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)

A 40-year-old man with the Verner-Morrison syndrome (refractory watery diarrhoea and hypokalaemia in islet-cell tumour of the pancreas) had an islet-cell carcinoma of the non-B-cell type with metastases to liver and mesenteric lymph nodes. High concentrations of a vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) were demonstrated in tumour tissue and plasma by radioimmunological tests. After surgical removal of the tumour the plasma VIP concentration fell to normal. Immunohistochemical tests of the tumour for gastrointestinal hormones demonstrated marked fluorescence only for vaso-active intestinal polypeptide. It is assumed that this polypeptide is largely responsible for the clinical signs. In the described case the severe watery diarrhoea ceased after glucocorticoid administration.
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PMID:[The vaso-active intestinal polypeptide in Verner-Morrison syndrome]. 16 27

Functioning tumors of the pancreatic islets are now recognized as the source of clinical syndromes affecting the gastrointestinal tract which have a wide variety of catastrophic symptoms. Experiences with thirty-six cases suggest at least four separate diagnostic categories in the ulcerogenic tumor syndrome. These include: a typical history, gastric analysis, and roentgenographic findings with boderline fasting serum gastrin levels; ulcerogenic tumor with evidence of hyperparathyroidism; iatrogenic ulcerogenic syndrome associated with failure of a previous operation for duodenal ulcer; and the classic ulcerogenic syndrome associated with a fulminating ulcer diathesis or diarrhea and high serum gastrin levels. The problems presented at operation include: decisions to be make in the presence of a negative exploration; the finding of a solitary tumor in the wall of the duodenum; solitary pancreatic tumors particularly in the body and tail; ulcerogenic tumors in the very young; liver metastases in the elderly; and the wisdom of removing gross metastases in combination with total gastrectomy. The long-term survival in the ulcerogenic tumor syndrome approximated 50 per cent, with 40 per cent of those having proved malignancy living five years. Evidence of hyperparathyroidism is relatively common in association with both the ulcerogenic and the diarrheogenic tumor syndromes. The association may by a result of a congenital abnormality, metabolic alkalosis, or a direct effect of the islet cell tumor. Parathyroidectomy may be indicated when both the serum calcium and parathormone levels are elevated in the presence of borderline fasting gastrin levels. The latter may return to normal after parathyroidectomy. The evidence of hyperparathyroidism closely parallels the episodes of diarrhea in the diarrheogenic syndrome, and hyperparathyroidism may regress spontaneously after total removal of the pancreatic tumor. Just as routine calcium determinations made the diagnosis of hyperparathyroidism more commonplace, it is suggested that the gastrointestinal syndromes associated with islet cell tumor would receive wider recognition if radioimmunoassays for gastrin as well as secretin, and the other secretin-like polypeptides, were carried out routinely.
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PMID:Islet cell tumors of the pancreas and the alimentary tract. 16 36

A 61-year-old woman had watery diarrhea, hypochlorhydria, hypokalemia, and elevated serum gastrin levels. She had islet cell carcinoma of the body of the pancreas with multiple metastases to the liver. Radioimmunoassay and immunofluorescence demonstrated both vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) and gastrin in the surgically removed carcinoma and in a metastatic focus. Electron microscopical findings confirmed the presence of two cell types whose secretory granules had characteristics ascribed to these two hormones. Plasma prostaglandin E levels were also elevated above normal. Serum VIP levels became elevated to the Verner-Morrison range prior to her death of a bleeding duodenal ulcer two years after initial symptoms.
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PMID:Vasoactive intestinal polypeptide and gastrin-producing islet cell carcinoma. 19 71

The glucagonoma syndrome occurs in some but not all patients with a benign or malignant islet cell tumor and hyperglucagonemia. Manifestations may include anemia, diabetes mellitus, pruritic skin rash, glossitis, stomatitis, weight loss, diarrhea, flexible fingernails, venous thromboses, low plasma amino acid levels, and coarse folds of the jejunum and ileum. Most patients are postmenopausal women, but men and women ages 40 to 65 have been affected. The course is variable depending upon the nature of the underlying tumor. Twenty-two cases of probable glucagonoma syndrome have been reported; twelve documented with glucagon levels. The hyperglucagonemia results from elevation of the proglucagon and true glucagon immunoreactive fractions of pancreatic glucagon. Management of the rash can be accomplished rarely with topical or systemic antibiotics or corticosteroids. If the tumor is resectable, surgery reverses the syndrome. Patients with metastatic disease have responded to streptozotocin and DTIC.
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PMID:The glucagonoma syndrome and its management. 20 9

