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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
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103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The role of surgery in patients with Barrett's esophagus and high-grade dysplasia is controversial. The aims of this study were to determine the prevalence of unsuspected early cancer and to evaluate surgical outcome in a cohort of patients with high-grade dysplasia. Records of all 16 patients who underwent esophagectomy for high-grade dysplasia from 1986 to 1991 were reviewed. All had preoperative endoscopy with no gross evidence of carcinoma, and none had a preoperative diagnosis of intramucosal or invasive carcinoma. Intramucosal carcinoma was found in six (38%) resection specimens. There were no cases of invasive carcinoma or lymph node
metastases
. One patient (6%) died 3 months postoperatively. The remaining patients are alive without evidence of
recurrent cancer
(range of follow-up, 2-68 months). Early postoperative complications occurred in seven patients (44%). Late complications occurred in 11 patients (73%). Anastomotic strictures accounted for seven of the 11 (64%) late complications. Complications were successfully managed conservatively in all but two patients. One required laryngectomy for chronic aspiration and another required a gastrojejunostomy for gastric outlet obstruction. Intramucosal carcinoma that had been unsuspected is frequently found in patients with Barrett's esophagus and high-grade dysplasia. Mortality associated with esophagectomy is low, and perioperative complications can usually be managed conservatively. Esophageal resection is indicated in appropriately selected patients with Barrett's esophagus and high-grade dysplasia.
...
PMID:Surgical management of high-grade dysplasia in Barrett's esophagus. 823 24
The postoperative course of 159 patients with early gastric cancer operated on between 1974 and 1987 was followed for a median of 7.3 years. The cumulative 10-year survival rate(s.e.) calculated using follow-up data to the end of 1989 was 90.6(2.7) per cent excluding operative death and that from causes other than gastric cancer, or 86.3(3.0) per cent when operative mortality was included. The overall 10-year survival rate(s.e.) was 77.3(3.7) per cent. Univariate analysis showed a significant difference in survival rates between cancers confined to the mucosa and those with submucosal invasion (P = 0.02), between patients with and without lymph node
metastases
(P = 0.05) and between those < or = 50 and > 50 years of age (P = 0.02). Using Cox multivariate analysis and a stepwise procedure for eight variables (sex, age, depth of invasion, lymph node
metastases
, presence of ulceration, location, histological type, type of surgery), age and histological type had the most significant effect on survival. Seven operative deaths were recorded. Eleven patients died from
recurrent cancer
and one is still alive with a gastric remnant recurrence. Other causes of death were metachronous primary cancer (six patients), cardiovascular disease (two), pneumonia (three), sepsis (one) and car accident (one). Although the prognosis of early gastric cancer is relatively good in western countries, patients should be carefully followed over a long period for late recurrence and for metachronous cancer, which has a high incidence.
...
PMID:Early gastric cancer: follow-up after gastrectomy in 159 patients. 847 41
Intraoperative radiation therapy (IORT) has been used successfully in the treatment of malignancies, alone and as an adjunct to surgical resection. This study examined a single institution's experience with combined IORT and surgical resection in the treatment of advanced cancer. The records of 41 consecutive patients undergoing intraoperative radiation therapy (IORT) at the Fox Chase Cancer Center, from July 1987 through March 1990, were retrospectively reviewed. All patients had locally advanced disease, of whom 73% had failed previous multimodality therapy and 44% had undergone prior radiation therapy (XRT). The 2-year actuarial survival for the entire cohort was 72%. Disease-free survival was 47% at 1 year and 5% at 2 years. The only important prognostic factor predicting outcome was status of the surgical margin. Positive surgical margins decreased the 2-year actuarial survival from 100% to 59%, and increased the local failure rate from 21% to 52%. Margin status had no effect on the later development of
metastatic disease
. Higher IORT doses, field sizes > 7 cm, and multiple IORT fields were used for larger tumors and larger amounts of residual disease. These parameters alone did not correlate with improved local control. This analysis suggests the usefulness of aggressive surgical resection with IORT in extending survival for locally advanced or
recurrent cancer
. Negative margin status is the best predictor of a favorable outcome and should be used to select patients who may benefit from IORT. The use of radiation sensitizing agents should be explored in patients with positive margins, since in-field failure continues to be the major pattern of failure. IORT in conjunction with aggressive surgical resection should continue to be studied in prospective randomized clinical trials.
...
