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)

Canine extraskeletal osteosarcomas are extremely rare tumors. Over a period of 25 years at the Animal Medical Center, approximately 1,000 cases of skeletal osteosarcomas have been diagnosed. During the same period 11 cases of extraskeletal osteosarcomas and three extraskeletal chondrosarcomas were diagnosed. Tumors of the mammary gland were excluded. Extraskeletal osteosarcomas were found in the adrenal gland, eye, gastric ligament, ileum, kidney, liver, spleen, testicle, and vagina. The chondrosarcomas were found in the mitral valves, lungs, and omentum. The mean age of the dogs with extraskeletal osteosarcoma was 11 years, and the mean age of the dogs with extraskeletal chondrosarcoma was 14 years. The The sizes of the tumors ranged from 3 cubic centimeters to 8,315 cubic centimeters. Osteoblastic osteosarcomas were the most common histologic type (7/11, 63.6%); there was a single case of each of the following: fibroblastic, fibrous histiocytic, chondroblastic, and mixed osteo-chondroblastic osteosarcoma. Two of the dogs with chondrosarcomas had mesenchymal chondrosarcomas involving the lungs and omentum. The remaining dog had a regular chondrosarcoma involving the mitral valve. Distant metastases were present in seven of 11 dogs with extraskeletal osteosarcoma and in none of the dogs with chondrosarcoma. In contrast to human beings, in which most extraskeletal osteosarcomas occur in the soft tissues and the extremities, most canine extraskeletal osteosarcomas develop in the visceral organs.
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PMID:Canine extraskeletal osteosarcoma and chondrosarcoma: a clinicopathologic study of 14 cases. 230 81

The case of an 11-year-old girl suffering from chondroblastic osteosarcoma of the left tibia head is reported. Within 19 months following the amputation of the thigh and during intensive chemotherapy a total of 7 pulmonary metastases were diagnosed and resected in 3 sessions. The patient has been free of any metastases for 5 years.
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PMID:[Successful treatment of several metachronous pulmonary metastases of a chondroblastic osteosarcoma]. 241 44

An analysis of 6 patients with periosteal osteosarcoma treated by the authors along with a review of 55 patients reported in the literature demonstrates that periosteal osteosarcoma is distinctly different from conventional osteosarcoma or periosteal chondrosarcoma. Periosteal osteosarcoma is a less aggressive tumor than conventional osteosarcoma. It is a relatively well-differentiated chondroblastic osteosarcoma occurring on the surface of the long bones of the extremities. Three patients demonstrated frank medullary invasion of tumor, two grossly and one microsurgically. Patients treated with marginal resection had a 70% local recurrence rate. Patients receiving wide resection or primary amputation have survived longer with less recurrence of disease. Overall, 10 of 61 patients are dead with metastatic disease with a mean reported follow-up of 6 years and 7 months. Adjunctive therapy has been of no demonstrable aid in terms of prolonging survival. Medullary extension of this tumor should not be used to exclude this diagnosis. The authors believe that the treatment of choice is wide resection without adjunctive chemotherapy.
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PMID:Periosteal osteosarcoma. 396 78

Osteosarcoma commonly presents with osseous and pulmonary metastases. We present an unusual case of extraosseous metastatic abdominal chondroblastic osteosarcoma presenting as intestinal obstruction.
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PMID:Osteosarcoma presenting as intestinal obstruction. 822 47

Primary lung tumors of mesenchymal or mixed cell origin were diagnosed in 4 dogs with clinical and radiographic abnormalities indicating an intrathoracic mass. Each dog had 1 large intrapulmonary lesion, and 1 dog also had nodules scattered throughout all lung lobes. Two dogs were euthanatized; 1 had a biphasic pulmonary blastoma; and the other had a pulmonary chondroblastic osteosarcoma with intrapulmonary metastases. The masses in the other 2 dogs were hamartomas (lipomatous in 1, microcystic in the other), which were resected. Both dogs survived more than 1 year after surgery. Primary lung tumors are uncommon in dogs and are generally malignant (adenocarcinomas or carcinomas). Tumors of connective tissue or mixed cell origin are rare, but the outcome is potentially good after surgical removal.
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PMID:Primary mesenchymal or mixed-cell-origin lung tumors in four dogs. 846 26

Two cases of osteogenic sarcoma with skeletal muscle metastases are described. A 40-year-old woman presented with progressive swelling of both calves and a soft tissue back lump. She had been diagnosed with mandibular chondroblastic osteogenic sarcoma 6 years earlier. Radiographs showed calcified masses. MRI scans and bone scintigraphy revealed multiple soft tissue masses in both calves. Bone scintigraphy also showed uptake in the back lump, right thigh and left lung base. Biopsy confirmed metastatic chondroblastic osteogenic sarcoma, which initially responded well to chemotherapy. However, the metastatic disease subsequently progressed rapidly and she died 21 months after presentation. The second case concerns a 20-year-old man who presented with a pathologic fracture of the humerus, which was found to be due to osteoblastic osteogenic sarcoma. He developed cerebral metastases 17 months later, followed by metastases at other sites. Calcified masses were subsequently seen on radiographs of the abdomen and chest. CT scans confirmed the presence of densely calcified muscle metastases in the abdominal wall, erector spinae and gluteal muscles. The patient's disease progressed rapidly and he died 30 months after presentation.
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PMID:Osteogenic sarcoma with skeletal muscle metastases. 1042 40

