively. New developments in the management of penile cancer such as laser treatment, high-resolution ultrasonography and SNB result in a more tailored approach with less morbidity without reducing survival rates.
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PMID:[Less mutilating treatment of penile carcinoma]. 1628 58

Penile cancer is a rare tumor in Europe with an incidence of 0.1-0.9 per 100,000 men per year. The success of our therapy is mainly influenced by the presence of lymph node metastases. At first diagnosis 17-45% of patients already harbor lymph node metastases. Bilateral inguinal and pelvic lymphadenectomy is a curative measure in these patients. In cases of gross inguinal metastases neoadjuvant chemotherapy leads to a remission rate of 21-60% and improves the resectability. The influence on survival is not proven. The same holds true for adjuvant therapy following lymphadenectomy. Polychemotherapy rarely leads to long-lasting complete remission in patients with distant metastases. The protocols consist usually of cisplatin, bleomycin, methotrexate, and 5-fluorouracil. The overall remission rate is around 15-32%. Because of the low efficacy of the present chemotherapy regimens, one should follow new strategies, comparable to those initiated for squamous cell cancer of other organs.
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PMID:[Systemic therapy of penile cancer]. 1662 42

The staging lymph node dissection in patients with penile carcinoma is accompanied with a high morbidity. As many patients are free of nodal metastases the lymphoscintigraphic sentinel node biopsy is supposed to minimize perioperative morbidity in these patients. In the current study the accuracy of the lymphoscintigraphic sentinel node biopsy was verified against the gold standard of radical inguinal dissection. In particular, patients with enlarged lymph nodes have also been included since one half of these patients is known to have histologically negative lymph nodes. Between 2000 and 2004 fifteen patients with penile carcinoma were elected to undergo bilateral groin dissection, thus 30 inguinal areas have been dissected. Nine patients have had clinically palpable nodes. All patients underwent lymphoscintigraphy after injection of Tc99-nanocolloid subcutaneously into the peritumoral area. Intraoperatively the sentinel nodes were identified with the aid of a gamma ray detection probe and excised. Afterwards a standard groin dissection was performed and the different lymph nodes were histopathologically assessed separately. In all patients lymph nodes with high radioactivity uptake were detected bilaterally. In 10 out of 30 inguinal areas histopathologically positive lymph nodes were present. In four of them the sentinel node was positive for tumor but in six dissection areas lymph node metastases were found despite a negative sentinel node. These patients had clinically palpable lymph nodes in their histologically positive inguinal regions. If no palpable nodes were present dynamic sentinel biopsy detected the positive nodes. The current study showed that dynamic sentinel node biopsy in patients with clinically suspicious lymph nodes is of low value for detection of lymphatic spread in penile cancer. Therefore the gold standard in these patients remains the radical groin dissection. However, dynamic sentinel node biospy is still a promising strategy to identify lymphatic spreading in clinically N0 patients and therefore to prevent unnecessary groin dissection.
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PMID:Lymphoscintigraphy in penile cancer: limited value of sentinel node biopsy in patients with clinically suspicious lymph nodes. 1668 59


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