PMID:The influence of surgical margins on advanced cancer treated with intraoperative radiation therapy (IORT) and surgical resection. 847 94
Ninety-four patients with squamous cell carcinoma invading the cervical stroma to a depth of >3.0-5.0 mm with 7 mm or less in horizontal spread (FIGO Stage IA2) were evaluated. Depth and lateral extent of stromal invasion were verified using an ocular micrometer. Cell type and lymph vascular space invasion (LVSI) were recorded in each case. Patients were treated primarily by radical hysterectomy with pelvic lymphadenectomy, and those with lymph node
metastases
were offered postoperative radiation. Following treatment, patients were seen at 3-month intervals for 2 years, and every 6 months thereafter. The mean duration of follow-up was 6.9 years (range 0.4-23.5 years). Seven of 94 patients (7.4%) had lymph node
metastases
. Five patients had 1 positive node, 1 patient had 2 positive nodes, and 1 patient had 3 positive nodes. Five patients developed
recurrent cancer
and 4 died of disease. LVSI was present in 31 cases (33%). Tumor recurrence was significantly increased in patients with positive LVSI (9.7% vs 3.2%). The 5-year survival rate of patients with LVSI was 89% vs 98% in patients without this finding (P = 0.058). The 5-year survival rate of all Stage IA2 cervical cancer patients was 95%. Patients with Stage IA2 cervical cancer have a significant risk of lymph node
metastases
and should be treated by radical hysterectomy with pelvic lymphadenectomy. LVSI is an important prognostic variable in these patients and should be recorded in all cases.
...
PMID:Lymph node metastases and prognosis in patients with stage IA2 cervical cancer. 889 59
In a 12-month period,
metastatic cancer
was diagnosed in eight patients. Six of them presented with pain mimicking toothache, temporomandibular joint disorders or trigeminal neuralgia, while two showed osteopenic bone lesions in the panoramic radiography, and perimandibular swelling. Anesthesia of the lower lip was the only common clinical feature. In seven of the eight patients, a whole body bone scintigraphy and single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) of the skull in combination with a whole body and SPECT anti-granulocyte (Tc-99m MAK 250/183) bone marrow scintigraphy was performed. One patient did not have combined scintigraphy performed secondary to severe systemic illness. In six of the seven, the results were conclusive for a metastatic bone lesion. Biopsies confirmed three patients to have a previously unrecognized primary cancer, one patient to have previously unrecognized
recurrent cancer
, and three patients to exhibit new metastatic spread of an already diagnosed cancer. Histology revealed breast, lung, renal cancer and a malignancy of inconclusive origin. In the remaining patient, combined scintigraphy suggested osteomyelitis, yet biopsy revealed a prostate cancer metastasis with acute inflammatory cell infiltration. Thus, the scintigraphy pattern of a hot spot in the bone scan and a cold lesion in the bone marrow scintigraphy is highly suggestive of a mandibular metastasis, if accompanied by anesthesia of the lower lip.
...
PMID:Clinical manifestations and diagnostic approach to metastatic cancer of the mandible. 932 88
At the University of California, San Francisco, 17 patients who met the following criteria-hepatic tumor unresectable because of location or inadequate liver reserve, no
metastases
, HBsAg negative, no tumor larger than 5 cm in diameter, and no more than three tumors--were enrolled prospectively in a protocol employing preoperative chemoembolization to assess whether orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) could cure a majority of highly selected patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Thirteen patients had biopsy-proven HCC, 2 had the fibrolamellar variant, and 2 had radiological findings of HCC but no biopsy confirmation. Fourteen had underlying liver disease. All arteriographically apparent lesions were chemoembolized using a mixture including Gelfoam powder, doxorubicin, mitomycin-c, and cisplatin. Eight patients with poor hepatic reserve were chemoembolized when a donor organ became available, whereas 9 patients were chemoembolized and then placed on the waiting list. The only complication of chemoembolization was a gangrenous gallbladder in 1 patient. Thirteen patients underwent liver transplantation (2 patients without prior histological confirmation of carcinoma had no identifiable tumor at OLT); 3 patients developed
metastases
between the time of enrollment and donor organ availability and subsequently died; and 1 patient underwent a trisegmentectomy. Ten of the 11 patients with biopsy-proven HCC who underwent transplantation remain free of
recurrent cancer
at a median of 40 months; 1 patient died at 6 months of lymphoproliferative disease with no cancer found at autopsy. Although the role of chemoembolization is uncertain, these data show that the majority of carefully selected patients with HCC may achieve long-term survival with OLT.
...
PMID:Liver transplantation for hepatocellular carcinoma: results with preoperative chemoembolization. 934 74
Gastrointestinal cancer remains a significant public health threat in developed countries. Even with breath-taking gains in our understanding of the molecular underpinnings of the most common GI cancers, it is clear that the best hope in the foreseeable future lies in the chemoprevention of
recurrent cancer
and its associated precursors. Colon cancer is an ideal disease for the application of chemopreventive strategies. The molecular biology of colon cancer has been well studied and it is an excellent model for the development of chemopreventive interventions. This fact allows clinical investigators to utilize what is known about discrete biological phases of colon carcinogenesis to tailor clinical trial protocols that may attenuate a future risk for cancer. Among the agents currently in clinical trial testing are anti-oxidants, modulators of metabolism, and antiproliferatives. Current clinical trials have often incorporated the use of biomarkers as intermediate endpoints to assess the efficacy of particular preventives. The current status of ongoing colon cancer prevention trials suggests that this disease, in particular, may well be suited to chemopreventive approaches.
