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)

We treated a patient who had had postchemotherapeutic pulmonary metastases from urinary tract cancer by bronchial artery infusion (BAI) chemotherapy. Pulmonary lesions showed a 33.0% reduction after the treatment. However, esophago-bronchial fistula (EBF) occurred after the second BAI. The patient died of recurrent aspiration pneumonia and sepsis in the sequelae of the repair surgery. The fistula was considered to have resulted from an increase in the blood flow to the esophageal branch originating from the bronchial artery after the first BAI, which had consequently damaged the local tissue due to accumulation of anti-cancer drugs. In order to avoid these complications, the secondary change of blood flow should be examined precisely by preceding angiographical mapping, and the concentration and the infusion speed of the cytotoxic drugs, should be under adequate control.
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PMID:[Esophago-bronchial fistula caused by chemotherapy with bronchial artery infusion for pulmonary metastases from urinary tract cancer]. 128 28

To ascertain the range of neurological problems in patients with systemic cancer, we prospectively evaluated neurological symptoms, neurological diagnoses, and primary tumors in all patients with a history of systemic cancer examined by the Department of Neurology at the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, from Jul 1, 1990, to Dec 31, 1990. Of the 815 patients seen for neurological symptoms, less than half (45.2%) had metastatic involvement of the nervous system. The three most common symptoms were back pain (18.2%), altered mental status (17.1%), and headache (15.4%). The most common neurological diagnosis was brain metastasis (15.9%), followed by metabolic encephalopathy (10.2%), pain associated with bone metastases only (9.9%), and epidural extension or metastasis of tumor (8.4%). Of 133 patients with undiagnosed back or neck pain, 44 (33%) had epidural extension or metastases from tumor and 40 (30%) had pain associated with vertebral metastases only. In 15 (11%) the cause for the back pain was unrelated to metastatic disease. Of 132 patients seen on initial consultation for altered mental status, metabolic encephalopathy was the major neurological diagnosis (80; 61%); 20 (15%) had intracranial metastases. Of 97 patients with undiagnosed headache, 59 (61%) had a nonstructural cause. Fifty-three of these patients had either migraine, tension headache, or headache related to systemic illness (e.g., fever, sepsis). These results indicate that even in patients with systemic cancer, a group particularly prone to developing neurological disease that can be diagnosed radiologically, the role of clinicians remains important in helping distinguish noncancer-related and nonmetastatic neurological problems.
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PMID:The spectrum of neurological disease in patients with systemic cancer. 163 35

Melanoma frequently disseminates to the gastrointestinal tract, being found post-mortem in 60 per cent of patients with disseminated disease, while during life it is diagnosed in only 4 per cent. During the period 1981-87, 835 melanoma patients were referred and 30 developed complaints caused by gastrointestinal metastatic melanoma. Twenty-three patients were treated surgically. The interval between treatment of the primary melanoma and detection of intestinal involvement was a median of 34 months (range 2-87 months). In four patients recurrence in the gut was the first evidence of dissemination. Major complaints were nausea and vomiting, abdominal pain, signs of anaemia, and blood in the stools. Complications were bleeding (ten cases), ileus due to intussusception (five cases), bowel perforation (four cases) and cholecystitis (one case). The metastases, mainly localized in the small bowel, were removed by relatively simple procedures. Symptoms were reduced in 19 patients. Two patients died after operation: one from sepsis due to suture leakage, the other from pneumonia and a cerebrovascular accident. Of the remaining patients, 16 survived a median of 7.5 (range 0.7-32.0) months. Five patients are still alive 72, 72, 70, 7 and 2 months after the metastasectomy, three of whom are tumour-free. The actuarial 5-year survival of all patients is 19 per cent. These results support surgical intervention for patients with complaints and/or complications attributable to gastrointestinal metastatic melanoma.
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PMID:Surgery for melanoma metastatic to the gastrointestinal tract. 168 96

