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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (metastases)
103,950 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Inbred Sewall Wright strain 2 male guinea pigs with established intradermal tumors and microscopic lymph node metastases were treated either by local excision, cryosurgery, or intralesional injection of BCG. Cryosurgery and local excision were effective in eliminating growth of the primary tumor but failed to prevent growth of lymph node metastases. In contrast, intralesional injection of BCG caused regression of primary tumors and prevented growth of lymph node metastases.
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PMID:Failure of cryosurgical treatment of experimental intradermal tumors to eradicate microscopic lymph node metastases in guinea pigs. 28 20

Intralesional administration of emulsified croton oil into established syngeneic transplants of murine firosarcoma no. 1023 caused complete regression of the injected tumors in C3H mice without recurrence during the period of observation. In Sewall Wright strain 2 guinea pigs, in contrast to BCG cell wall vaccine which eradicated regional lymph node metastasis as well as dermal transplants, croton oil treatment only delayed the development of metastatic disease despite the fact that the injected skin tumors did not recur. 12-O-Tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetate (TPA), the active principle of croton oil, incorporated in mineral oil droplets in aqueous suspension, caused regression of murine tumors when injected intralesionally. Aqueous suspensions of TPA failed to eliminate the tumors. Our results suggest that tumor regression induced by croton oil of TPA emulsions was due to indiscriminate destruction of the injected tissue.
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PMID:Local tumor regression after intralesional injection of croton oil. 28 39

A series of 35 primary cerebral neuroblastoma is reported. These rare tumours occur most often in children in the first half of the first decade. Grossly the tumors are often massive, discrete, lobular, firm and cystic. Histologically three variants, largely determined by the extent and distribution of the fibrous connective tissue stroma, are recognized: (1) a classical variant, which most resembles the peripheral neuroblastoma and is characterized by a high frequency of Homer Wright rosettes and a relatively high frequency of ganglionic differentiation; (2) a desmoplastic variant, which is characterized by an intense connective tissue stroma; and (3) a transitional variant, in which both the classical and the desmoplastic features may be present within the same case, either concurrently or consecutively. Both the desmoplastic and the transitional forms are less likely to exhibit differentiation to mature ganglion cells, but the importance of identifying the primitive cell elements as neuroblasts is emphasized. With rare exceptions, this can be established only by specific silver impregnations on frozen material. Occasionally the direction of growth may be largely leptomeningeal. Seven illustrative clinical histories with pathological correlations are described. The over-all clinical behaviour of these tumours is that of malignant neuroepithelial neoplasms, characterized by a high recurrence rate. Recurrence may, however, be a late development, in some cases occurring five or seven years after apparently successful surgical removal. The tumour shows shows a high incidence of metastatic spread, almost 40 per cent of the cases examined at autopsy having disseminated in the cerebrospinal pathways. Exceptionally, extraneural metastases may also develop. However, long post-operative survival occasionally occurs, and the subsequent clinical course is not always predictable in the individual case. The differential diagnosis is briefly discussed. The cellular nature of the tumour and its biological behaviour recall those of the cerebellar medulloblastoma. Post-operative radiation to the entire neuraxis should be considered for these neoplasms.
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PMID:Primary cerebral neuroblastoma. A clinicopathological study of 35 cases. 103 Jun 55

Primitive neuroectodermal tumor (PNET) is a small round cell malignancy arising in soft tissue and bone, predominantly in older children and adolescents. We report the cytomorphologic features and findings of ancillary studies of eight fine needle aspiration (FNA) biopsies from three patients (7-year-old male, 12-year-old female, 9-year-old female). Two of the biopsies suggested the initial diagnosis of PNET of the chest wall, while the remaining six documented recurrent or metastatic disease. In one of these cases the primary diagnosis made by FNA biopsy enabled the pediatric oncologists to give specific therapy for the unresectable tumor and achieve remission. Local recurrences included the chest wall (two cases), pleura (one case) and pericardium (one case), while metastatic disease involved the supraclavicular lymph node and breast. All the cases consisted of small malignant cells with a high nuclear/cytoplasmic ratio and hyperchromatic nuclei without prominent nucleoli. Homer Wright rosettes were seen in only two of the aspirates, and neuropil and ganglion cells were not present. Ancillary studies, including electron microscopy (two cases), immunocytochemistry (four aspirates from two cases) and cytogenetics (11/22 translocation, one case) performed on the aspirated material were aids in making a specific diagnosis and excluded other small round cell tumors of childhood, such as malignant lymphoma, rhabdomyosarcoma and Ewing's sarcoma. The differential diagnosis between PNET and neuroblastoma can be difficult on the basis of an FNA biopsy alone, although light microscopic morphologic differences exist. Clinical features (e.g., age, primary site, metastatic patterns), catecholamine levels, electron microscopy and cytogenetics are necessary in establishing the correct diagnosis.
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PMID:Fine needle aspiration cytology of primitive neuroectodermal tumors. A report of these cases. 132 99

