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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
)
103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Here we report the first noted case of a small cell carcinoma of the lung (
oat cell carcinoma
) presenting as
metastases
in the patella. Malignancies of the patella, primary or secondary, are rare. First presentation of a malignancy with
metastases
in the patella has only been recorded once previously.
...
PMID:Orthopaedic clinical note. Patella metastases: a case report. 911 85
Oat cell carcinoma
is rarely diagnosed in the head and neck and can be primary or secondary. Primary tumors arise from amine precursor uptake and decarboxylation cells which are found throughout the head and neck. Secondary deposits
metastasize
most commonly from the lungs. We report a 64-year-old woman with a known pancreatic
oat cell carcinoma
who came to the ENT Department with dysphagia. On examination, a lesion was seen at the base of the tongue and was histologically an
oat cell carcinoma
. No treatment was administered and the patient died one month after discharge. This report highlights the difficulty in determining the primary site when a rare tumor metastasizes to the head and neck and no autopsy findings are obtained. To our knowledge,
oat cell carcinoma
of the tongue has not been previously reported.
...
PMID:Oat cell carcinoma of the tongue from an unknown primary. 955 13
Small cell carcinoma
of the esophagus is a rare clinical entity and the accumulation of information is necessary to clarify its clinical behavior. We report a 69-year-old Japanese man with this rare disease with systemic
metastases
, including liver, bone and lymphnodes. The patient was treated with systemic chemotherapy consisting of 300 mg/m2 of carboplatin on day 1, and 80 mg/m2 of etoposide on days 1, 2 and 3. Although transient relief of subjective symptoms was obtained, the disease showed systemic progress, and the patient died on day 25 of chemotherapy. During the clinical course of the disease, serum pro-gastrin-releasing peptide (proGRP) decreased upon systemic chemotherapy from elevated level (54.6 pg/ml) to normal range (19.2 pg/ml). Further study is warranted to examine whether measurement of serum proGRP may yield valuable information on the diagnosis and monitoring activities of esophageal small cell carcinoma.
...
PMID:A case with small cell carcinoma of the esophagus: measurement of tumor markers, including pro-gastrin-releasing peptide. 971 79
Two cases of cancer with secondary
metastases
to the iris were examined. In the first case, the work-up performed after appearance of the iris lesion led to the discovery of a general spread from the already known and treated primary tumor which was an
oat cell carcinoma
of the lung.
...
PMID:[Iris metastases in two patients, important for the diagnosis and treatment of the primary tumor]. 974 14
Small cell neuroendocrine carcinoma
of the cervix is very rare and is usually associated with dismal prognosis if treated by conventional surgery and radiotherapy even in early stage disease. This tumor is characterized by early lymphatic and hematogenous spread. Only one successfully treated case of small cell neuroendocrine carcinoma of the cervix with dissemination to the pelvic nodes had been reported before in the literature. We are reporting a case of small cell neuroendocrine carcinoma of the cervix with multiple pelvic nodal
metastases
including the common iliac nodes, which had been successfully treated with a multimodal approach including radical hysterectomy, pelvic/para-aortic lymphadenectomy, and postoperative chemotherapy using cisplatin-etoposide combinations and pelvic irradiation.
...