Extraskeletal osteosarcoma is an uncommon neoplasm that usually arises in the deep soft tissues, especially in the lower extremities, with rare cases involving the subcutis or dermis. We report a 60-year-old man with an enlarging cutaneous mass in the right lower thigh. An incisional skin biopsy showed a well-defined, but non-encapsulated neoplasm, characterized by extensive cartilage with marked cellularity, atypia and high mitotic activity, involving the dermis and subcutis. Although osteoid or bone was not observed, a diagnosis of cutaneous chondroblastic osteosarcoma was suggested after excluding an origin in bone or other primary tumor sites by imaging techniques. Histopathologic features of the surgical specimen were characteristic, with a predominant high-grade chondroid component together with focal fibrosarcomatous zones, areas of multinucleated giant cells and foci of bone and osteoid formation. The patient underwent postoperative chemotherapy and is currently alive with pulmonary metastases 15 months after surgery. In summary, we report a unique case of cutaneous osteosarcoma of the chondroblastic subtype, diagnosed on incisional skin biopsy despite the absence of osteoid or bone during tumor sampling. As a rule, when an obviously malignant 'chondrosarcoma' is identified, one should always consider this entity.
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PMID:Extraskeletal cutaneous chondroblastic osteosarcoma: a case report. 1819 Apr 51

Osteosarcoma of the jaw is a rare disease; we report two cases, one in which the primary osteosarcoma had occurred in the sacrum and ileum, the second at the mandible. Dissemination of osteosarcoma to other organs, especially early dissemination to the lung, is common, but metastasis to the jaw has only rarely been reported. About 10% of osteosarcomas occur in the head and neck, most in the mandible or maxilla. Clinically, both patients presented swelling, and pain at the jaw in the premolar-molar region. At radiography, extensive bone erosion and soft-tissue swelling were apparent. A biopsy was taken and a diagnosis of osteosarcoma rendered in both cases. Histological examination revealed a proliferation of atypical osteoblast-like cells with hyperchromatic nuclei and formation of scattered neoplastic osteoid tissue. Immunohistochemistry for a panel of antibodies showed strong positivity for CD99, weak positivity for S-100, but was negative for desmin, vimentin, and cytokeratins. The diagnosis for both cases was of osteogenic osteosarcoma, chondroblastic subtype. Unfortunately, both patients died, one before the planned chemotherapy regime could begin, the second during the chemotherapy course. Our report aims to highlight the importance of the diagnostic profile in formulating a diagnosis of osteosarcoma, and that this tumor, although very rare, may be primary or may metastasize to the jaws.
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PMID:Clinical and histopathological profile of primary or secondary osteosarcoma of the jaws. 2219 20

Osteosarcoma is the most common primary malignant mesenchymal tumor, accounting for approximately 20% of sarcomas, with 5% incidence in the jaws. They present various clinical and histological aspects as well as variable disease prognosis and outcome. About 50% of all osteosarcomas are osteoblastic, 25% fibroblastic, 25% chondroblastic. Metastasis of osteosarcoma in the oral cavity is rare, and very few cases have been described so far in the literature. This article presents a metastatic case of chondroblastic osteosarcoma in the mandibular right-attached gingiva arising from 4(th) rib. This case report further suggests that chondroblastic osteosarcoma has poor prognosis.
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PMID:Oral metastasis of chondroblastic osteosarcoma. 2329 3

Chondrosarcoma represents approximately 11% of all primary malignant bone tumors. It is the second most common sarcoma arising in bone after osteosarcoma. Chondrosarcomas of the head and neck are rare and may involve the sinonasal tract, jaws, larynx or skull base. Depending on the anatomical location, the tumor can produce a variety of symptoms. Computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging are the preferred imaging modalities. The histology of conventional chondrosarcoma is relatively straightforward; major challenges are the distinction between grade I chondrosarcomas and chondromas, and the differential diagnosis with chondroblastic osteosarcoma and chondroid chordoma. Surgery alone or followed by adjuvant radiotherapy is the treatment of choice. Radiotherapy alone has also been reported to be effective and can be considered if mutilating radical surgery is the only curative alternative. The 5-year survival for chondrosarcoma reaches 80%; distant metastases and/or local recurrences significantly worsen prognosis. The present review aims to summarize the current state of information about the biology, diagnosis and management of these rare tumors.
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PMID:Chondrosarcomas of the head and neck. 2421 3


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