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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
)
103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Colonic adenocarcinomas measuring less than 10 mm are rare. Herein, we report a carcinoma measuring 8 mm in diameter associated with subserosal extension through a "locus minoris resistentiae" and
metastases
to lymph nodes, an association not previously reported. No residual adenomatous tissue was found, suggesting a de novo carcinoma.
Dis Colon
Rectum
1991 Mar
PMID:Primary de novo adenocarcinoma of the colon measuring 8 mm in diameter with lymph node metastases. Report of a case. 199 37
We have developed an animal model for colon cancer metastasis and produced a metastasizing tumor after using a microinjection technique to inject SW480 cells into the cecal wall of athymic nude mice during "minilaparotomy." After the metastatic foci formed in murine lung, an in vitro primary culture was performed and a new
metastatic cancer
cell line, which was designated as CC-ML3, was established. The studies included: 1) the comparison between SW 480 and CC-ML3 in morphology, growth kinetics, seeding and plating efficiency, and karyotype; and 2) carcino-embryonic antigen determination, origination, and metastatic ability of CC-ML3. The results showed that CC-ML3 was significantly different from SW480 in vitro and possessed a high metastatic potential in vivo. This newly developed animal model may thus be useful for studying the biology and pathogenesis of metastasis of human colonic cancer.
Dis Colon
Rectum
1991 Jun
PMID:An animal model for colon cancer metastatic cell line with enhanced metastasizing ability. Establishment and characterization. 203 25
Hepatic resection is the only curative therapy currently available for colorectal cancer
metastases
to the liver. However, concern over high morbidity and mortality of the procedure has limited referral of patients for resection. The authors report on 58 patients undergoing hepatic resection for colorectal
metastases
at the National Cancer Institute between the years 1976 and 1985. Thirty-two patients underwent a major hepatic resection, and 26 patients underwent one or more wedge resections. Mean anesthesia time was 448 minutes, mean estimated blood loss was 3663 ml, and mean hospital stay was 17.5 days. Operative mortality was 3 percent, and morbidity was 62 percent. Using a grading scale for complications, 24 percent of patients had inconsequential complications, 16 percent had moderate complications, and 19 percent had severe complications. Complications were clearly related to extent of procedure. Factors that correlated best with morbidity were high blood loss and trisegmentectomy. The authors conclude that while hepatic resection can carry a high morbidity, much of this morbidity is minor and operative mortality is low. Recent improvements in anesthesia, improved resection technique, and a better understanding of hepatic anatomy have made possible correspondingly lower morbidity and mortality rates. Careful selection of patients can make hepatic resection a safe procedure.
Dis Colon
Rectum
1990 May
PMID:Morbidity and mortality of hepatic resection for metastatic colorectal carcinoma. 215 18
Fewer than 100 cases of Paget's disease located in the perianal skin have been reported since the extramammary location was first described in 1893. Two patients seen and treated in the authors' institutions with disease limited to the epidermis and its adnexae are described to illustrate the usual presentation and pathobiology of the disease. A staging classification based on the disease pathology has been developed from the cases reported in the literature and correlated with appropriate surgical treatment. Stage I disease treated with wide local excision promises unlimited survival, whereas the prognosis worsens for Stage II, with synchronous localized malignancies, and for Stages III and IV, with regional and distant
metastatic disease
, respectively.
Dis Colon
Rectum
1990 Jun
PMID:Perianal Paget's disease. Classification and review of management: report of two cases. 216 27
The management of patients with hepatic
metastases
from colorectal carcinoma is controversial. While a "no treatment" attitude still persists, other patients undergo systemic chemotherapy with very limited results. Other possible options are hepatic resection and locoregional treatments. One hundred twenty-three patients with hepatic
metastases
from colorectal cancer were treated at the authors' institution over a period of 15 years. Thirty-nine patients underwent hepatic resection while 84 underwent various forms of locoregional treatment. Several patients in the latter group were registered in one national (RNSI) Phase 2 study and one international (EORTC) Phase 3 trial. The authors' experience confirms the opinion that hepatic resection can be performed with the aim of curing in patients with isolated
metastases
. A five-year survival rate can be achieved in 25 to 30 percent of the resectable patients. Patients with unresectable extrahepatic disease or multiple bilateral
metastases
are usually excluded from resection. In other cases, hepatic resection should be carried out when technically possible. The value of adjuvant chemotherapy to the remaining liver has to be tested in prospective randomized trials. Patients with diffuse
metastases
can benefit from locoregional infusion of chemotherapeutic agents. Symptoms improve in most patients; objective responses vary from 53 to 83 percent of the cases, which is a higher rate than that reported for systemic chemotherapy. Survival may be prolonged in respect to untreated patients but this has not been demonstrated yet by prospective randomized studies. Current trends are continuous infusion of chemotherapeutic agents and experimentation of new drugs or drug combinations. Future improvements may be achieved by adding hepatic arterial ischemia, hyperthermia, or radiation therapy. As these kinds of treatments are still experimental, they should be applied to the patients only in the context of prospective clinical trials.
