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

The experience with hepatic resection for metastatic lesions, exclusive of colorectal and neuroendocrine tumors, is anecdotal. The reduction in operative mortality leads to a reconsideration of the subject. A review of the literature suggests a selective approach. There is little improvement to be anticipated for resection of metastases from tumors of the esophagus, stomach, small intestine, or pancreas. Resection of metastases from primary renal cell carcinoma, Wilms' tumor, and adrenocortical carcinoma is indicated. There is little to recommend resection of metastases from gynecologic or breast primary carcinomas. Resection as palliation is to be considered for all lesions, particularly bulky metastases from ocular melanomas.
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PMID:Hepatic resection for noncolorectal nonneuroendocrine metastases. 774 Aug 13

The purpose of the study was to define the magnetic resonance (MR) imaging appearance of adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC) with current MR techniques. Eight patients with ACC underwent high-field-strength MR imaging with the following sequences: axial T1-weighted gradient echo, fat-suppressed T1-weighted spin echo, fat-suppressed T2-weighted spin echo, and gadolinium-enhanced T1-weighted gradient echo and fat-suppressed T1-weighted spin echo. Postcontrast images were also acquired in the sagittal (six patients) and coronal (three patients) planes. Out-of-phase gradient-echo images were obtained in two patients. Lesion morphology, signal intensity features, and presence of metastatic disease were retrospectively evaluated. MR imaging features of ACC included internal hemorrhage (seven of eight patients), central necrosis (seven of eight), and peripheral enhancing nodules (seven of eight). Out-of-phase images in two of two patients demonstrated signal loss compared with in-phase images, which may be a common feature of these tumors. Liver metastases were present in four patients. Consistent MR features of ACC are identified.
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PMID:Adrenocortical carcinoma: MR imaging appearance with current techniques. 776 78

A 45-year-old man presented with gynecomastia, hypertension and a large left adrenal mass. Further evaluation revealed elevated serum concentrations of estrogen, estrone sulfate, androstenedione, dehydroepiandrosterone, dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate, deoxycorticosterone, and aldosterone and increased 24-hour urinary 17-ketosteroid and free cortisol excretion. Removal of a 10 kg adrenocortical carcinoma led to normalization of the hormone concentrations and partial resolution of the gynecomastia. There was no clinical evidence of metastases. Incubation of tumor slices demonstrated that the tumor had an active aromatase and sulfotransferase. We estimated that about half the serum estrone arose from peripheral conversion of androstenedione. Feminizing adrenocortical carcinomas are rare and this case is unusual given the lack of clinical metastases and the probable dual source of estrogen from tumor as well as from the peripheral conversion of tumor-derived androgens.
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PMID:Feminization as a result of both peripheral conversion of androgens and direct estrogen production from an adrenocortical carcinoma. 793 Mar 80

Metastases to the skin from internal malignant neoplasms are uncommon and often preterminal event. Cutaneous metastases from an adrenal cortical carcinoma have rarely been reported even in the advanced stages of the disease. A patient was initially seen with a small cutaneous lesion on the cheek and was found to have a large adrenal cortical tumor. Histologic comparison proved that the cutaneous lesion was a metastase from an adrenal cortical carcinoma.
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PMID:[Cutaneous metastasis disclosing adrenal cortical carcinoma]. 809 28

Adrenal cortical carcinoma is uncommon. There is little controversy concerning treatment of the primary tumor. However, data concerning the treatment of pulmonary metastases are sparse. In order to assess the results of therapy, we reviewed our 14-year experience. Records of 24 patients admitted to our institution from 1973 to 1991 with the diagnosis of adrenal cortical carcinoma and pulmonary metastases were reviewed. Ten patients underwent pulmonary resection, 12 received chemotherapy, and 2 no therapy. In the pulmonary resection group, treatment consisted of wedge resection in 8 patients and lobectomy in 2. For the 10 patients undergoing resection of their pulmonary metastases, the 5-year survival was 71% (median not reached at 5 years). This was significantly longer than those not resected, with no one alive at 3 years (median survival 11 months). Our data suggest that those patients who are able to have their pulmonary metastases resected survive significantly longer than those who do not.
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PMID:Pulmonary metastases from adrenal cortical carcinoma: results of resection. 834 Oct 55

