Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
)
103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The cyclic chemotherapy scheme OS I/75 was tried in 6 patients with newly diagnosed osteosarcoma and in 3 patients with secondary
metastases
. The treatment consists of high dose methotrexate, followed by citrovorum-factor rescue, doxorubicine (Adriblastin) and cyclophosphamide (Endoxan). All 6 primary patients are in a continuous remission of 6+ to 21+ months (median 12+ months). The length of remission in the patients with
metastases
is 5.5+ and 8+ months. The haematological side effects led to an average prolongation of the cycle by 11 days in a planned cycle duration of 42 days. However, they were readily manageable. Among the other side effects two cases of Adriblastin
myocardiopathy
are remarkable which became apparent after methotrexate and ifosfamide. In order to improve possibilities for treatment regional centralisation of patient care and interdisciplinary and supraregional cooperation of treatment centres are necessary. A prospective treatment programme has been developed for the Federal Republic of Germany and Austria.
...
PMID:[Chemotherapy of osteosarcoma (author's transl)]. 30 80
A 39-year-old man had pain and swelling of the terminal phalanx of a finger. Radiograph was interpreted as osteomyelitis, and amputation through the mid-phalanx was performed. Histology revealed Ewing sarcoma. Lung metastases rapidly developed. Right lung irradiation and systemic chemotherapy, including doxorubicin, were instituted. He developed progressive severe right ventricular failure which was attributed to effects of large pulmonary
metastases
. Autopsy showed massive right ventricular
metastases
, the primary pathological cause of the heart failure, without evidence of doxorubicin
cardiomyopathy
.
...
PMID:Ewing sarcoma: phalangeal primary with fatal cardiac metastases. 54 62
We report a case of renal cell carcinoma with pulmonary
metastases
treated with recombinant alpha interferon and subsequently presenting as congestive heart failure due to a dilated cardiomyopathy. A 66-year-old man presented himself to the department of internal medicine at our hospital with a complaint of persistent cough with sputum on August 27, 1988. Ultrasonogram, computed tomography and angiography showed a right renal cell carcinoma and chest x-ray films disclosed bilateral multiple nodular shadows, probably representing
metastases
of the renal tumor. After being transferred to our department, the patient underwent the ligation of the right renal artery and vein and the postoperative treatment with recombinant alpha interferon, achieving a complete response for pulmonary
metastases
and a partial response for the primary region. On February 14, 1990 the patient was admitted to our hospital with a complaint of dyspnea to be diagnosed as congestive heart failure due to dilated cardiomyopathy. The interferon therapy was suspected to have caused the heart disease, and four months after discontinuation of interferon therapy the heart failure symptoms had improved, but hypokinesis of the cardiac wall still persisted. To our knowledge, this may be the first case of alpha interferon-related
cardiomyopathy
in Japan.
...
PMID:[Dilated cardiomyopathy following alpha interferon therapy of renal tumor with pulmonary metastases: a case report]. 141 58
BACKGROUND Resection of pulmonary
metastases
may be followed by long term survival and now that it is an accepted method of treatment for patients with osteogenic sarcoma indicators of favourable prognosis are needed to aid the assessment of suitability for resection. This study compares the survival rates of patients who did and did not undergo resection of their pulmonary
metastases
and relates them to prognostic indicators. METHODS The study population was the 43 patients with osteosarcoma who developed pulmonary
metastases
out of the 111 patients with osteosarcoma treated by the Birmingham bone tumour treatment service during 1977-83. All patients who developed
metastases
confined to the lungs were considered for resection, thoracotomy being advised for all patients (provided that they were fit enough) who had
metastases
thought to be resectable even if they were multiple. RESULTS Of the 18 patients who did not have a thoracotomy, 15 died of disseminated disease after a mean interval of eight months; one patient died of
cardiomyopathy
and two are alive after 26 and eight months. Of the 25 patients who underwent thoracotomy in an attempt to resect
metastases
, three were found to have inoperable disease and died after a mean interval of 5.4 months from thoracotomy. Overall, after thoracotomy (repeated if necessary) there was a 20% survival at five years from the first thoracotomy. When survival was assessed with respect to the disease free interval and the number and bilaterality of the
metastases
no significant relationships were found. There was, however, a significant relation between survival and the position of
metastases
, patients with
metastases
confined to one lobe of the lung having a mean survival of 29.5 months, compared with 13.7 months in patients with disease in more than one lobe. CONCLUSION Thus patients who had a thoracotomy survived longer from the time of diagnosis of pulmonary metastasis than those not undergoing thoracotomy;
metastases
confined to one lobe predicted a better prognosis.