PMID:Small cell neuroendocrine carcinoma of the cervix with involvement of multiple pelvic nodes--A successfully treated case by multimodal approach. 1002 9
Small cell carcinoma
of the breast is an uncommon neoplasm that has been reported rarely in the literature. The aim of this study was to characterize better the pathologic and immunohistochemical features of this neoplasm. Nine examples of mammary small cell carcinoma were retrieved from the authors' consultation files and reviewed. The patients ranged in age from 43 to 70 years. Two patients had a previous history of cutaneous malignant melanoma and one had prior lobular carcinoma in situ and atypical duct hyperplasia in the same breast as the small cell carcinoma. Eight patients presented with a mass in the breast; one patient had an axillary tumor. Tumor size ranged from 1.3 to 5.0 cm (mean, 2.6 cm). Histologically, the nine tumors had characteristics of small cell carcinoma with high mitotic activity and necrosis. A dimorphic histologic appearance was observed in four tumors. In one instance, this consisted of small cell carcinoma merging with invasive lobular carcinoma. In three cases, small cell carcinoma was present together with invasive, poorly differentiated duct carcinoma; invasive carcinoma with "lobular and gland-forming elements"; and focal squamous differentiation, respectively. Lymphatic tumor emboli were identified in four instances. An in situ component was seen in seven tumors; five were of the small cell type in ducts and two were of the ductal type with high nuclear grade. Immunohistochemical analysis showed consistent staining for cytokeratin markers but variable staining with neuroendocrine markers. Sixty-six percent of the tumors (six of nine) were reactive for chromogranin, synaptophysin, or peptide hormones, including four positive for chromogranin and synaptophysin, one positive for synaptophysin and calcitonin, and one positive for calcitonin alone. One tumor that was reactive for chromogranin and synaptophysin also contained calcitonin immunoreactive cells, whereas gastrin-releasing peptide was present in two other tumors that were also positive for chromogranin. Leu 7 was positive in three cases that were reactive for either chromogranin or synaptophysin. Five tumors were estrogen and progesterone receptor-positive. All tumors were positive for bcl-2 and negative for HER2/neu. Patients were treated by mastectomy (n = 3) or lumpectomy (n = 6). Eight underwent an axillary dissection that revealed metastatic carcinoma in four patients. Seven patients received adjuvant chemotherapy and four patients received radiation. Two patients also received tamoxifen treatment.
Metastases
developed in two patients (22%) with a follow-up period of 11 and 32 months. All patients were alive at last follow up 3 to 35 months after treatment. When compared with published reports of mammary small cell carcinoma, our results show that the prognosis in these patients may not be as poor as previously suggested.
...
PMID:Small cell carcinoma of the breast: a clinicopathologic and immunohistochemical study of nine patients. 1139 67
The conclusions of a symposium held in London in October 1999 and devoted to the optimal management of brain
metastatic disease
were: 1. Prognostic factors are: size and number of
metastases
(and the presence of mass effect); the status of the systemic cancer outside the central nervous system; performance/neurological status; the age of the patient; and the type of cancer. 2. Surgical management of the single, superficially located brain metastasis with symptomatic mass effect is recommended in good performance status patients. Many would follow this routinely by whole brain radiotherapy. 3. Whole brain radiotherapy is often not followed by durable control of the disease and carries morbidity; better management plans are required. In poor prognosis patients the delivery of radiotherapy may not always be indicated. 4. The current literature demonstrates that stereotactic radiosurgery can enhance the likelihood of sterilizing individual brain metastases compared with whole brain radiotherapy alone. 5. The results of questionnaire showed that the histological diagnosis and latency to onset made little difference to the opinion of neuroscience clinicians, who generally favoured stereotactic radiation therapy over whole brain radiotherapy (with or without a conventionally delivered boost) for all patients with less than four
metastases
. The opinions of oncologists differed. For bronchial and breast cancer patients, whole brain radiotherapy, with or without a boost, was favoured by the majority, particularly in
oat cell cancer
. However, with a long latency to 'isolated' brain metastasis, oncologists favoured focal radiation therapy. There was a strong preference amongst oncology experts to reserve stereotactic radiation therapy for apparently isolated brain metastasis; this opinion applied to bronchus and breast cancer, and also to melanoma. 6. Whole brain radiotherapy followed by positron emission tomography scanning to determine what viable
metastatic disease
remained (and potentially treatable by stereotactic/focal technology) was favoured by most of delegates who answered this question.
...
