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)

A retrospective review of 37 cases of carcinoma of the vulva presenting between 1996 and 2000 has been carried out. Thirty-three cases were managed with curative intent and four cases with advanced loco-regional disease were managed with palliative intent. The surgical treatment consisted of wide excision in one case, radical vulvectomy (RV) in six cases, radical vulvectomy and bilateral groin node dissection (RV+BGND) in 25 cases and radical vulvectomy and unilateral groin node dissection in one case. Nine of these 33 women also received adjuvant chemotherapy preoperatively in the hope of achieving better tumour-free surgical margins. Eight cases had a partial response and one case achieved complete response; the surgical margins were free in all these patients. One case received neoadjuvant radiotherapy to the vulva and pelvis followed by RV+BGND, which revealed no residual tumour. Overall, 26/33 cases had groin/inguinal node dissection and 23 (88.4%) of them had groin wound dehiscence. Thirteen of these 26 patients (50%) had inguinal node metastases (Stage III, four patients; Stage IV, nine patients). All the patients with negative nodes were free of disease while three of four patients with Stage III and two of nine patients with Stage IV with nodal metastases remained free of disease. The only patient with Stage III disease plus inguinal node metastases who recurred had multiple positive nodes with extracapsular spread. It appears that although bilateral involvement of the inguinal lymph nodes carries a worse prognosis, unilateral involvement with or without vaginal involvement carries an excellent prognosis provided multiple nodes are not involved. The role of neoadjuvant chemotherapy as compared to neoadjuvant radiotherapy, in locally advanced tumours, needs to be explored further.
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PMID:Carcinoma of the vulva: a retrospective review of 37 cases at a regional cancer centre in South India. 1520 81

A review of the clinical applications of sentinel lymph node (sN) biopsy has been performed with the aim of defining the rationale, the methods of detection, the accuracy, and the current indications to sN biopsy in different solid neoplasms. In melanoma patients, sN biopsy represents a standard procedure for staging purpose, although its therapeutic value is still under examination. The sN is an accurate method for the pathologic staging of the axilla in patients with early stage breast cancer, and it can be useful for the selection of patients with axillary metastasis who should undergo standard axillary dissection. In gynecologic malignancies, appreciable results are available in patients with vulvar and cervical cancer only. Patients with squamous cell vulvar cancer may benefit by sN biopsy because a complete bilateral inguino-femoral lymph-node dissection may be avoided whenever the sN is free of metastasis. As regards to cervical cancer, further studies are required with the combined technique (blue dye injection and gamma-probe guided surgery), which seems more promising, before abandoning pelvic lymphadenectomy in patients with histologically-negative sN. The experience in urologic cancer deals mainly with penile and prostate cancer; the modern procedures for the dynamic detection of sN are going to clarify its role in the surgical management of penile cancer; as regards to prostate cancer, very preliminary results suggest that the sN biopsy may enhance the pathologic staging of this neoplasm compared to modified pelvic lymphadenectomy, due to the individual variability of the lymphatic drainage of this cancer. In patients with clinically node-negative squamous head and neck cancer, the reliability of sN-guided neck lymph node dissection seems promising. The sN biopsy is also technically feasible in patients with differentiated thyroid cancer; however, the future role of this procedure in the clinical decision-making of these patients remains to be defined due to the questionable biological meaning of nodal metastases. Patients with non-small-cell lung cancer should be investigated by means of radiotracers injected at the time of thoracotomy or under CT-scan guidance in order to achieve a satisfactory identification rate (over 80%); the focused histopathologic staging of the sN improves current pathologic staging by conventional bi-valve assessment of all the lymph nodes of the surgical specimen; moreover, the prognostic role of isolated N2 metastasis can be better elucidated. In patients with gastrointestinal malignancies, the intraoperative lymphatic mapping with sN biopsy have suggested that the lymphatic drainage of the gastrointestinal tract is much more complicated than other sites, skip metastasis being rather frequent. In patients with gastric cancer, current data show that it can be detected by means of peritumoral injection of indocyanine green; the detection of tumor positive lymph nodes beyond the perigastric area could select patients amenable to D2 lymphadenectomy. As regards to colorectal cancer patients, the focused analysis of the sN may reveal disease that might otherwise go undetected by conventional surgical and pathological methods, and those patients which are upstaged can benefit by adjuvant chemotherapy. Finally, in patients with Merkel cell carcinoma, notwithstanding the limited experiences with sN biopsy, sN histology seems to predict regional lymph node status and may aid in selecting which patients are amenable to therapeutic lymph node dissection.
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PMID:Clinical applications of sentinel lymph-node biopsy for the staging and treatment of solid neoplasms. 1616 21

