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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
)
103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A study of the clinical, biochemical and histological findings of 57 patients with medullary thyroid carcinoma (
MCT
) in Norway, is presented. The diagnosis was established by light and electron microscopy and by measurements of immunoreactive calcitonin (iCT) in serum. The major factor influencing the prognosis was the extension of the disease at presentation. None of the 24 patients with tumour confined to the thyroid gland have died of the disease, and serum iCT was normal in 15 patients. Of 19 patients with regional lymph node metastes only 11 are alive 1 to 14 years after treatment, and of these 9 had increased serum iCt. 14 patients technically inoperable and/or with distant
metastases
, 12 have died of
MCT
, 1 are alive with elevated serum iCT. Of 14 patients with raised serum iCT, 8 have no clinical recurrence of the disease from 1 to 15 years after the operation.
MCT
-associated diseases were found in 8 patients, chronic thyroiditis in 10. Serum iCT was measured in 249 relatives of 42 patients, and abnormal elevations were found in 11 members of 6 families.
...
PMID:Medullary carcinoma of the thyroid in Norway. Clinical course and endocrinological aspects. 98 24
Flow cytometry of medullary thyroid carcinoma (
MCT
) was performed in a large family with the MEN-2A syndrome. Of 15 family members with
MCT
five patients (10-27 yr) were without lymph node
metastases
. Six patients had a normal pentagastrin test after operation. All patients are alive and free of symptoms of MCT 6-9 yr after total thyroidectomy and an ablative dose of 131-I. In 12 of the 15 patients with
MCT
flowcytometry of paraffin-embedded tissue could be performed. The majority of all tumors (n = 9) were classified as peridiploid. Metastatic tumor, 6 years after thyroidectomy, in one of the patients was diploid. Only two
MCT
were clearly aneuploid. In one patient the tumor was tetraploid. We conclude that the majority of the
MCT
patients in this family with the MEN-2A syndrome have no or limited ploidy aberrations in their tumors, which correlates well with the favourable prognosis of familial
MCT
.
...
PMID:Nuclear DNA content of medullary thyroid carcinoma in a large family with the MEN-2A syndrome. 167 51
Medullary carcinoma of the thyroid (MTC) is exceptional in that the hormone calcitonin produced by the tumor cells represents a specific and sensitive tumor marker. Careful screening by serial calcitonin determinations following pentagastrin stimulation allows for the early detection of
metastatic disease
. We have adopted a method of meticulous modified radical neck dissection to eradicate persistent or recurrent
MCT
in 11 patients treated over a 15-month period. This surgical approach resulted in potentially curative treatment in two patients. Effective tumor reduction was achieved in another seven. Two patients have persistent or progressive disease despite maximum efforts to eradicate malignant tissue. Follow-up is presently incomplete in one patient. Postoperative complications included recurrent nerve paralysis (n = 3), hypoparathyroidism (n = 2), muscular weakness (n = 2) and Horner's syndrome (n = 3). The majority of nervous complications improved spontaneously. It is concluded that the adopted method of meticulous modified radical neck dissection offers the chance of cure to some patients and results in the removal of substantial tumor mass in the majority of others. Postoperative problems are mostly temporary and are deemed acceptable.
...
PMID:New operative strategy in the treatment of metastasizing medullary carcinoma of the thyroid. 197 10
In 13 patients who had been thyroidectomized for medullary carcinoma (
MCT
), basal and pentagastrin-stimulated immunoreactive calcitonin (iCT) concentrations were measured in a peripheral vein and concomitantly in hepatic veins as well as in the superior and inferior caval veins. The basal concentrations of iCT in serum from the antecubital vein ranged from normal values (less than 0.50 micrograms/1) to grossly elevated (greater than 100 micrograms/1). Intravenous pentagastrin injections (0.5 micrograms/kg) stimulated transiently calcitonin secretion in all patients and peak concentrations occurred in peripheral venous blood and in the inferior caval vein after 3 to 5 minutes. In all patients peak iCT values in the hepatic vein occurred at 1 to 2 minutes and were much higher than in samples taken from other veins. Only three patients showed
metastases
to liver as judged by conventional clinical and laboratory examinations. Two patients with nonthyroid, malignant disease did not show an increase in serum iCT concentration of hepatic veins. The authors conclude that
MCT
may spread early to the liver. The presence of liver metastases is an important prognostic factor in patient evaluation and can be demonstrated by measuring iCT in hepatic veins before and during pentagastrin stimulation.
...
PMID:Early liver metastases in patients with medullary carcinoma of the thyroid gland. 291 Apr 15
A case of
MCT
with immunoreactivity for both thyroglobulin and calcitonin in the same neoplastic cells is reported. Double-stained tumor cells were present both in the primary tumor and in lymph node
metastases
.