One hundred forty patients with carcinoma of the esophagus treated over a 12-year period at Queens Hospital Center were reviewed. Comparable numbers of patients were assigned at random to radiation therapy alone, surgical treatment with radiation, or treatment with combinations of radiation and chemotherapy pre- or postoperatively. Surgical mortality (survival 1 month or less) was 9 patients of 34, or approximately 26%. Mean survival including the early deaths was 7.5 months. Deaths were primarily due to respiratory tract complications, either alone or in combination, with three cases of anastomotic leaks, sepsis, inanition, and progressing carcinoma. Fifty-two patients received radiation therapy alone. Although there were only six deaths (10%) within the first month of treatment, average survival was 8.4 months, only marginally greater than those treated by surgery. Of 13 patients treated with combined radiation and chemotherapy, no deaths occurred within the first month of treatment, but the average survival was only 6.5 months. Of nine patients treated with chemotherapy alone, no deaths occurred within the first month of treatment, but mean survival of this small group was only 4.9 months. Efficacy of chemotherapy and radiation therapy as definitive, adjuvant, or palliative therapy, in spite of recent somewhat optimistic reports, remains to be proven. Exploratory surgery should be retained as an essential staging and therapeutic modality in those patients in whom definite evidence establishing inoperability is lacking; ie, tumor fixation to vital structures, distant metastases, and other medical contraindications to surgery. Endoscopic instrumentation with the yttrium aluminum garnet laser appears to have a future as preliminary to surgery or definitive (palliative) management of obstructing esophageal carcinoma.
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PMID:Carcinoma of the esophagus seen in a 12-year period at Queens Hospital Center. 169 95

For four years up to December 1987, 190 patients (median age 73 years) with proximal malignant biliary obstruction were treated by endoscopic endoprosthesis insertion. Altogether 101 had cholangiocarcinoma, 21 gall bladder carcinoma, 20 local spread of pancreatic carcinoma, and 48 metastatic malignancy. Fifty eight patients had type I, 54 type II, and 78 type III proximal biliary strictures (Bismuth classification). All patients were either unfit or unsuitable for an attempt at curative surgical resection. A single endoprosthesis was placed initially, with a further stent being placed only if relief of cholestasis was insufficient or sepsis developed in undrained segments. The combined percutaneous-endoscopic technique was used to place the endoprosthesis when appropriate, after failed endoscopic endoprosthesis insertion or for second endoprosthesis placement. Full follow up was available in 97%. Thirteen patients were still alive at the time of review and all but one had been treated within the past six months. Initial endoprosthesis insertion succeeded technically at the first attempt in 127 patients, at the second in 30, and at a combined procedure in a further 13 (cumulative total success rate 89% - type I: 93%; type II: 94%; and type III: 84%). There was adequate biliary drainage after single endoprosthesis insertion in 152 of the 170 successful placements, giving an overall successful drainage rate of 80%. Three patients had a second stent placed by combined procedure because of insufficient drainage, giving an overall successful drainage rate of 82% (155 of 190). The final overall drainage success rates were type I: 91%; type II: 83%; and type III: 73%. The early complication rates were type I: 7%; type II: 14%; and type III: 31%. The principle early complication was clinical cholangitis, which occurred in 13 patients (7%) and required second stent placement in five. The 30 day mortality was 22% overall (type I: 14%; type II: 15%; and type III: 32%) but the direct procedure related mortality was only 3%. Median survival overall for types I, II, and III strictures were 21, 12, and 10 weeks respectively but survival was significantly shorter for metastatic than primary malignancy (p<0.05). Endoscopic insertion of a single endoprosthesis will provide good palliation of proximal malignant biliary obstruction caused by unresectable malignancy in 80% of patients. Second stents should be placed only if required. Extensive structuring because of metastatic disease carries a poor prognosis and careful patient selection for treatment is requires.
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PMID:Palliation of proximal malignant biliary obstruction by endoscopic endoprosthesis insertion. 171 94