PMID:What is the optimal therapy of brain metastases? 1137 69
Small cell carcinoma
of the prostate (SCCP), although relatively rare, is the most aggressive variant of prostate cancer, currently with no successful treatment. It was therefore tempting to evaluate the response of this violent malignancy and its bone lesions to Pd-Bacteriopheophorbide (TOOKAD)-based photodynamic therapy (PDT), already proven by us to efficiently eradicate other aggressive non-epithelial solid tumors. TOOKAD is a novel bacteriochlorophyll-derived, second-generation photosensitizer recently, developed by us for the treatment of bulky tumors. This photosensitizer is endowed with strong light absorbance (epsilon(0) approximately 10(5) mol(-1) cm(-1)) in the near infrared region (lambda=763nm), allowing deep tissue penetration. The TOOKAD-PDT protocol targets the tumor vasculature leading to inflammation, hypoxia, necrosis and tumor eradication. The sensitizer clears rapidly from the circulation within a few hours and does not accumulate in tissues, which is compatible with the treatment of localized tumor and isolated
metastases
. Briefly, male CD1-nude mice were grafted with the human SCCP (WISH-PC2) in 3 relevant anatomic locations: subcutaneous (representing tumor mass), intraosseous (representing bone metastases) and orthotopically within the murine prostate microenvironment. The PDT protocol consisted of i.v. administration of TOOKAD (4 mg/kg), followed by immediate illumination (650-800 nm) from a xenon light source or a diode laser emitting at 770 nm. Controls included untreated animals or animals treated with light or TOOKAD alone. Tumor volume, human plasma chromogranin A levels, animal well being and survival were used as end points. In addition, histopathology and immunohistochemistry were used to define the tumor response. Subcutaneous tumors exhibited complete healing within 28-40 days, reaching an overall long-term cure rate of 69%, followed for 90 days after PDT. Intratibial WISH-PC2 lesions responded with complete tumor elimination in 50% of the treated mice at 70-90 days after PDT as documented histologically. The response of the orthotopic model was also analyzed histologically with similar results. The study with this model suggests that TOOKAD-based PDT can reach large tumors and is a feasible, efficient and well-tolerated approach for minimally invasive treatment of local and disseminated SCCP.
...
PMID:Photodynamic therapy with Pd-Bacteriopheophorbide (TOOKAD): successful in vivo treatment of human prostatic small cell carcinoma xenografts. 1264 Jun 88
Small cell carcinoma
of the bladder is a rare entity occurring in fewer than 1% of all the primary bladder tumors. Its clinic and epidemiologyc characteristics are similar to the transitional cell carcinoma. But, its more aggressive with a high tendency to infiltrate the muscular layer and to
metastasize
. Thus, therapeutic approach used by the pulmonary form has been applied to the bladder carcinoma. The best results has been achieved using systemic chemotherapy, not only in survival rates but in preserving the bladder integrity, playing the radical cystectomy a rescue role in cases of recurrence or persistence of the tumor. We report a new case of small cell carcinoma of the bladder and review the literature with special attention to the different therapeutic approaches.
...
PMID:[Small cell carcinoma of the bladder. Report of a new case and review of the literature]. 1264 80
Small cell carcinoma
of the endometrium (SCCE) is extremely rare. Previous reports indicate that SCCE frequently shows systemic spread and has a poor prognosis. Beta-catenin has been shown to be a key downstream effector of the Wnt signaling pathway, which regulates cell growth and survival. Decreased membranous expression of beta-catenin in cancers correlates with poor prognosis and is associated with dissemination of tumor cells and the formation of
metastases
. Recently, some different investigators demonstrated aberrant beta-catenin accumulation in neuroendocrine tumors arising in different organs, suggesting a role for the Wnt/beta-catenin signaling pathway during neuroendocrine tumorigenesis. Here, we report a new case of SCCE associated with peritoneal spreading and aggressive course; the patient died one month after surgery. This study also aimed at assessing the involvement of the Wnt signaling pathway in this rare neuroendocrine tumor. Interestingly, both intense nuclear beta-catenin accumulation and cyclin D1 immunoreactivity were restricted to carcinoma cells invading lymphatic vessels. However, mutation analysis failed to demonstrate any mutation in exon 3 of the beta-catenin gene or exon 15 of the APC gene in the present case. Although the mechanism of nuclear accumulation of beta-catenin is still unknown, the heterotopic nuclear localization of beta-catenin may play a role in the tumor invasion process and, subsequently, may be associated with the aggressive behavior of SCCE.
...
PMID:Small cell carcinoma of the endometrium: report of a case with analysis of Wnt/beta-catenin pathway. 1453 40
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