In the last 20 years, eleven children with adrenocortical functional tumors were treated in the National Children Hospital of Costa Rica. There were nine females and two males and their ages ranged from nine months to 14 years. Eleven patients had features of virilism, five had stigmas of Cushing's syndrome and three hyperaldosteronism. The clinical diagnosis was established given the symptoms, hormonal tests and radiological and imagenological studies. The histologic diagnosis was carcinoma in six by clinical picture in one, and were adenoma in four. Three patients had regional and distant metastases. Four patients with carcinoma were treated by surgery and five received chemotherapy, two of them in presurgical stage, and four received radiotherapy. Two patients with carcinoma are alive and had no evidence of tumor recurrence ten and six years after diagnosis. Five are dead, two of them after partial response to chemotherapy. The four patients with adenoma were cured by complete surgical tumor resection, furthermore one of them received chemotherapy because there was not sure of his histologic benign condition. It is necessary more studies in use of chemotherapy in treatment of this tumors but in our experience CFM, VCR, Epi and Actin is a regimen that appears to be an active combination for the treatment in presurgical stage of adrenal cortical carcinoma.
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PMID:[Functioning tumors of the adrenal cortex in children. Clinical and therapeutic considerations on 11 cases]. 837 47

A series of 17 patients with primary adrenal cortical carcinoma is presented. Of 14 patients without evidence of disseminated disease prior to radical surgery, 6 developed distant metastases during follow-up. The mean interval free of disease in these patients was 12 months (range 3-40) and the median survival 15 months. Of the six patients in whom adjuvant external beam radiotherapy was delivered, no evidence of local recurrence was observed. Of the patients treated without external beam radiotherapy, 3 local failures were observed. The projected 5 years survival was 35%, which is similar to that reported in the literature. To date, there is no evidence that chemotherapy nor radiotherapy could improve the survival, however, radiotherapy might increase the local control in selected cases.
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PMID:[Primary adrenal carcinoma]. 845 80

Adrenocortical carcinoma is a rare malignant tumor. The survival rate is related to a radical tumor resection. However, adrenocortical carcinomas are usually diagnosed in advanced stage. Although some cases of long-term regressions of metastases under op'-DDD (Mitotane) therapy have been sometimes reported the overall efficiency of mitotane in prolonging life remains controversial. Between May 1975 and January 1994, 9 patients were surgically treated for adrenocortical carcinoma at our institution. There were 6 females and 3 males, mean age 40.8 years (median 40 years). Five (55.6%) patients presented with abdominal pain, whereas 4 (44.4%) patients had symptoms of hormone secretion (cortisol). One patient was lost at follow-up. Overall survival rate was 16.8 +/- 5.9 months, the survival rates according to tumor stage were: stage I. 58 months (1 case), stage II. 6 and 16 (2 cases; mean 11 months), stage III. 7, 15.17 and 22 (4 cases, mean 15 months) and stage IV. 9 months (1 case). The progression of the disease is not controlled by the administration of op'-DDD and the best treatment is represented by surgery.
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PMID:[Adrenocortical carcinoma. Current approaches in diagnosis and treatment]. 894 4

One in seventy randomly selected individuals is supposed to host an adrenal mass. The increasing number of incidentally detected adrenocortical adenomas requires the effective and reliable evaluation of dignity. So far this has been determined through a difficult multi-parametric analysis. Since MHC class II antigens are expressed in the normal adrenal cortex with a restriction to the zona reticularis, we examined 28 adrenocortical incidentalomas, 10 adenomas, 13 cortical carcinomas, 2 metastases, 10 controls as well as the adrenocortical carcinoma cell line NCI-H295 immunohistochemically for the expression of HLA class II antigens. We showed, that the majority of the adenomas still express class II antigens, whereas the expression is abrogated in all carcinomas examined. Our results indicate, that the detection of HLA class II positive tumour cells excludes malignancy. Therefore, MHC class II antigens may serve as a novel tumour marker in the evaluation of dignity in adrenocortical tumours. These findings could change the strategy for the assessment of adrenal masses.
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PMID:MHC class II expression--a new tool to assess dignity in adrenocortical tumours. 895 65