...
PMID:Results of thoracotomy in osteogenic sarcoma with pulmonary metastases. 175 20
A 10 year old child developed severe
cardiomyopathy
after combined, multicycle chemotherapy for Ewing's sarcoma and was treated by heart transplantation with good results. Long term azathioprine and cyclosporin caused only mild impairment of immune function and there were no recurrent infections, local recurrences of the tumour, or distant
metastases
.
...
PMID:Long term survival after heart transplantation for doxorubicin induced cardiomyopathy. 192 98
Two Pediatric Intergroup Ewing's Sarcoma studies of patients with
metastatic disease
(IESS-MD) have used multimodal therapy consisting of intensive combination chemotherapy and radiation therapy (XRT) to areas of gross disease detected at the time of diagnosis. In IESS-MD-I, conducted from 1975 to 1977, 53 eligible patients were entered and received the chemotherapeutic agents vincristine, Adriamycin (doxorubicin; Adria Laboratories, Columbus, OH), cyclophosphamide, and dactinomycin with concomitant XRT (VACA + XRT). In IESS-MD-II, conducted from 1980 to 1983, 69 eligible patients were entered and received 5-fluorouracil (5FU) in addition to the chemotherapeutic agents of IESS-MD-I; initial intensive chemotherapy was given and XRT was delayed until week 10 (VACA + 5FU, delayed XRT). The best response rate (complete and partial remissions combined) was 73% in IESS-MD-I and 70% in IESS-MD-II, so there was no statistical evidence of a difference in response rates (P = 0.62). The length of best response also was similar between studies (P = 0.79), with approximately 30% of the patients on both studies remaining in remission at 3 years. The percentage of patients surviving 5 years or more was 30 on the first study and 28 on the second study (P = 0.49). The major sites of relapse after a response were lung and bone, each occurring with nearly equal frequency. The age of the patient was related to both best response rate and survival: patients 10 years of age or younger had substantially higher response and survival rates than patients 11 years of age or older. The favorable prognosis for younger patients might be explained by a more favorable distribution of primary sites at diagnosis; 39% of patients 10 years of age or younger had rib primary sites, compared with only 16% for patients older than 10 years of age (P = 0.05). The frequency of life-threatening toxicity was substantially higher in IESS-MD-I (30%) than in IESS-MD-II (9%), but the frequency of fatal toxicity was similar (6% to 7%). Fatal complications included Adriamycin-induced
cardiomyopathy
, Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia, unspecified pneumonitis, and sepsis. The most common toxicity and complications were leukopenia and infections.
...
PMID:Ewing's sarcoma metastatic at diagnosis. Results and comparisons of two intergroup Ewing's sarcoma studies. 220 33
From January 1978 to May 1983, 41 patients with primary high-grade osteogenic osteosarcoma of a limb were treated with a combination of intensive chemotherapy and prophylactic lung irradiation (PLI) intercalated between the first two cycles of chemotherapy. The primary tumor was treated according to its size and location by amputation, resection, high-dose radiotherapy, and salvage amputation for a tumor progressing under radiotherapy. Two weeks after surgery or simultaneously with radiotherapy, a three-drug regimen (cycle A) consisting of mitomycin C on day 1, vincristine followed by a 6-hour infusion of methotrexate on day 2 was given. Folinic acid rescue was started 6 hours after the end of the methotrexate infusion. A PLI of 20 G was given from day 10 to 22. On day 28, a four-drug regimen (cycle B) combining doxorubicin on day 1, vincristine on day 2 and dacarbazine with cyclophosphamide on days 3 to 6 was administered. Thereafter, five additional cycles of A and B were administered provided that the absolute number of polymorphonuclear cells and platelets had recovered. When these values were not attained, treatment was delayed until recovery. After a mean follow-up of 60.6 months, 16 patients have developed distant
metastases
, associated in four cases with local recurrence. Sixteen patients have died: 15 with
metastases
, one with no evidence of disease (toxic death). The overall survival of the entire group is 66% and the continuously disease-free survival 58% at 5 years. Alopecia, nausea, vomiting, asthenia, anorexia, and infraclinical and reversible impairment of lung ventilatory function were universal. A noticeable hematologic toxicity also was seen. One toxic death occurred after a pulmonary infection. Two patients developed
cardiomyopathy
. A multiparametic analysis of prognostic factors shows the very significant influence of age on treatment outcome. The continuous disease-free survival among the 17 patients younger than 15 years is 41% compared to 79% in older patients. The prognostic influence of age was independent of other factors. The delay (for more than two cycles) of methotrexate administration was the second independent prognostic factor. These results raise the question of using different protocols of adjuvant chemotherapy for patients younger or older than 15 years in order to optimize the curability/toxicity ratio.