Bone metastases from a vulvar carcinoma are exceptionally rare with only five reported cases in the literature. We report on a patient who was initially treated with radical vulvectomy and bilateral inguinal lymphadenectomy for a vulvar cancer (pT2, pN2 (6/37), M0; G2). Due to a positive nodal status, adjuvant radiation of the vulva and the pelvis was performed additionally. The patient presented 4 months after initial therapy with severe pain in the right humeral shaft due to a pathologic fracture based on an osteoclastic metastasis. During osteosynthetic stabilization histologic and immunohistochemical stain gave evidence of a metastasis of the known vulvar carcinoma. Bone scan showed enhancements in both humeral heads as well as the right distal femur, whereas plain radiographs confirmed further metastases in all suspected areas. In conclusion, bone metastases should be considered in the differential diagnoses of unclear osseous pain in women with a history of vulvar cancer. Immunohistochemical examinations might be important to depict the epithelial character of the tissue and allude to the metastatic nature of such rare lesions. The atypical location should alert the physician to suspect distant metastasis, rather than locoregional disease.
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PMID:Bone metastases in vulvar cancer: a rare metastatic pattern. 1634 6

Vulvar cancer is an uncommon but devastating disease. In addition to radical vulvectomy, most patients require inguinofemoral lymphadenectomy, which often results in wound infection, wound breakdown, and chronic lymphedema. In the past, the gold standard for early lesions was radical vulvectomy with complete bilateral inguinal-femoral lymphadenectomy. This resulted in a low rate of recurrence but devastating disfigurement and high complication rates. Because only approximately 20% of patients with vulvar cancer have positive lymph nodes upon presentation, the traditional approach of inguinal-femoral lymphadenectomy for all patients resulted in many patients undergoing a morbid procedure without any real benefit. Sentinel node dissection, by removing only the nodes with the highest risk of containing metastases, offers a much less morbid alternative. In addition, because only one or two lymph nodes are removed, these can be subjected to a more thorough histopathologic analysis than conventional complete lymphadenectomy. This involves serial sectioning and immunohistochemical staining for cytokeratin antigen. Very small metastases, termed micrometastases, can be detected in this fashion. Therefore, sentinel node dissection with serial sectioning and immunohistochemical staining potentially offers a more accurate assessment of the regional nodes with less morbidity. Patients with positive sentinel nodes may then undergo additional therapy. Patients with negative sentinel nodes are theoretically at very low risk for metastases and should not require any additional treatment.
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PMID:Sentinel node dissection in vulvar cancer. 1645 19

The objective of this review is to summarize the published data about squamous carcinoma of the vulva and to identify promising areas for future investigation. Rather than the routine use of complete radical vulvectomy, a radical wide excision of the vulvar lesion to achieve at least a 1-cm gross margin appears sufficient to treat the primary lesion. A surgical assessment of the groin is required for all patients who have invasion greater than 1 mm. Ipsilateral groin node dissection can be performed through a separate incision. All the nodal tissue medial to the vessels and above the fascia should be removed. Sentinel node evaluation may be a significant step forward, but the false-negative rate is not well enough defined to consider this a standard. Patients with positive inguinal nodes at groin dissection should receive radiation therapy to the ipsilateral groin and hemipelvis. For those patients who have unresectable primary disease or if nodes are palpably suspicious, fixed, and/or ulcerated preoperatively, chemoradiation is the preferred option. Exenterative procedures may rarely be required. Chemotherapy for recurrent or metastatic disease has not been proven to be of value. Although survival rates are high for those with negative nodes, the morbidity associated with standard radical techniques has prompted innovation. Adequately powered trials aimed at further reducing morbidity without compromising survival are underway.
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PMID:Carcinoma of the vulva. 1650 47

In this review article, the application of sentinel lymph node (SLN) lymphoscintigraphy not only in breast cancer and melanoma but also in cancers of the genital organs and the lungs is described. After a brief historical background, including Virchow and Cabanas' views, a description of the basic technique and the sensitivity and specificity of this technique in identifying SLN in breast cancer and melanoma are presented. In cervical and vulvar cancer and also in lung cancer, special techniques are applied before and during surgery and evaluated after surgical operation. The advantages and disadvantages of using SLN lymphoscintigraphy are described. Finally, our experience from using SLN lymphoscintigraphy, especially in cervical cancer, is presented. The technique for SLN mapping may save the patient from extended surgical procedures, indicate the pathways of lymph drainage and identify skip metastases. Nevertheless, the sensitivity of this technique should improve more in order to provide information concerning the extent of surgical treatment.
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PMID:Current application of sentinel lymph node lymphoscintigraphy to detect various cancer metastases. 1661 87

