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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
)
103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
PURPOSE: The indication for liver transplantation in malignant liver tumors has been controversial due to disappointing results and shortage of donor organs. The authors evaluated the experience and results of a single center in order to define present indications and selection criteria in hepatobiliary malignancy. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Retrospective analysis of 212 patients who underwent liver transplantation for malignant tumors between 1972 and 1995: Primary hepatobiliary tumors: hepatocellular carcinoma, n = 124 (with underlying cirrhosis, n = 86; fibrolamellar subtype, n = 8); intrahepatic bile duct (cholangiocellular) carcinoma, n = 24; proximal bile duct carcinoma, n = 29; other uncommon entities (n = 15); secondary liver tumors: neuroendocrine, n = 11, and nonendocrine, n = 9. RESULTS: Survival rates in primary liver cancer were correlated to International Union Against Cancer (UICC) tumor stage. For hepatocellular and proximal bile duct carcinoma significantly better outcome was found in UICC-tumor stage I and II versus III and IV. No long-term survival was found after transplantation for intrahepatic bile duct carcinoma, hemangiosarcoma and nonendocrine liver metastases. Comparison of transplant and resected patients with hepatocellular carcinoma stage I and II with underlying cirrhosis showed better survival after transplantation: 1-, 3-, 5-year survival rate of 83.3% versus 76.9%, 75.8% versus 44.0%, 60.6% versus 44.0%, and median survival 96.5 versus 23.2 months. Although this difference was not significant, no patient died from tumor recurrence in the transplant group versus three in the resection group. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS: Patients with malignant tumors can be selected for transplantation with predictable likelihood for long-term survival. According to the present data, liver transplantation can be considered in unresectable UICC-stage II hepatocellular and proximal bile duct carcinoma, the uncommon entities fibrolamellar carcinoma, epitheliod hemangioendothelioma and
hepatoblastoma
as well as liver metastases from neuroendocrine tumors. UICC-stage II and IV hepatocellular carcinoma as well as intrahepatic bile duct carcinoma, hemangiosarcoma and
metastases
from nonendocrine tumors should be excluded from transplantation alone. For hepatocellular carcinoma, multimodality treatment protocols have had a proven impact on the prevention of early recurrence and prolongation of survival. There is evidence that liver transplantation in still resectable hepatocellular carcinoma with underlying cirrhosis might be more appropriate in order to cure the cancer-bearing disease.
...
PMID:Indications and Role of Liver Transplantation for Malignant Tumors. 1038 47
Our results of treatment for
pediatric hepatoblastoma
are presented with special emphasis on pulmonary metastasis. The pulmonary metastasis rate of
hepatoblastoma
was 44% (11/25). In 19 patients with resected hepatoblastomas, the 5-year survival rate without pulmonary metastasis was 90% (9/10); while with pulmonary metastasis it was 22% (2/9). Six patients with unresected hepatoblastomas all died within 4 months regardless of chemotherapy and/or metastasis. To improve survival in patients with
hepatoblastoma
, preoperative or postoperative chemotherapy was thought to be essential for tumors extending over 2 hepatic segments and having predictable factors for pulmonary metastasis (large size or histological evidence of capsular invasion). A long-term multidisciplinary approach including hepatic lobectomy, current multiagent chemotherapy (including CDDP, THP-ADR), and partial pulmonary resection for localized lung areas with
metastases
would ultimately be needed.
...
PMID:A study of therapy for pediatric hepatoblastoma: prevention and treatment of pulmonary metastasis. 1042 88
The aim of this study was to investigate the prognostic significance of pretreatment patient and tumour characteristics for overall (OS) and event-free (EFS) survival in 154 children affected by
hepatoblastoma
(HB) in the first prospective liver tumour study run by the International Society of Paediatric Oncology. The pretreatment characteristics studied were age, alpha-fetoprotein, platelet count, histology; from radiology: intrahepatic tumour extension (PRETEXT), lung metastases, enlarged hilar lymph nodes, vena cava or extrahepatic vena porta tumour extension and tumour focality. Five-year OS was 75% (95% confidence interval (CI) 68-82%) and EFS 66% (95% CI 59-74%). Both were univariately associated with PRETEXT and the presence of
metastases
. Additionally tumour focality and enlargement of hilar lymph nodes at diagnosis were univariately associated with EFS. In multivariate analysis, PRETEXT was the only predictor of OS; PRETEXT and
metastases
were predictors of EFS. There is a need to investigate further these factors to confirm their validity.