Cancer
Metastasis
Rev
PMID:Chemoprevention of gastrointestinal cancer. 943 48
This study was performed to assess the relationship between the level and extent of prostatic capsular invasion (PCI) by cancer and the clinical and pathological features and prognosis of early-stage prostate cancer. We conducted a retrospective analysis of the clinical (age, stage, grade, prostate specific antigen [PSA] level) and pathological (tumor volume, stage, grade, surgical margins) features of 688 patients treated with radical prostatectomy to determine the pathological features and probability of recurrence associated with various levels of PCI. Radical prostatectomy specimens were serially sectioned and examined by whole-mount technique. Progression-free probabilities (PFP) after radical prostatectomy were determined by Kaplan-Meier and Cox proportional hazards regression analysis. Progression was defined as a rising serum PSA < or = 0.4 ng/mL or clinical evidence of
recurrent cancer
. Increasing clinical stage, Gleason grade in the biopsy specimen, and pretreatment serum PSA levels were each associated with increasing levels of PCI (P < .001). In the radical prostatectomy specimen, increasing levels of PCI were significantly associated with increasing tumor volume (P < .001), Gleason grade (P < .0001), seminal vesicle involvement (SVI, P < .001) and lymph node
metastases
(+LN, P < .001). None of 138 patients without capsular invasion had SVI or lymph node
metastases
(+LN), and all remained free of progression, even though some had large volume (up to 6.26 cm3) or poorly differentiated (Gleason sum up to 8) cancers. Invasion into the capsule (n = 271) was occasionally associated with SVI (6%) or +LN (3%) and a significantly (log-rank test) lower PFP of 87% at 5 years. Focal and extensive extraprostatic extension (EPE) were associated with progressively increased risk of SVI and +LN and lower PFP (73% and 42%, respectively). In a multivariate analysis, the level of PCI was an independent prognostic factor (P < .001). There is a strong association between the level of invasion of cancer into or through the prostatic capsule and the volume, grade, pathological stage, and rate of recurrence after radical prostatectomy. Prostate cancer does not appear to
metastasize
in the absence of invasion into the capsule regardless of the volume or grade of the intracapsular tumor. Subclassification of patients according to the levels of PCI provides valuable prognostic information.
...
PMID:Clinical and pathological significance of the level and extent of capsular invasion in clinical stage T1-2 prostate cancer. 971 29
Islet cell carcinoma of the pancreas is a rare, indolent malignancy associated with a higher resectability rate and better survival than ductal carcinoma. This retrospective study presents the results of surgical treatment for nonfunctioning islet cell carcinoma of the pancreas in seven patients diagnosed and treated at Kurume University Hospital. There were two men and five women, with an average age of 54 years. Of the five tumors, four were located in the head of the pancreas, and the other three tumors were located in the body or tail of the pancreas. Epigastric pain was frequently the primary clinical symptom. By the time of diagnosis, four of the patients had regional disease, one of whom had lymph node and liver metastases, and one, liver metastases. Another patients was found to have lymph node
metastases
intraoperatively. Only one of the patients died of
recurrent cancer
, 21 years after the original operation. All of the patients who had liver metastases at the time of initial surgical treatment are now living at home. Thus, we conclude that nonfunctioning islet cell carcinomas are slow-growing tumors with a good prognosis if the main tumors and metastatic lesions are removed.
...
PMID:Nonfunctioning islet cell carcinoma of the pancreas: an evaluation of seven patients who underwent resection followed by long-term survival. 1019 33
164 operations for malignant tumors of the liver were performed in Cancer Research Center. 14 patients underwent repeated resections of the liver, 5 of them due to primary cancer of the liver and 9--with metastatic liver disease. Recurrence was revealed in 6 from 14 patients (42.8%), within a year after resection, in 4 (28.6%)--during two year after the first resection of the liver. In the rest 4 patients (28.6%) recurrence was revealed after two and more years. The indications for repeated resections were:
recurrent cancer
in the liver which should be localized, with absence of extrahepatic metastasis, good functional condition of the liver and absence of concomitant diseases. Repeated resections of the liver are technically more complicated due to the following causes: functional condition of the liver is rather deteriorated, especially after previous extended resections; anatomical interrelations are disturbed, there are intensive adhesions. There were no lethal outcomes after repeated resections of the liver. 3 years survival of operated patients was higher (60%) than in patients who underwent resection of the liver once, both in a primary cancer of the liver (46.8%) and in
metastatic cancer
(40%).
...
PMID:[Repeated resection of liver in primary and metastatic cancer]. 1021 47
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