Primitive neuroectodermal tumors (PNET) of the bone and soft tissue were reviewed by immunohistochemistry and partly by morphometry, focusing particularly on histologic changes in recurrent or metastatic foci, in order to elucidate their probable histogenetic relationship with Ewing's sarcoma (ES) and its extraskeletal counterpart (EES). Eleven cases of bone tumor (average patient age; 15.1 yr) and 12 cases of soft tissue tumor (average patient age; 22.1 yr) which disclosed unequivocal Homer-Wright rosettes and/or at least foci of ganglion cell differentiation either in a given primary tumor or metastatic (or recurrent) foci were selected from small round cell tumors primarily categorized as ES or EES. Most of the cases for which follow-up biopsy samples were available disclosed prominent Homer-Wright rosettes in the metastases, whereas the primary tumors showed features of ES and lacked rosettes. In only one case, Homer-Wright rosettes were absent in the metastatic tumor. Most cases had been treated by combined intensive chemotherapy and radiotherapy, which might have influenced cell differentiation. Neural markers (neuron-specific enolase, neurofilament protein and others) were positive in most cases. Three cases with otherwise typical histologic features of ES or EES showed minute foci of ganglion cell differentiation, as confirmed by morphometry and neural markers. These results suggest that ES (or EES) and PNET are histogenetically related, but represent different stages of cell differentiation.
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PMID:Primitive neuroectodermal tumors of bone and soft tissue. With reference to histologic differentiation in primary or metastatic foci. 141 58

We treated a bilateral, well-differentiated neuroblastoma of the choroid in a patient who had congenital abdominal neuroblastoma. Although orbital metastasis of neuroblastoma is common, intraocular metastasis is not. In our patient, there was no amplification of the N-myc oncogene in the tumor of either eye. This is consistent with early-stage primary neuroblastoma. Histologically, the tumors were identical in each eye and well differentiated with Homer Wright rosettes; most neuroblastoma metastases have few rosettes and are composed of more undifferentiated, anaplastic cells. We believe that our patient had bilateral primary tumors and not metastatic tumors.
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PMID:Bilateral choroidal neonatal neuroblastoma. 233 Sep 47

Hepatocellular carcinoma cells obtained from ascitic fluid after diethylnitrosamine treatment of Sewall Wright strain-2 guinea pigs produce solid (primary) tumors, lymph-node metastases and malignant ascites when reinjected into animals of the same strain. When brought into culture the cells settle, form multilayer cultures and can be maintained in passage. In addition to epithelium-specific cytokeratin intermediate filaments (IF), these latter cells, like most cultured cells, also contain vimentin. Hepatocellular carcinoma cells in solid tumors and in metastatic tumors retain their original keratin IF and in general do not have an additional vimentin-IF system. When the tumor cells are present in ascites they develop vimentin-IF in addition to cytokeratin filaments. Vimentin is gradually lost when these cells sediment onto the peritoneal surface and proliferate continuously to form papillary projections, or when they are detected as circumscribed metastases. It seems likely, therefore, that in this system the synthesis of an additional vimentin cytoskeleton is related to reduced cell-to-cell contact and to the ability of the cells to survive individually or as cell clusters in body fluids, without being part of a cohesive tissue.
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PMID:Changing intermediate-sized filament patterns in metastatic hepatocellular carcinoma cells of the guinea pig. 242 67

