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)

We have examined circulating concentrations of a parathyroid hormone-like peptide (PLP) in patients with malignancies and in patients with hyperparathyroidism. The radioimmunoassay employed reacts with synthetic amino-terminal fragments of PLP but not with parathyroid hormone. Elevated plasma PLP concentrations were observed in 50% of patients with malignancy and hypercalcemia and in 15% of normocalcemic cancer patients, mean values being higher in the former group. Detectable plasma PLP concentrations were found in 2 of 39 control subjects. In 2 patients with breast cancer plasma PLP declined concomitantly with a reduction in tumor burden. Adenocarcinoma of the breast and squamous cell carcinomas were most frequently associated with high plasma PLP levels although a variety of histologic types were represented. The presence of metastases on bone scans did not correlate with either the severity of hypercalcemia or the extent of PLP elevation. Increased concentrations of plasma PLP were also observed in 4 of 20 patients with primary hyperparathyroidism and in 5 of 16 patients with chronic renal failure and secondary hyperparathyroidism. Gel filtration analysis of immunoreactive PLP in plasma from 2 hypercalcemic breast cancer patients revealed heterogeneity, with, in each case, both large (greater than 15 kD) and small (6-7 kD) molecular weight amino-terminal moieties. The results document the presence of PLP in the circulation of patients with cancer and are consistent with a pathogenetic role for PLP in the hypercalcemia of malignancy irrespective of whether skeletal metastases have occurred. PLP may also contribute to the skeletal and/or renal manifestations of hyperparathyroid states.
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PMID:Circulating concentrations of parathyroid hormone-like peptide in malignancy and in hyperparathyroidism. 231 98

Two hundred consecutive patients with malignant pleural effusion were reviewed. The pathologic etiology of malignant pleurisy was: primary lung cancer in 123 cases; five, mesothelioma; and 72 cases secondary to metastatic tumors. Adenocarcinoma of the lung and mammary cancer were the most frequent tumors causing malignant pleural effusion. The modalities employed in local treatment consisted of thoracocentesis in 62 patients, tube thoracotomy in 111 cases with local instillation of adriamycin, MMC, CQ, 5FU, OK432 or talc. Surgical procedures including pleuropneumonectomy or reduction surgery of the tumor with decortication were performed in ten patients. Tube drainage with local instillation of drugs was more effective than thoracocentesis with or without local therapy. Excellent initial results were obtained in patients who received reduction surgery with decortication and pleurodesis. Results of cytologic investigation were positive in 157 cases (78.5 percent). The tumor cells disappeared in 79.4 percent of primary cancer pleurisy cases and 81.1 percent of patients with metastases while disappearance or significant decrease in pleural effusion following treatment was obtained in 75.2 and 77.8 percent respectively. The median survival was 11.3 months in primary cases, and 11.7 months in patients with metastases.
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PMID:Treatment of malignant pleural effusion. 241 78

Adenocarcinoma of the prostate produces specific ultrasonic findings that can be used in diagnosis. We have examined 211 patients using transrectal ultrasound in both the sagittal and axial planes. Thirty-three carcinomas were detected, and 31 histologically confirmed; 24 by needle biopsy, six by transurethral resection, one by total prostatectomy, and two by the demonstration of distant metastases. On ultrasound, all of the carcinomas were less echogenic than normal prostate. All appeared to originate in the peripheral zone of the prostate and produced asymmetry of the gland. The majority of carcinomas in this series showed capsular involvement and ten penetrated and extended beyond the prostatic capsule. The results of this series indicate that transrectal ultrasound can be used to detect cancer of the prostate gland. Ultrasound demonstrated the extent of tumor involvement and enabled accurate staging of these cancers.
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PMID:Transrectal ultrasound in the diagnosis of prostate cancer: location, echogenicity, histopathology, and staging. 241 29

Adenocarcinoma involving the distal esophagus usually is far advanced when the patient is first seen. Adenocarcinoma differs from squamous carcinoma of the esophagus since it is relatively unresponsive to radiation therapy or chemotherapy. Adenocarcinoma of the esophagus resembles gastric cancer in its tendency to form a bulky and locally invasive tumor with early regional lymph node metastases. It differs from gastric cancer in its tendency to spread proximally in the esophagus and in the relatively infrequent early involvement of the liver by metastases. From 1979-1986, 37 patients had resection for adenocarcinoma involving the distal esophagus. Thirty-three patients were diagnosed with American Joint Committee for Cancer Stage III or IV adenocarcinoma at the time of operation. Transhiatal esophagectomy in continuity with a proximal gastrectomy was done in 27 patients. Reconstruction was accomplished by cervical esophagogastrostomy using pedicled distal stomach. There were three postoperative deaths (30-day mortality rate: 8%). Anastomotic leak occurred in nine patients and caused significant morbidity in four patients. Eleven patients required dilation of the cervical anastomosis after operation for up to 6 months. Mediastinal recurrence affected three patients treated by transhiatal esophagectomy. The survival rate (Kaplan-Meier) was 44% at 1 year and 31% at 2 years. Resection of adenocarcinoma of the esophagus can be accomplished in most patients with acceptable risks of morbidity and mortality. Resection restores ability to swallow saliva and to consume a normal diet, and is associated with an appreciable improvement in the quality of life.
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PMID:Adenocarcinoma of the esophagus. 243 70