...
PMID:Pretreatment prognostic factors for children with hepatoblastoma-- results from the International Society of Paediatric Oncology (SIOP) study SIOPEL 1. 1089 56
Spinal cord compression secondary to
metastases
is an infrequent complication of childhood cancer. We describe an infant with
hepatoblastoma
in whom cord compression developed because of extensive epidural
metastases
during treatment. This is a hitherto undescribed metastatic site for
hepatoblastoma
.
...
PMID:Hepatoblastoma with spinal metastases. 1113 21
Forty-seven children treated in various Polish centers between 1985 and 1995 for primary malignant liver tumors were retrospectively analyzed.
Hepatoblastoma
(HB) prevailed--it was found in 39 cases. There were 6 hepatocarcinoma (HCC) cases and 2 cases of undifferentiated sarcoma (UDS). In 44% of HB patients the tumor involved both liver lobes. 18% of children with HB presented with pulmonary
metastases
at diagnosis. Chemotherapy was applied in 92% of cases (preoperatively in 67%). Tumor resection was performed in 56% of HB patients. Overall survival of patients with
hepatoblastoma
was 43.6%, while it was 50% for hepatocarcinoma and 100% for undifferentiated sarcoma (2 cases only). Mean observation time was 58 months. The
hepatoblastoma
subgroup, being the largest (83% of all cases), was analyzed separately for prognostic factors. Completeness of tumor excision strongly influenced survival. Involvement of both lobes of the liver and multifocality of the tumor were other adverse prognostic factors.
...
PMID:Multicenter retrospective analysis of various primary pediatric malignant hepatic tumors--management in a series of 47 Polish patients (1985-1995). 1137 Oct 41
Involvement of the inferior vena cava (IVC) by hepatic tumors, although uncommon, is considered to be unresectable by standard surgical techniques. Recent advances in hepatic surgery have made combined hepatic and vena caval resection possible. The purpose of this study is to describe the surgical techniques and early results of combined resection of the liver and IVC. From 1997 to 2000, 11 patients underwent resection of the IVC along with four to seven liver segments. Resections were carried out for hepatocellular carcinoma (four); colorectal
metastases
(four); and
hepatoblastoma
, gastrointestinal stromal tumor
metastases
, and squamous cell carcinoma in one patient each. Ex vivo procedures were performed twice, and total vascular isolation was used in the nine other cases. The IVC was reconstructed with ringed Gore-Tex tube graft (five), primarily (five), or with Gore-Tex patches (one). There were two early deaths: one from liver failure at 3 weeks and one from sepsis secondary to a perforated segment of small bowel 4 months postresection. One patient with a gastrointestinal stromal tumor died at 32 months of recurrent tumor and one patient with hepatocellular carcinoma is alive with recurrent tumor at 16 months. The remaining patients are alive and disease free with follow-up ranging from 3 to 40 months without evidence of IVC occlusion. Combined resection of the liver and IVC is a formidable undertaking with substantial surgical risk. However, this aggressive surgical approach offers a chance for cure in patients with tumors involving the IVC that would otherwise have a dismal prognosis.
...
PMID:Resection of the inferior vena cava for hepatic malignancy. 1173 Feb 25
Hepatoblastoma
, the commonest primary malignant liver tumor in infants and children, is usually associated with elevated serum alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) levels. The authors sought to determine if AFP levels can be used to modify treatment, thereby avoiding the wait for formal imaging studies and prolonged suboptimal treatment and limiting the use of effective but toxic chemotherapy. From April 1984 to December 1997, 8 children were diagnosed with AFP-secreting
hepatoblastoma
. Serum AFP levels were measured weekly. If AFP levels failed to improve, or increased on at least 2 successive examinations, the chemotherapy protocol was changed. When an excellent response was achieved, less toxic chemotherapy was substituted. Six patients (75%) were disease-free for at least 2 years, some with high-risk or
metastatic disease
. Two patients died. Six of the 7 nonmetastatic patients (86%) remain disease-free (only one had a resectable tumor). Chemotherapy changes resulted in reduced AFP levels in 7 patients. This study supports the use of AFP monitoring to modify treatment in
hepatoblastoma
responding to therapy with less toxic drugs and the use of nonstandard therapy when suboptimal responses are obtained.
...