In the immunocompromised patient, even mild forms of any combination of headache, meningismus, altered mental status, or focal neurologic signs should initiate an evaluation for possible CNS infection. The limited signs and symptoms of acute CNS infection are not due to specific organisms but to pathologic changes at the neuroanatomic site of infection. The initial clinical history, examination, laboratory, and neuroradiographic data will narrow the problem to one of several groups of agents, although it may not be possible to specify a single causative agent. It should be remembered that several concurrent infections (i.e., CMV and toxoplasmosis, aspergillosis, and bacterial sepsis) may be present. Thus, the clinician should rely on broad antibiotic coverage appropriate to the suspected causative agent or agents at the site of infection. It may be necessary to offer broad-spectrum antibiotic coverage for a CSF presentation that is subsequently found to result from a viral illness or from a noninfectious cause. However, one should avoid undertreating those infections for which specific therapy can be offered, and broad-spectrum treatment usually will not be regretted. Uncertainty in diagnosis following noninvasive procedures should lead to a brain biopsy. Although many of the infections discussed in this article have a poor prognosis, some of the most common pathogens, such as Cryptococcus, Listeria, and Toxoplasma, have effective specific therapies to which the patient should have access as rapidly as possible. The clinician who has successfully treated a patient with CNS infection should remain vigilant for late sequelae or recurrence of infection. Chronic treatment of some infections, such as toxoplasmosis or aspergillosis, may be necessary. The reintroduction of steroids for the treatment of an underlying cancer may reactivate previously treated disease, such as cryptococcosis, and periodic CSF surveillance is appropriate under these circumstances. Recurrence of the symptoms should raise the suspicion of recurrent or new infection, and the patient also should be evaluated with CT or MRI for the development of hydrocephalus or for new metastatic disease. In patients who have had varicella-zoster infection, postherpetic neuralgia and delayed arteritis may develop. Seizures, hearing loss, and neuropsychologic sequelae may follow any meningoencephalitis. The patient should always be reevaluated for the possibility of infection with a different opportunistic organism. CNS infections remain a major cause of morbidity and mortality in immunosuppressed patients with malignancies. In one series, 60% of such patients died as a result of their CNS infection, many at a time when the underlying disease had an otherwise good prognosis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Central nervous system infections in cancer patients. 175 29

From 1 January 1983 to 1 January 1989 123 cirrhotic patients with hepatocellular cancer (n = 122) or cholangiocarcinoma (n = 1) were screened using liver function tests, alpha-fetoprotein determination, ultrasonography with biopsy (and in selected cases computed tomography or nuclear magnetic resonance), laparoscopy and angiography, Child-Pugh classification and urea-nitrogen synthesis rate. Twenty-three patients were selected for surgical resection because the tumour was smaller than 5 cm, not centrally located and at least 1 cm away from main structures; there was no evidence of multicentricity or metastatic disease; and the Child-Pugh classification was A or B and the urea-nitrogen synthesis rate at least 6 g/day. Upper gastrointestinal endoscopy was used routinely to identify oesophageal varices which were present in 17 cases; ten patients with a history of variceal haemorrhage (43 per cent) had preoperative endoscopic sclerotherapy. In cases with recurrent haemorrhage, surgery was used to prevent intraoperative and postoperative bleeding. Tumour resection was carried out using controlled hypotension and hepatoduodenal ligament clamping. Twelve bisegmentectomies, ten segmentectomies and one atypical resection were performed. The operative mortality rate was 13 per cent with liver failure and sepsis as the causes of death. The 'recurrence rate' was 26 per cent and the late mortality rate for the whole group up to 1 January 1990 was 30 per cent; 13 patients were still alive. The 12-month survival rate was 77 per cent and after 5 years it was 49 per cent. Thus, surgical resection of small liver tumours is the treatment of choice in this selected group of patients.
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PMID:Limited hepatic resection for selected cirrhotic patients with hepatocellular or cholangiocellular carcinoma: a prospective study. 185 52

Twenty-five assessable patients with metastatic melanoma have been entered in a multicenter phase II study of two induction cycles of human recombinant interleukin-2(IL2), 18 x 10(6) IU/m2/d continuous intravenous (IV) infusion on days 1 to 5 and days 12 to 17. Dacarbazine (DTIC), 850 mg/m2 IV bolus was given on day 26. The cycle was repeated at 5 weeks. Maintenance therapy was scheduled 3 weeks after the completion of induction treatment, consisting of IL2, 18 x 10(6) IU/m2/d for 5 days alternating with DTIC, 850 mg/m2 IV every 3 weeks, for a total of 18 weeks. Six patients responded (24%); two complete and four partial. Stable disease was seen in five patients. None of the six patients with more than two sites of metastases responded. Maximum response was observed in the first 3 months of treatment. Progression-free periods of 6 months and longer were seen in the two complete responders (8 and 17+ months), in two of the four partial responders (7 and 12+ months), and in three of the five patients with stable disease (9+, 15, and 17+ months). Toxicity included fever, skin rash, fatigue, anorexia, and diarrhea in most patients. Two patients had a weight gain of more than 10%. Eight patients needed intensive care for the observation and treatment of a myocardial injury (one patient), ventricular tachycardia (one), hypotension and oliguria (four), and sepsis (two). Sequential treatment with IL2 and DTIC appears to be effective but not clearly better than could be expected of IL2 alone.
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PMID:Sequential administration of recombinant human interleukin-2 and dacarbazine in metastatic melanoma: a multicenter phase II study. 187 25