Small-cell carcinoma is a rare and aggressive malignancy; this tumor is lethal due to the propensity to metastasize early in the course of the disease. It occurs most frequently in the lung. Small-cell cancer also rarely may occur in the female genital tract, usually in the cervix. This article concerns the fifth reported case of small-cell carcinoma of the vulva in a 34-year-old women who had developed a vulvar mass3 months earlier. The physical examination revealed bilateral inguinal lymph nodes. The mass was excised and the histological finding was a small-cell carcinoma. Postoperative search for metastasis included computed tomography scan of the abdomen, pelvis, chest and brain that showed right iliac lymph nodes. The osteo medullar biopsy was positive. The patient was treated with 6 cycles of chemotherapy including cisplatinum (80mg/m2 d1) and etoposide (100mg/m2 d1 d2 d3). Adjuvant radiotherapy (50Gy) was administered but the disease progressed and the patient died after 7 months. Small-cell carcinoma of the vulva is a very rare tumor. Similarly to small-cell cancers arising in other sites, it appears that regional therapy is not a sufficient treatment for this tumor. Chemotherapy should be used to improve outcome.
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PMID:[Small-cell carcinoma of the vulva]. 1715 43

Stage IA vulvar carcinoma is not supposed to metastasize to the lymph nodes. Therefore, it is assumed that these lesions can be safely treated by less aggressive methods than macroinvasive carcinomas. However, in this case report, two patients are described who had vulvar lesions with a depth of invasion of less than 1 mm and developed lymph node metastases in the groin despite radical wide local excision of their lesions. Both the patients underwent lymphadenectomy and received postoperative radiation therapy on the groins. Neither of the two patients died of vulvar carcinoma. Thus, we conclude that vigilance for the occurrence of lymph node metastases remains necessary after radical, local excision in stage IA vulvar cancer. However, this case report also shows that adequate treatment of groin node metastases can result in a very good long-term survival.
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PMID:Lymph node recurrence following stage IA vulvar carcinoma: two cases and a short overview of literature. 1731 54

The aim of this study is to determine immunohistochemical markers with prognostic significance for disease-specific survival in patients with squamous cell cancer of the vulva. The study material consisted of slides and paraffin blocks of 50 vulvectomy specimens. A tissue microarray was constructed and stained with 16 antibodies. The impact of lymph node metastases, size of tumor, vascular space involvement, and the marker expression on disease-specific survival was calculated. In univariate analysis lymph node metastases, tumor size more than 4 cm, vascular space involvement, strong cyclooxygenase 2 expression, and absent Caspase 3 expression were significantly associated with disease-specific survival. In a multivariate analysis, poor disease-specific survival is independently associated with absent Caspase 3 expression (hazard ratio, 0.2; 95% confidence interval, 0.04-0.97; P = 0.045). Five-year survival was 86% in patients with tumors positive for Caspase 3 (n = 20) and drops to 64% in patients with Caspase 3-negative tumors (n = 30). In this test set, cyclooxygenase 2 and Caspase 3 seem to be immunohistochemical markers with prognostic significance for vulva cancer. The results have to be validated.
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PMID:Identification of potential prognostic markers for vulvar cancer using immunohistochemical staining of tissue microarrays. 1741 88

Overexpression of endothelin (ET)-1 and its receptors, ETAR and ETBR, commonly referred to as the 'ET-axis', has been demonstrated to play a role in cancer progression for various human tumours. Based on these results we propose a similar role of the expression of the ET-axis in vulvar cancer. Expression of the ET-axis was investigated immunohistochemically using tissue microarrays with tumour samples of 68 vulvar cancer patients. Samples were obtained from patients undergoing local excision or radical vulvectomy. ET-1 expression of tumour cells correlated highly significantly with early stages of vulvar cancer (p=0.004), whereas neither ETAR nor ETBR expression showed any association with TNM stages. High staining levels of ETBR in the tumour tissue were significantly related to tumour progression (p=0.01) and early metastases (p=0.09); low ETBR staining intensity correlated with longer relapse-free survival (p=0.019). In patients with ETBR overexpressing low-stage tumours (pT1-2) we observed a significantly reduced overall survival and disease-free survival (p=0.036 and 0.021, respectively). ETAR expression and ETBR expression were significantly correlative (p=0.018). Accordingly, co-expression of both receptors was related to tumour progression (p=0.022) and an increased risk for local recurrence (p=0.005). These results suggest that, in addition to established histological and clinical prognostic factors, analysis of ET-receptor and, in particular, of ETBR expression by means of simple immunohistochemical analysis might improve prediction of the prognosis for patients with vulvar squamous cell carcinoma.
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PMID:Expression and prognostic relevance of endothelin-B receptor in vulvar cancer. 1761 49


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