PMID:Treatment of alpha-fetoprotein secreting hepatoblastoma by response of serum alpha-fetoprotein levels: a new concept. 1176
Liver transplantation (LT) for malignant tumors should be accepted if, with adequate case selection, long-term results are similar to those in patients transplanted for benign diseases. The aim of the present study was to reexamine selection criteria for LT in malignant diseases with particular emphasis on hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in cirrhosis. One hundred-three of 369 patients transplanted in our unit had HCC in cirrhosis (28%), 15 of which were incidental tumors, and 234 patients underwent LT for non-cholestatic cirrhosis. Pretransplant arterial chemoembolization(TACE) was performed in 36 cases (41%) of known HCC. Only early,well-delimited tumors in advanced cirrhosis with no extrahepatic disease were accepted for LT. Hepatocellular carcinoma characteristics included mean tumor size (3.1 cm), multiple (59%), bilobular involvement (31%), and vascular invasion (9.2%). Postoperative mortality was 4%. Median follow-up was 67.5 months. Tumor recurrence rate was 14.5%, 33% (5/15) in incidental tumors and 11.4% (10/88) in known HCC and by tumor stage (pTNM): 7.7% (1/13) in stage I, 16.7%(5/30) in stage II, 15% (3/20) in stage III, and 17% (6/35) in stage IV. Mean time for recurrence was 20.6 months. Tumoral vascular invasion, tumor differentiation, and satellite tumors were significant factors for tumor recurrence in univariate analysis, whereas tumor vascular invasion was the only significant factor for tumor recurrence in multivariate analysis. Actuarial survival rates at 1, 3, and 5 years were 81%, 66%, 58%, respectively, in patients with HCC and were similar to those of cirrhotic patients 76%, 67%, 63%, respectively. In conclusion, patients with early HCC in cirrhosis are good candidates for LT; results are similar when compared with those of cirrhotic patients without tumor. Liver transplantation for other malignancies is admitted only in fibrolamellar hepatoma,
hepatoblastoma
, epithelioid hemangioendothelioma without extrahepatic disease, and in
metastases
from carcinoid tumors.
...
PMID:Liver transplantation for malignant diseases: selection and pattern of recurrence. 1186 57
Hematogenous brain metastases are uncommon in childhood. Three patients and a literature review that includes centers reporting up to 36 years of experience are presented in this study. The total of 2,040 patients includes our three examples of one neuroblastoma, one
hepatoblastoma
, and one adrenal carcinoma. Cerebral hematogenous
metastases
were reported in 4.4% of 429 patients with neuroblastoma, 1.9% of 574 rhabdomyosarcoma patients, 6.5% of 386 patients with osteosarcoma, 3.3% of 487 Ewing sarcoma patients, 3.6% of 44 melanoma patients, 13.5% of 37 patients with germ cell tumors, and 1.3% of the 78 patients with Wilms tumor. Five miscellaneous patients included three with a
hepatoblastoma
and one each with adrenal carcinoma and nephroma. All of the large series reports have been published in oncology journals.
...
PMID:Hematogenous brain metastasis in children. 1195 30
Kinetic studies of cell proliferation rates shed light on the growth dynamics of cancer. Most such studies are based on measurements of cell numbers that were evaluated in time intervals of about 12 h. Studies of the initial tumour growth with short measuring intervals are rare. This study was therefore designed with 1 h measuring intervals over a 24 h period. Human breast cancer cell lines (ZR-75-1, SK-BR-3, MCF-7) and a benign cell line (
HBL
-100) were used to study the hourly thymidine uptake as a measure of cells in synthesis. In parallel experiments, the same cell lines were also exposed to tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) to explore the effect of an apoptosis-inducing substance on initial tumour growth kinetics. In time-evolution plots, there was an oscillation of the labelling index of thymidine uptake for all investigated cell lines, with and without TNF-alpha. Based on the results obtained, a mathematical model was developed mimicking the real experiment. To describe the system dynamically a cellular automaton model was studied. The growth kinetics revealed by the simulation were in accordance with our experimental data. Two- and three-dimensional growth simulations of this computer model yielded objects morphologically similar to real images of human breast cancer. Almost identical fractal dimensions of the virtual and real tumours further supported this visual similarity. The cellular automata models could, therefore, be seen as a bridge towards realistic in vivo scenarios. From a clinical point of view, the results obtained may be applicable not only to primary tumours, but even to tumour cell microfoci and small
metastases
, which are a major concern in early metastasizing tumours such as breast cancer.
...
PMID:Short-term rhythmic proliferation of human breast cancer cell lines: surface effects and fractal growth patterns. 1464 67
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