Eighteen patients with metastatic carcinoid tumours were admitted to surgical gastroenterological department of Rigshospitalet during the period 1974--1978. Thirteen had primary carcinoid tumours in the terminal ileum, two in the lungs, one in the pancreas, one in the testis, and one possibly in the retroperitoneum. All patients had distant metastases, 13 in the liver. Carcinoid syndrome with flusing and diarrhoea was present in 15 patients (83%). The time elapsing from onset of symptoms until diagnosis was on an average 2 1/2 years. The most valuable screening test for carcinoid syndrome was determination of the excretion of 5-hydroxy-indol- acetic-acid. The most sensitive investigation for determination of primary tumour and/or metastases was abdominal angiography, which was positive in all cases. Other radiological investigations were less sensitive.
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PMID:Clinical diagnosis of metastatic carcinoid tumours. 29 34

Twenty-six patients with disseminated malignant melanoma were treated with intermittent bolus DTIC and actinomycin D in an escalating dose schedule, starting at 650 and 1 mg/m2 respectively. Courses were repeated at 3--4-week intervals. Twenty four patients were evaluable for toxicity and 22 were evaluable for response. Two patients (9%) had a complete remission lasting 7+ and 14 months, and three patients (14%) had a partial remission lasting 2+, 5+, and 14+ months. Nausea and vomiting, lasting 24 hours, was observed in 88% of patients, while diarrhea was noted in 17%. Stomatitis and alopecia were less frequently observed. All responses occurred at nonmyelosuppressive doses and in patients with visceral-predominant metastases. This schedule offers the patient the convenience of single-day treatment and less prolonged gastrointestinal intolerance. Further evaluation of this drug combination and schedule would appear to be indicated.
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PMID:Phase I--II study of intermittent bolus administration of DTIC and actinomycin D in metastatic malignant melanoma. 35 80

In a controlled, prospectively randomized trial, 74 patients with hepatic metastases from colorectal cancer were randomized to either intra-arterial hepatic artery infusion with 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) or systemic chemotherapy with 5-FU. In 61 acceptable patients, there was no significant difference in terms of response rate, time to progression, duration of the response, and survival rate. Though the response rate for the intra-arterial infusion arm was slightly higher than for the systemic arm, the difference was not significant, and the intra-arterial infusion arm was associated with a greater incidence of nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, in addition to complications of femoral-arterial thrombosis, bleeding, and infection at the catheter site not seen in patients treated by systemic chemotherapy. Patients with an objective response to chemotherapy on either treatment arm survived twice as long as the nonresponders. Long-term survival in one patient, 77 months, can occasionally be achieved in patients with hepatic metastases.
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PMID:Results of a prospective randomized study of hepatic artery infusion with 5-fluorouracil versus intravenous 5-fluorouracil in patients with hepatic metastases from colorectal cancer: A Central Oncology Group study. 38 74

Prostaglandins and serotonin are vasoactive compounds with profound effects on the gastrointestinal tract. Both cause inhibition of gastric acid secretion (although serotonin stimulates gastric pepsin secretion), stimulation of intestinal motility, and conversion of small intestinal mucosa from absorption to secretion of water and electrolytes. Their effects on pancreatic and biliary function are still not clear. Although prostaglandins appear to elicit their effects primarily by a paracrine mode of action, and serotonin is primarily a neurotransmitter (neurocrine), it is clear that even under normal conditions both can function as humoral agents. For example, we have shown that serotonin plays a physiologic role as a humoral inhibitor of gastric acid secretion. However, the effects of these agents become more pronounced in patients with humorally mediated diarrheogenic syndromes. Serotonin (and related indoles, particularly 5-hydroxytryptophan) has been firmly implicated as a cause of diarrhea in patients with carcinoid syndrome; our recent studies suggest that the diagnosis can be more effectively made by measuring circulating immunoreactive serotonin concentrations than urinary excretion of 5-HIAA; that some circulating serotonin escapes hepatic inactivation and, thus, large intestinal tumors can cause carcinoid syndrome in the absence of hepatic metastases; and that large amounts of serotonin are produced by some noncarcinoid diarrheogenic tumors, including medullary carcinomas of the thyroid and tumors associated with the WDHA syndrome. A large number of tumors of probable neural crest origin, including medullary thyroid carcinoma, carcinoids, and tumors associated with the WDHA syndrome, secrete large amounts of prostaglandins, particularly PGE2. The clinical response of at least some of the patients harboring these tumors to inhibitors of prostaglandin synthesis (particularly indomethacin) suggests that prostaglandins play a role in the etiology of these diarrheogenic syndromes.
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PMID:Prostaglandins and serotonin: nonpeptide diarrheogenic hormones. 39 Aug 99