Dis Colon
Rectum
1990 Aug
PMID:Colorectal metastases to the liver: present status of management. 216 54
A case of angiosarcoma of the large bowel is presented. The tumor occurred in a 16-year-old girl who presented with lower abdominal pain and rectal bleeding. A sigmoid colectomy was performed. Although macroscopic omental and pelvic peritoneal
metastases
were noted at operation, she did not receive adjuvant therapy and was alive and well more than three years after surgery. The literature on colonic angiosarcoma is also reviewed.
Dis Colon
Rectum
1990 Apr
PMID:Angiosarcoma of the colon. Report of a case with long-term survival. 218 13
The relationship of prostaglandin E2, of which a large amount is produced in various neoplasms, and hematogenous distant
metastases
was investigated in a total of 44 colorectal cancer patients because of its varied pathophysiologic potentials. The authors found significantly high levels of PGE2 in local venous blood draining the carcinoma and in peripheral blood in cases with liver or lung metastasis, as well as a significantly large amount of PGE2 production in the carcinoma tissue. The results suggest that increased local blood PGE2 could enhance the metastasis formation, and increased peripheral blood PGE2 may be useful in the detection of such metastasis in colorectal cancer.
Dis Colon
Rectum
1990 Oct
PMID:Relationship between blood plasma prostaglandin E2 and liver and lung metastases in colorectal cancer. 220 73
One hundred thirteen patients with carcinoma of the rectum were evaluated for lymph node
metastases
by endorectal ultrasound. With the use of 7.5 MHz and based on different echo patterns, two main groups of lymph nodes can be differentiated: hypoechoic and hyperechoic lymph nodes. Compared with pathologic findings, hypoechoic lymph nodes represent
metastases
, whereas hyperechoic lymph nodes are visualized due to unspecific inflammation. Lymph node metastases can be predicted with a sensitivity of 72 percent and inflammatory lymph nodes with a specificity of 83 percent. The physical basis of the differentiation of lymph nodes was assessed in vitro by the determination of ultrasound parameters (speed of sound, acoustic impedance, attenuation, and backscattered amplitude). The attenuation coefficient of benign lymph nodes [2.5 dB/(MHz x cm)] is significantly higher than the mean value of lymph node
metastases
[1.3 db/(MHz x cm)]. The results demonstrate that involved nodes can principally be differentiated from not involved nodes. Micrometastases, mixed lymph nodes, and changing echo patterns within inflammatory nodes explain the accuracy rate of 78 percent.
Dis Colon
Rectum
1990 Oct
PMID:Endosonography of pararectal lymph nodes. In vitro and in vivo evaluation. 220 76
Five-year survival data were obtained in 97 percent or 1105 of 1140 new patients with histologically confirmed colorectal adenocarcinoma during a 12-month period in 1981 and 1982, as part of a large comprehensive population-based study of colorectal cancer incidence, etiology, and survival, The Melbourne Colorectal Cancer Study. Fifteen percent of patients were Dukes' A stage, 32 percent were Dukes' B, 25 percent were Dukes' C, and 29 percent were Dukes' D. At five years after diagnosis, the observed survival rate was 36 percent and the adjusted rate was 42 percent. Dukes' staging was a highly discriminating factor in survival (P less than 0.001). Survival rates were better in women than in men and better for patients with colon cancer than for patients with rectal cancer. Survival by Dukes' staging was not affected by colon subsite or by the tumor being the first and single tumor, metachronous tumor, or synchronous tumor. The survival of younger patients was better for Dukes' stages A, B, and C, and worse for Dukes' D. Survival was worse in the presence of bowel perforation in Dukes' C and D stages. Within Dukes' D (incurable cases), survival was best in the absence of hepatic
metastases
, slightly worse when only hepatic
metastases
were present, and poorest in the presence of both hepatic and extrahepatic
metastases
. Statistical modeling of survival determinants other than staging indicated that cell differentiation had the largest effect (survival decreasing with poor cell differentiation), followed by site (survival worse for rectal cancer than colon cancer), then age (survival better for younger patients), while bowel perforation had the smallest effect on survival.
Dis Colon
Rectum
1990 Nov
PMID:Survival in patients with large-bowel cancer. A population-based investigation from the Melbourne Colorectal Cancer Study. 222 81
Twenty-five patients with invasive adenocarcinoma of the rectum were treated by preoperative external irradiation (35 Gy), local excision, and peroperative placement of a plastic tube loop in the tumor bed for perioperative brachytherapy (20 or 25 Gy). Patients treated were too frail for radical resection (14 patients) or had refused a permanent colostomy (11 patients). With a mean follow-up of 40.5 months, there have been 5 patients with local relapse, 3 of whom had salvage abdominoperineal resections: 2 have no evidence of disease and 1 has developed distant
metastatic disease
. The 20 patients with local control have normally functioning sphincters; 1 has developed distant
metastatic disease
. This combined approach was designed to expand the curative role of local resection in carcinoma of the rectum. The surgical techniques are thoroughly described and the potential role and indications of this approach are discussed.
Dis Colon
Rectum
1990 Feb
PMID:Conservative management of tumors of the rectum by radiotherapy and local excision. 229 96
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