A Sewall Wright strain-2 guinea pig model producing malignant ascites after injection of a diethylnitrosamine-induced hepatocellular carcinoma cell suspension (Line-10) was used to demonstrate the multilayered settling of tumor cells on the peritoneal surface, frequently followed by the formation of papillary projections and the early invasion in a proliferating submesothelial tissue. At the border of tumor cells and the desmoplastic tissue the malignant cells changed their shape and generally two categories were recognized. Often multilayering, atypical flat cells covered the stromal tissue, while mostly rounded ones invaded using their branched penetration processes, being devoid of cationized ferritin, which was only present on the luminal sides of all cellular elements. Flattened malignant cells, penetrating processes and invading cells lost their microvillous surface pattern. The infiltrating cells were often only detectable with the monoclonal antibody 10 TL 40 and the anti-cytokeratin OV TL 12-5, demonstrating the need for immunohistochemistry in diagnosing solitary invading malignant cells in light microscopy. It appeared that still numerous mesothelial cells were found scattered deeply within the desmoplastic tissue. These former lining cells were identified by their junctions and the presence of remnants of basal lamina as well as by their microvillous 5'-nucleotidase activity.
Clin Exp Metastasis
PMID:Tumor cell settling and early invasion of the peritoneum. 246 62

Hepatocellular carcinoma cells (Line-10), obtained from ascitic fluid after diethylnitrosamine treatment of Sewall Wright strain-2 guinea pigs, produce solid (primary) tumours, lymph-node and lung metastases and malignant ascites when reinjected into animals of the same strain. Monoclonal antibodies were raised against the tumour cells by immunizing BALB/c mice with viable ascitic hepatocellular Line-10 tumour cells. Three hybridomas producing anti-Line-10 monoclonal antibodies were selected for further studies (10TL1, 10TL40 and 10TL43) and compared with monoclonal antibodies against intermediate filament keratins. The anti-Line-10 monoclonal antibodies did not cross react with Line-1 hepatocellular carcinoma cells, nor with normal guinea pig hepatocytes. When ascitic Line-10 cells form high papillary projections on the peritoneal surface, they significantly reduced their antigen expression of 10TL40 and of 10TL43 defined antigens, while the expression of 10TL1 defined antigens remained unaltered. Invading Line-10 cells in the deep submesothelial stromal tissue, however, lost reactivity with MoAb 10TL43 but not with the MoAb's 10TL40 and 10TL1. The antigens on lung- and lymphnode metastases remained largely unaffected. The reactivity with MoAb's 10TL40 and with 10TL43 was also lost upon prolonged culturing of Line-10 cells. The reactivity of Line-10 and Line-1 cells with all monoclonal antibodies against keratin filaments remained unaltered. Line-1 cells could be distinguished from Line-10 cells by the absence of any reactivity with the MoAb's 10TL1, -40, -43, but also by the fact that 100% of the Line-1 cells were positive with antibodies against keratins 5/8, 18, and 7.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Changing tumour antigen expression in metastatic hepatocellular carcinoma cells of the guinea pig. 246 49

The ultrastructural appearances of 7 primitive neuroepithelial tumours (PNETs) originating in soft tissues and bone are described. Three of the tumours represented primary soft tissue lesions, while locally recurrent tumour or pulmonary metastases were studied from the 4 skeletal tumours, all of which had been diagnosed previously as Ewing's sarcomas. Rosettes were present in one of the soft tissue lesions and although not seen in the primary skeletal neoplasms, they were identified by light microscopy (LM) in 2 of 3 pulmonary metastases, one of which had the morphology of a neuroepithelioma, with innumerable Homer Wright rosettes. Conventional TEM revealed cytoplasmic processes in all cases and rosettes in varying stages of development were also evident, but the appearances did not achieve the level of cellular organization seen in neuroblastoma: microtubules were few, while dense-core granules varied in number but were generally sparse and pleomorphic, resembling lysosomes. However, typical neurosecretory granules were found in one lung metastasis; the neoplastic cells comprising the same tumour also had epithelial markers in the form of well constructed desmosomes, while freeze-fracture analysis demonstrated elaborate tight junctions. In thin sections, junctions in the other tumours appeared rudimentary, but freeze-fracture of a further case revealed small collections of membrane particles suggesting extremely poorly developed desmosomes. Immunocytochemical study of 4 tumours (2 originating in soft tissue and 2 in bone) demonstrated weak to moderate immunostaining for neurone-specific enolase and with several monoclonal antibodies reactive with neuroblastomas, but there was no evidence of immunolabelling for tyrosine hydroxylase.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Primitive neuroepithelial tumours of soft tissues and of bone: further ultrastructural and immunocytochemical clarification of 'Ewing's sarcoma', including freeze-fracture analysis. 264 32


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