Total sialic acid (TSA), lipid-bound sialic acid (LSA), hexoses (galactose and mannose) and mucoid proteins were analyzed by specific chemical methods from sera of 43 patients with lung cancer and 5 cases of benign lung diseases. The levels were compared with similar values obtained from 25 healthy individuals. The four biomarkers were significantly elevated in lung cancer patients as compared to controls as well as benign conditions (p less than 0.001). TSA, LSA and the hexoses levels were significantly higher in benign conditions as compared to controls (p less than 0.001, p less than 0.05, and p less than 0.001, respectively). Adenocarcinoma patients had lower mean values of all the four biomarkers than squamous-cell and small-cell carcinoma patients. Increased levels of LSA in squamous-cell carcinoma and TSA in small-cell carcinoma were statistically also significant as compared to adenocarcinoma (p less than 0.01 and p less than 0.05, respectively). LSA showed higher mean values in metastatic cancer than in primary lung cancer. The combination of these markers might be useful for differentiation between benign and malignant conditions and also for the diagnosis of metastatic lung cancer.
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PMID:Significance of serum sialoglycoproteins in patients with lung cancer. 253 69

Adenocarcinoma of the endometrium is diagnosed by the histologic evaluation of endometrial tissue. In stage I disease, five-year survival depends upon a number of prognostic factors. Histologic grade and type of carcinoma are most important. The need for pelvic and para-aortic lymphadenectomy is often based on the preoperative histologic grade and type of tumor. The purpose of this study was: 1) to compare preoperative histology of endometrial carcinoma to that found at hysterectomy, 2) to determine if preoperative histology can accurately predict depth of myometrial invasion or extra-uterine spread, 3) to determine whether para-aortic lymphadenectomy could be deleted based only on the preoperative finding of well differentiated carcinoma. In 19 (28%) of the 68 patients studied, the histologic grade or pattern at hysterectomy was different from that found preoperatively. In seven (13%) of the 52 "good prognosis" patients with grades 1 and 2 preoperative histology, hysterectomy revealed a more serious histologic type. Three of the seven (43%) had extrauterine spread. In the 16 "poor prognosis" patients with preoperative grade 3 or papillary serous/clear cell carcinoma, 14 (88%) had a similar histologic pattern at hysterectomy. Three of these patients had metastatic disease. Depth of myometrial invasion could not be predicted by preoperative histology even though the data suggested that extrauterine spread could. Clinical stage I endometrial carcinoma, grade 1 or 2, should not be treated without para-aortic nodal sampling based only on a supposedly favorable preoperative histologic pattern. Confirmed para-aortic nodal disease will alter the fields of post-operative radiation therapy should that become necessary. In these patients, however, pelvic lymphadenectomy is not justified.2 +
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PMID:Endometrial adenocarcinoma: therapeutic impact of preoperative histopathologic examination of endometrial tissue. 277 82