From 1973 to 1986, 160 patients with adenocarcinoma localized to the prostate were treated with radical prostatectomy and pelvic lymphadenectomy. In 78 (49%) patients more advanced stage of disease was found at surgery and they received local pelvic irradiation (RT). This consisted of 45 Gy for microscopic and 55 Gy for macroscopic residual disease. RT was given at 1.8 Gy a day, using the four-field "box" technique with the 23 MV X ray beam. Pelvic lymph node metastases were found in 28 (36%) patients who, in addition to RT, received systemic therapy: 20 with cyclophosphamide alone, 4 combined with 5-Fluorouracil, and 4 patients received DES. The 5- and 10-year overall actuarial survival was 95 and 77%, respectively, and the 5- and 10-year disease-free survival was 58 and 43%, respectively. Recurrent tumor was found in 34 (44%) patients. Of these 34 patients, 32 (94%) had distant metastatic tumor and 2 (6%) had local recurrence in the pelvis. The presence of metastatic disease in pelvic lymph nodes had clinical significance since it influenced disease-free survival and the incidence of tumor recurrence. The 10-year disease-free survival for the 50 patients with no lymph node metastases was 51%, as compared to 28% for the 28 patients with such metastases, p = 0.001. Similarly, recurrent tumor was found in 28% of the former and 68% of the latter patients, p = 0.002. Other important parameters predicting recurrence were: clinical stage, p = 0.018, histological grade, p = 0.013, and Gleason's grade, p = 0.002. This treatment program was very well tolerated and of low toxicity. There was no surgical mortality. Surgical complications were seen in 10 (13%) patients including: minor in 5 and major in 5. At 1 year, 77% of the patients remained continent, while 10% had mild stress incontinence. Of the remaining 13% only 3 (4%) patients had severe incontinence (greater than 5 pads daily). RT toxicity was mild with 38% experiencing diarrhea. Severe toxicity was seen in 2 (3%) patients who, early in the study, developed scrotal and lower extremity edema. Severe chemotherapy complications were seen in 1 (4%) patient who had severe neutropenic sepsis. Postoperative radiotherapy is a well tolerated, safe and effective treatment in patients who have microscopic or macroscopic residual tumor following radical prostatectomy.
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PMID:Radiotherapy following radical prostatectomy in patients with adenocarcinoma of the prostate. 191 24

Patients with T2 grade 3 and T3 bladder cancer were randomised to be treated with radiation alone (NO MISO) or with radiation and misonidazole (PLUS MISO). Patients in both groups initially received 40 Gy in 2 Gy fractions (5/week). Patients in the NO MISO arm received a further 20 Gy in 2 Gy fractions (5/week). Patients in the PLUS MISO arm received a further 12 Gy in 6 Gy fractions (1/week). MISO was administered orally (3.0 g m-2) and intravesically (1.0 g in 35 ml of solvent) 4 h and 2 h respectively prior to each fraction of 6 Gy. Fifty-eight patients were randomized of whom 53 are evaluable. There is a minimum follow-up of 5 years in the surviving patients. In the NO MISO and PLUS MISO arms, the complete response rate at cystoscopy at 6 months was 63% and 69%, the 5-year survival rate was 41% and 48% and the 5-year local control rate with bladder preservation was 46% and 36% respectively (censored for death from metastases while locally clear). These differences are not statistically significant. Two patients had grade 3 RTOG late bowel complications. Both patients were in the PLUS MISO arm, had undergone salvage cystectomy and subsequently required colostomies for bowel obstruction for a 5-year late complication rate (RTOG grade 3) of 9%. In addition, two patients in the PLUS MISO arm developed wound sepsis post cystectomy. We were not able to demonstrate improved results from the use of oral and intravesical MISO in this study. The number of patients entered are relatively low and large differences would have been required to be detected with a power of 0.80. The use of an unconventional radiation fractionation schedule may have resulted in increased bowel morbidity in patients in the PLUS MISO arm who subsequently underwent cystectomy.
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PMID:A prospective randomised trial of radiation with or without oral and intravesical misonidazole for bladder cancer. 193 28


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