Adrenal masses are more and more frequently detected by adrenal ultrasound, computed tomography or nuclear magnetic resonance carried out for a reason other than the suspicion of adrenal disease (incidentalomas). The findings of an incidentaloma still leaves many diagnostic and therapeutic questions open. We report the results of a multicentric retrospective evaluation of patients with adrenal incidentalomas, performed by a Study Group of the Italian Society of Endocrinology. According to the definition of incidentaloma, exclusion criteria a priori were: severe or paroxysmal hypertension, frank hypokalemia and clinical signs of hypercortisolism or hyperandrogenism. 29 centers participated in the study and the data obtained by questionnaire were collected in 2 centers for final elaboration. Center 1 carried out the epidemiological and clinical evaluation. Basal and dynamic hormonal evaluation of 786 among the 1013 cases recruited were performed in our center (center 2). Functional studies included: diurnal rhythm of cortisol, urinary free cortisol (UFC), ACTH, DHEAS, 17-OH progesterone, testosterone, androstenedione, supine and upright plasma renin activity (PRA) and aldosterone, urinary aldosterone, urinary catecholamines and VMA. The hormonal dynamic evaluation included the overnight dexamethasone suppression test (1 mg), CRH test and ACTH test. In our study, 89% (702 patients) of adrenal incidentalomas were non-hypersecretory masses; 6.2% (49 patients) showed a preclinical Cushing's syndrome (PCS) (at least two altered parameters of pituitary-adrenal axis); 3.4% (27 patients) were pheochromocytomas; 0.89% (7 patients) were aldosteronomas. One tumor was a masculinizing adrenocortical carcinoma. Two hundred sixty patients underwent surgical exploration and the histological diagnosis showed: 138 adenomas (53%), 32 carcinomas (12%), 26 pheochromocytomas (10%). 16 myelolipomas (8%), 13 cystic lesions (5.5%), 7 tumors of neuronal lineage (3%). 12 metastases (4%), 13 others (5%). The 138 patients with adenomas had the following hormonal diagnosis: 103 nonfunctional adenomas (74%), 31 PCS (23%) and 4 cases of hyperaldosteronism (3%). In the patients with PCS an abnormal dexamethasone suppression test was found in 86% of cases (37/41 patients). Values for ACTH were low in 78% (32/41 patients). UFC was elevated in 64% of patients, the diurnal rhythm of cortisol evaluated in 14 patients was absent in 7. Only in 50% of cases DHEAS values (12/24 patients) were decreased, whereas they were normal in the other 50%. Interestingly, 8 patients with normal DHEAS and normal UFC showed nonsuppressible cortisol by dexamethasone test (1 mg). Blunted ACTH response to CRH was detected in 9 of 14 patients (64%). Thus our data suggest that the best parameter for evaluating subclinical hypercortisolism seems to be the overnight dexamethasone suppression test. In 27 patients with pheochromocytoma 24-hour urinary catecholamine and VMA levels were elevated in 86 and 46% of cases respectively. In 7 patients with hyperaldosteronism upright PRA was suppressed in 100% of cases and aldosterone plasma levels were elevated in 6 patients (86%); serum potassium level was slightly decreased in 60% of cases. In 86 of 138 histologically proven adenomas, DHEAS levels were: normal in 59% of patients, decreased in 36% and elevated in 4.6%, whereas in 22 of 32 cortical carcinomas evaluated. DHEAS levels were normal in 63% of cases, decreased in 18% and elevated 18%. Post-ACTH 17-OH progesterone levels were elevated in 52% (62/118 patients) of non-functioning adenomas and in 2 of 4 carcinomas. Not enough data are yet available postoperatively. In summary, endocrine evaluation can lead to the identification of a nonnegligible number of cases of clinically unsuspected pheochromocytomas and subtle hypercortisolism (about 3.4 and 6.2%, respectively of all adrenal incidentalomas), while cases of primary subclinical aldosteronism are rarely found. (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)
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PMID:Adrenal incidentaloma: an overview of hormonal data from the National Italian Study Group. 916 66


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