While carcinomas of the stomach is decreasing in incidence in the Dnited States, it is still a major cause of cancer death. But gastric neoplasms are not decreasing in some other geographic areas. According to some studies, 30% of all cancer in the U.S.S.R. originates in the stomach. The rate of gastric neoplasms is greatest in Japan, and over 54% of all cancer in the male population arises in the stomach. The peak age for development of stomach cancer is between 70 and 80 years; over 60% of all stomach cancer is diagnosed in patients between the ages of 60 and 70, while more than 10% is found in those over 80. The main hope for cure at this time rests with surgical treatment. However, despite increased use of surgery, the 5-year survival rate of approximately 13% for patients diagnosed during 1955-59 has not improved to any degree since that time. The major drugs commonly used to treat gastric cancer are 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) and mitomycin C. Controversy still exists concerning the optimum method for administering 5-FU, the most frequently used drug in the United States. The standard loading-course method was attended by a high risk of severe toxicity and drug-related deaths. Several variations of the loading course have evolved. Currently, the Mayo Clinic group uses a 5-day course of 13.5 mg 5-FU/kg repeated every 5 weeks, with therapy interrupted if stomatitis or diarrhea develops; with this regimen the drug-related mortality rate was reported to be less than 1%. Studies have shown that 5-FU plus radiotherapy can enhance survival in patients with locally unresectable diseases. The overall objective with 5-FU is 20-25% with an average of 4-5 months' duration of response. Despite the many patients treated with 5-FU, rarely has a systematic analysis been done of factors such as age, sex, disease-free interval, histologic grade of the tumor, or sites or metastases, which might predispose to a favourable or unfavorable response. In Japan the most commonly used drug for treatment of gastric cancer is mitomycin C, the second most frequently used drug in the United States. The overall objective response rate with mitomycin C is between 20 and 30%, with the higher response rates being reported in the Japanese data. The average duration of response ranges from 1 to 3 months. The nitrosoureas [1,3-bis(2-chloroethyl)-1-nitrosourea (BCNU), 1,3-cis(2-chloroethyl)-1-nitrosourea (CCNU), and methyl CCNU (MeCCNU)] have shown some evidence of activity against gastric cancer. BCNU has yielded an objective response rate of 18% (6/33) and an average duration of response of 4.5 months in gastric cancer patients, most of whom had no prior therapy. Adriamycin recently has been shown to have some antitumor activity, with an approximate response rate of 25%. Combination approaches have been more successful in stomach cancer than in any other gastrointestinal neoplasm. The Japanese have reported higher response rates with a combination of 5-FU, mitomycin C, and cytosine arabinoside...
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PMID:Gastric cancer: current status of treatment. 40 78

Medullary carcinoma of the thyroid develops in the parafollicular C cells, the origin of which is in the neural crest. It is characterized clinically by the presence of motor diarrhea, vasomotor attacks, and immunologically by the presence of an amyloid stroma and the appearance of an anaplastic carcinoma. It is frequently associated with a pheochromocytoma (Sipple's syndrome), parathyroid adenomas and cytaneo mucosal manifestations (phacomatosis, multiple mucosal neuromas). The C cells may secrete thyrocalcitonin and the estimation of the substance may be sometimes used in pre-operative diagnosis and, above all, subsequent observation and examination for the presence of metastases. Treatment is based upon surgery (total thyroidectomy) with lymphnode dissection. Complementary treatment (radiotherapy, chemotherapy, opotherapy) is given only when surgery is inedequate or recurrences occur.
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PMID:[Medullary carcinoma of the thyroid (author's transl)]. 46 19


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