...
PMID:Concurrent production of calcitonin and thyroglobulin by the same neoplastic cells. 371 99
Serum levels of calcitonin (CT) and carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) were evaluated in a group of 41 patients with histologically proven medullary thyroid carcinoma (
MCT
) before and sequentially after treatment for a period up to 7 years. Before thyroidectomy, CT levels were high in all patients, and significantly more elevated when
metastases
were present. On the other hand, CEA levels were high in most but not all the patients, and they also were found more frequently to be elevated in patients with
metastases
. After treatment, most of the patients without
metastases
showed persistently normal basal and pentagastrin stimulated CT and CEA levels. In some patients either without or with local
metastases
, postoperative CT levels, although considerably reduced, remained persistently above normal limits, whereas CEA levels became completely normal. This pattern may be due to the persistence of minute occult foci of the tumor, not sufficient to produce measurable amounts of CEA, which is not synthesized by all tumor cells. Most of the patients with
metastases
at diagnosis, showed still elevated CT and CEA levels after treatment. In the nonprogressive cases both markers decreased after adjunctive treatment or remained unchanged. In patients with progressive disease, an increase of CEA levels in the absence of a parallel increase of CT levels, which even decreased, was often observed. In one patient with progressive disease high CEA levels were seen for the first time when liver metastases had occurred. These data seem to suggest that, even though CEA production is not recognizable in all patients with
MCT
, in the CEA positive cases CEA levels may follow a nonparallel pattern and may have a distinct diagnostic meaning with respect to CT levels. In some cases, particularly in advanced disease, CEA may be a more useful marker of poor prognosis.
...
PMID:Nonparallel patterns of calcitonin and carcinoembryonic antigen levels in the follow-up of medullary thyroid carcinoma. 669 9
This prospective, randomized, controlled trial from the University of Hong Kong evaluated the efficacy of perioperative parenteral nutrition (PN) in patients requiring hepatectomy for primary hepatocellular carcinoma. From September 1990 through June 1993, 150 consecutive patients with resectable hepatocellular carcinoma were randomly assigned to receive either perioperative PN (n = 75), in addition to usual oral diet, or to no additional therapy (oral diet alone without PN; n = 75). Excluding patients with
metastatic disease
, a total of 64 patients in the perioperative PN group (39 with associated cirrhosis, 18 with chronic active hepatitis, and 7 without associated liver disease) were compared to 60 control patients (33 with cirrhosis, 12 with chronic active hepatitis and 15 with no associated liver disease). PN was started 7 days before hepatic resection and continued for 7 days after operation in the experimental patients. The PN consisted of standard micronutrients, dextrose, lipid emulsion (containing 50 percent of lipid as medium-chain triglycerides,
MCT
) and amino acids enriched in branched-chain amino acids (BCAA, 35 percent of PN protein intake), and provided = 1.5 g protein/kg/day and 30 kcal/kg/day. PN was administered via a superior vena cava Broviac catheter cycled over 12 hours each evening preoperatively, and as a 24 hour infusion during the postoperative week. Control patients received only 5 percent dextrose in normal saline postoperatively, with volume and sodium content similar to the experimental PN-treated patients. All patients studied (experimental and control) received 25 grams of albumin intravenously for 5 days postoperatively, and all were allowed to consume enteral diet as tolerated throughout the entire study period. Preoperative assessment included standard anthropometric indices, serum chemistries and proteins, indocyanine green clearance (an index of hepatic function), hand grip strength, and immune function tests (serum immunoglobulin concentrations and peripheral lymphocyte stimulation by phytohemagglutinin). Postoperative assessment included the same preoperative indices (chemistries measured from days 1 to 8 post-operatively), and overall postoperative mortality and morbidity during the hospitalization. Morbidity indices included both infectious complications and non-infectious complications (eg, pleural effusion, ascites, renal failure, hepatic coma). The two groups of patients were similar in age, sex, total and percent weight loss, hepatic carcinoma stage, incidence of cirrhosis, and other preoperative indices. However, a higher percentage of patients in the PN group had abnormal preoperative hepatic function by indocyanine green clearance (67 vs 47%, p = 0.03). The proportion undergoing major hepatectomy and other important intraoperative factors were similar between groups. No significant difference in postoperative hospital mortality occurred between groups (PN 8% vs control 15%; p = 0.30), and PN use did not change hand-grip strength, skin-fold thickness or midarm circumference. However, a significant beneficial effect of PN on hospital morbidity was observed Perioperative PN use was associated with a significant reduction in the overall postoperative morbidity rate (PN group 34% vs control group 55%; p = 0.02). This difference was mainly due to a significant reduction in infectious complications (PN 17% vs control 37%; p = 0.01), and in the need for diuretic drugs to control ascites (PN 25% vs control 50%; p = 0.004). There were no differences between groups in serum immunoglobulins or lymphocyte response to mitogens. There was less deterioration of liver function with PN as measured by the change in the rate of indocyanine green clearance (PN group -2.8% loss vs control group -4.8% loss; p = 0.05). The attenuation of hepatic function loss with PN occurred despite a significant rise in serum transaminase values from days 5 to 8 postoperatively. PN therapy was also associated with le
...