...
PMID:Age and dose of chemotherapy as major prognostic factors in a trial of adjuvant therapy of osteosarcoma combining two alternating drug combinations and early prophylactic lung irradiation. French Bone Tumor Study Group. 312 57
The medical records of 14 hyperthyroid cats with thyroid carcinoma were analyzed retrospectively regarding historical, physical, laboratory, and thyroid scintiscan findings, treatment, and treatment outcome. Breed predilection was not detected, and older castrated male cats were most commonly affected. The most common clinical signs detected by owners were weight loss, polydipsia, polyuria, polyphagia, hyperactivity, and anorexia. Physical examination findings included tachycardia, palpable cervical mass, hyperactivity, cardiac murmur, and abnormal coat. Common abnormal laboratory findings were high serum thyroxine and triiodo-thyronine concentrations and high serum alanine transaminase, alkaline phosphatase, and aspartate transaminase activities. Azotemia, hyperphosphatemia, and hyperglycemia were noticed less frequently. The most common thyroid scintiscan findings were multiple nodular areas of high radionuclide uptake in the cervical region, thoracic inlet, and cranial mediastinum. The most common morphologic diagnosis was mixed compact and follicular carcinoma, with follicular and papillary carcinomas being less common. Most cats responded well to treatment of the thyroid tumor, with rapid resolution of the historical and physical examination findings. The most common necropsy findings were local tumor invasion, regional lymph node
metastases
,
cardiomyopathy
, and interstitial nephritis.
...
PMID:Thyroid carcinoma causing hyperthyroidism in cats: 14 cases (1981-1986). 318 90
Between 1978 and 1986, atrial heart tumors were found in 21 of our patients, all of them subsequently underwent surgery. Pathological-histological examination in 20 patients confirmed the diagnosis of a myxoma; the one remaining case was a female patient with primary cardiogenic osteosarcoma. Of the 20 patients, 15 (75%) were females; in four female patients (20%) the tumor was localized in the right atrium. The main symptoms and findings were elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rates (80%), stress-induced dyspnea or paroxysmal dyspnea (71% resp.), and diastolic mitral or tricuspid murmurs (62%). The patient with osteosarcoma died of cachexia on the basis of generalized diffuse
metastases
. One female patient with a preoperative history of severe left ventricular impairment on the basis of dilative
cardiomyopathy
died 5 weeks after surgery. Relapse of atrial myxoma has not yet occurred during follow-up since 1978.
...
PMID:[Primary atrial heart tumors--a review of 21 cases]. 321 45
Adriamycin (Doxorubicin) is an important chemotherapeutic agent, but is limited in its clinical usefulness by dose-related
cardiomyopathy
. Attempts are being made to reduce this toxicity while retaining anti-tumor activity. These include development of chemically modified anthracycline derivatives and coupling of adriamycin to or into macromolecular carriers. We and several other laboratories have shown that entrapment of adriamycin in liposomes (phospholipid vesicles) can reduce toxicity while retaining or, in some cases, enhancing anti-tumor activity. Here we report further results of experiments in mice on toxicity reduction and anti-tumor activity. Approximate maximum tolerated doses (MTD) of adriamycin were determined from normal mouse survival at 240 days after initial treatment. I.V. bolus injection of liposomal-adriamycin was superior to i.v. bolus or i.v. infusion of free drug after a single injection, 5 daily injections or 5 biweekly (every 2 weeks) injections. Using L1210 tumor as a model for systemic leukemia, liposomal adriamycin was as effective as free adriamycin at equal doses, however liposomal-adriamycin was more effective at MTD. M5076 tumor was used as a limited model for comparisons of the effects of liposomal-adriamycin on "primary" and "metastatic" disease. The results showed that whereas free and liposomal adriamycin were without significant effect on "primary", subcutaneous tumor, that liposomal adriamycin, but not free adriamycin had very strong effects on liver "metastases". The results suggest that liposomally administered drugs, including adriamycin, may have utility for treatment of certain types of cancer and for
metastases
in organs where liposomes accumulate. Where improved anti-tumor activity is coupled with toxicity reduction and simplicity of administration, liposomal administration could be a useful method of drug delivery.
...
PMID:The use of liposomes as carriers of therapeutic agents. 388 26
1
2
3
4
Next >>