The accuracy of identification of tumor type and primary site of malignant tumors by examination of exfoliated tumor cells was cytologically studied in 448 malignant effusions from 366 patients for whom the primary tumor site had been confirmed by histology. Ninety-seven corresponding small biopsies from metastases were separately reviewed histopathologically. In four fluids, the cells were too scanty or too poorly preserved for tumor typing. The cytologic tumor typing was performed with nearly 100% accuracy in the remaining 444 fluids, except for those of intermediate-cell anaplastic carcinomas (0 of 3) and poorly differentiated squamous (epidermoid) carcinomas (1 of 5). Adenocarcinoma was correctly identified in 98% of 285 fluids, large-cell carcinoma in 97% of 108 fluids, oat-cell carcinoma in 94% of 16 fluids, well-differentiated (keratinizing) squamous carcinoma in 100% of 3 fluids, malignant lymphoma in 100% of 22 fluids and sarcoma in 100% of 2 fluids. The criteria and the failures are discussed at length. In the investigation of the accuracy of cytologic and histologic diagnoses with respect to the primary tumor site, tumors with variable sites of origin (sarcomas and lymphomas) and those with usually singular sites of origin (e.g., small-cell anaplastic carcinoma of the lung) were excluded, leaving 387 cytologic and 83 histologic specimens available for review. The breast as a primary site was correctly identified in 70% of both the cytologic and histologic specimens; the primary cytodiagnostic criteria included a uniform cell pattern, finely granular chromatin, dense cytoplasm and cell balls with smooth borders. Ovarian primaries were correctly identified in 70% of the fluids and 83% of the biopsy samples on the basis of very irregular clusters of large pleomorphic tumor cells, large nucleoli and psammoma bodies. Lung primaries, identified in 50% of the fluids and 29% of the biopsy samples, showed quite variable cell patterns, most often including large pleomorphic cells with or without mucus formation and prominent multinucleation. Gastric cancers of the diffuse type were accurately identified in 52% of the corresponding fluids, which showed mainly isolated cells with dense cytoplasmic rims, occasional signet-ring cells, "embryo-shaped" nuclei, marked hyperchromasia and densely granular chromatin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Identification of types and primary sites of malignant tumors by examination of exfoliated tumor cells in serous fluids. Comparison with the diagnostic accuracy on small histologic biopsies. 299 73

The study relates to patients with bronchioloalveolar carcinoma who had undergone operation. On reassessment of histological specimens, 92 patients were considered to have been suffering from bronchioloalveolar carcinoma. Bronchioloalveolar carcinoma was further classified according to histological findings as typical or of mixed type. The latter included cases on which there was differentiation towards pulmonary adenocarcinoma. A third group consisted of 32 cases of peripheral pulmonary adenocarcinoma originally diagnosed as bronchioloalveolar carcinoma. Pulmonary tuberculosis was found to have occurred oftener in bronchioloalveolar carcinoma cases than in mixed bronchioloalveolar cases (p less than 0.005). A history of pneumonia was commoner in mixed bronchioloalveolar and adenocarcinoma patients than in bronchioloalveolar patients (p less than 0.05). Lobectomy or more conservative resection had been possible in the majority of cases. There had been no surgical or hospital mortality. No differences existed between the groups as regards surgical treatment, postoperative radiotherapy or chemotherapy. Local recurrence was commoner in bronchioloalveolar patients than in mixed bronchioloalveolar patients (p less than 0.001) or adenocarcinoma patients (p less than 0.025). Mixed bronchioloalveolar and adenocarcinoma patients had distant metastases oftener than bronchioloalveolar patients (p less than 0.025 and p less than 0.001). Adenocarcinoma patients also had more metastases than mixed bronchioloalveolar patients, but the difference was not statistically significant. Most metastases (82%) were discovered within three years of operation. The incidence of local recurrences increased from three years after operation. The five-year survival rate was 57% in the bronchioloalveolar group, 45% in the mixed bronchioloalveolar group and 17% in the adenocarcinoma group.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Results of surgical treatment in bronchioloalveolar carcinoma. 302 37

Because of the scarcity of such lesions, little is known about the efficacy of chemotherapy for advanced salivary gland cancers. Although surgery and irradiation are the mainstays of treatment, patients with recurrent tumors and those with unresectable or metastatic cancer are not candidates for this usual approach. Ten patients with recurrent, metastatic, or unresectable salivary gland tumors were treated with combination chemotherapy, primarily with cisplatin, doxorubicin hydrochloride (Adriamycin), and cyclophosphamide, or cisplatin with 5-fluorouracil. In patients whose tumors exhibited no response, second-line drugs were used. The overall response rate was 50%--with one complete response--but the duration of response was short. This report contributes to the growing data base that demonstrates definite chemosensitivity of these tumors. To date, 116 patients have been reviewed. Adenocarcinoma-like cancers respond best to cisplatin, doxorubicin hydrochloride, and 5-fluorouracil. High-grade mucoepidermoid carcinoma may show a sensitivity similar to that of squamous cell carcinoma. Multi-institutional protocols need to be developed to assess the roles of adjuvant and palliative chemotherapy in the treatment of salivary gland cancer.
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PMID:Chemotherapy for salivary gland cancer. 303 59

Adenocarcinoma of the kidney may metastasize to many organs and remain undetected for years. We present three illustrative cases of patients who had solitary recurrences in unusual locations; two of the three presented more than eight years after having undergone nephrectomy. Recognition of these unusual presentations is important in proper patient management.
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PMID:Unusual solitary soft tissue metastases from renal cell carcinoma. 318 98


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