PMID:Perioperative nutritional support in patients undergoing hepatectomy for hepatocellular carcinoma. 878 71
Compared with other imaging modalities and clinical investigation, the 111In-pentetreotide scan identified additional
metastatic disease
sites in 12 carcinoid patients and 2 occult primaries, and influenced the therapeutic outcome in 36 patients [29 carcinoids, 2 atypical carcinoids, 3 cancers of unknown primaries (CUPs) and 2 medullary thyroid carcinomas (MCTs)]. No adverse reactions were noted. Somatostatin receptors were detected in 59/60 carcinoid patients, 3/4 atypical carcinoid patients, 0/2
MCT
patients, and 0/3 cases of CUP. Somatostatin receptor presence is underestimated in some patients using standard hormonal response criteria rather than scintigraphy. 18 patients with metastatic carcinoids who underwent 111In-pentetreotide scanning were all somatostatin receptor positive. Their mean (+/- SE) 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid (5-HIAA) suppression with octreotide therapy was -53% (+/- 6%). 8 patients had < 50% and 10 had > 50% 5-HIAA suppression (ranges: -4 to -47% and -58 to -94%, respectively). To investigate the effect of somatostatin analogues on survival, 90 consecutive cases of carcinoid syndrome patients treated during the somatostatin analogue era were reviewed. Survival according to primary site was 12.01, 18.29 and 6.05 years (overall median 12.01 years) for patients with foregut, midgut and unknown primaries, respectively. The difference from historical controls is substantial (67 vs. 18% 5-year survival), although our series is neither prospective nor randomised. The heterogeneity in patient and tumour response to somatostatin analogue therapy is discussed.
...
PMID:Somatostatin receptor imaging: predictive and prognostic considerations. 881 70
We report 2 cases of synchronous bilobar multiple liver metastases from colorectal cancer which are hepatectomised following a hepatic arterial infusion chemotherapy. Both cases were considered unresectable
metastases
before chemotherapy. Case 1: A 55-year-old male, with rectal cancer and multiple hepatic
metastases
, was performed a low anterior resection. Hepatic arterial infusion chemotherapy (5-FU 1 g/m2 5h qw) and systemic chemotherapy (5-FU/LV) were administered. Twelve months after the first surgery, hepatectomy was performed. Case 2: Right hemicolectomy was performed on a 66-year-old male, with cancer of the transverse colon and multiple hepatic
metastases
. Hepatic arterial infusion chemotherapy was administered 38 times. Thirteen months after the first surgery, hepatectomy and
MCT
were performed. Even among the cases of unresectable hepatic
metastases
from colorectal cancer, there are some in which resection is possible followed by hepatic arterial infusion chemotherapy. Re-evaluation for hepatectomy is needed for the cases where hepatic arterial infusion chemotherapy is administered.
...
PMID:[Two cases of resection of synchronous bilobar multiple liver metastases from colorectal cancer after hepatic arterial infusion chemotherapy]. 1555 77
Pancreatic acinar cell carcinomas are rare, and little is reported on their chemotherapy. We report a 49-year old male patient with pancreatic acinar cell carcinoma and multiple liver metastases, which responded to oral TS-1 and hepatic arterial infusion of cisplatin. The patient underwent a partial hepatectomy,
MCT
abrasions and excision of the pancreatic tumor. Postoperative pathological studies revealed
metastases
of acinar cell carcinoma to the liver and lymph nodes; the primary lesion was undetermined. After surgery, the patient was treated with hepatic arterial infusion of cisplatin and oral TS-1. Metastatic tumors completely disappeared, and serum lipase decreased to normal levels. Abdominal CT one year after surgery revealed a pancreatic body tumor, which was surgically removed. Pathological studies showed primary pancreatic acinar cell carcinoma, while previous
metastases
remained under control. To summarize, TS-1 and cisplatin can be effective treatments for pancreatic acinar cell carcinomas.
...
PMID:[Pancreatic acinar cell carcinoma successfully treated with combination of oral TS-1 and intra-arterial cisplatin]. 1661 67
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