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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
)
103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Variation in response rates to chemotherapy and survival in patients with hepatic
metastases
from colorectal carcinoma may be due to patient selection factors. The prognostic importance of 13 factors were analyzed in 112 patients with only hepatic
metastases
, who were eligible for hepatic artery infusional chemotherapy. When individually analyzed, six factors were found to significantly (less than 0.001) affect survival: the percentage of tumor involvement of the liver, assessed medically or surgically; initial serum albumin and lactic dehydrogenase; initial Karnofsky performance status; and weight loss. Patients with less than or equal to 30% liver involvement had a median survival of 24 months versus 10 months if they had greater than 30% involvement. There was a highly significant agreement between medical and surgical assessment of liver involvement (P = 0.0001). When the variables affecting survival were studied together by multivariable analyses, the most important factor was the medical assessment of liver involvement accomplished by evaluation of radionuclide liver scan and
CTT
scans. The next two most important factors in the model were the ability of the patient to obtain a tumor response and the presence or absence of weight loss. Only one factor helped predict response to chemotherapy, the type of perfusion seen on a 99Technetium-macroaggregated albumin (MAA) arterial flow scan. Forty-five percent of patients with good perfusion had a partial response while 13% of patients with poor perfusion had a tumor response (P = 0.006). We recommend that future studies, dealing with patients who have hepatic
metastases
from colorectal carcinoma and are eligible for hepatic arterial infusion, document and stratify for the following factors: the percentage of liver involvement, the presence or absence of weight loss, and the type of perfusion seen on MAA scans.
...
PMID:Prognostic variables in patients with hepatic metastases from colorectal cancer. Importance of medical assessment of liver involvement. 252 70
Between 1978-1980, 104 patients with single brain metastases (SBM) from non-small cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC) were treated at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center (MSKCC). These included 35 patients treated with surgical resection and radiation (S + ERT) and 69 patients treated with conventional external beam radiation therapy alone (ERT). Surgical resection was combined with whole brain (WBRT) and focal radiation in 83% and 17% of patients, respectively. In the ERT group, all patients received WBRT. Both treatment groups were similar with regard to age, sex, stage distribution, location and size of SBM, and time to relapse from initial diagnosis of NSCLC. The histologic examination, however, revealed adenocarcinoma predominating in those patients receiving S + ERT and epidermoid carcinoma in those receiving ERT. Follow-up treatment, symptomatic, and
CTT
response rates were evaluated. With S + ERT, the overall subjective and objective responses were 80% and 87%, respectively, and with ERT, 83% and 72% (of the 47 patients available for follow-up CT scans), respectively. Survival data indicate a significant advantage of S + ERT over ERT with a median survival of 16 months versus 4 months (P less than 0.0001). Three major factors, however, may have contributed to this difference: (1) patients in the S + ERT group generally received more aggressive initial treatment to the primary disease in the lung (72%) compared to the ERT group (36%); (2) in the S + ERT group, extracranial disease was absent at the time of SBM diagnosis in 49% of the S + ERT group compared to 26% in the ERT group; and (3) distant
metastases
were present in only 6% of the surgical patients yet, they were present in 49% of those treated with radiation alone. In one subset of patients, however--those with a radically treated primary and no extracranial disease--S + ERT resulted in a median survival of 33 months with 33% of the population still alive with no evidence of disease compared to 12 months and 0%, respectively, with ERT alone. Moreover, intracranial relapse was the cause of death in only one S + ERT patient (9%), yet it accounted for 50% of the ERT deaths. These data suggest that an aggressive approach to SBM in such favorable prognostic patients may indeed improve survival.
...
PMID:The treatment of single brain metastasis from non-oat cell lung carcinoma. Surgery and radiation versus radiation therapy alone. 373 Oct 22
In this study, we report the in vivo effects of a decoy oligonucleotide targeting the nuclear factor kappaB (NF-kappaB) on osteoclasts during forced orthodontic tooth movement in rats. Wistar rats were subjected to orthodontic forces, in the absence or presence of treatment with a decoy molecule mimicking a nonsymmetric NF-kappaB binding site (5'-CGC TGG GGA
CTT
TCC ACG G-3'). TUNEL staining of fragmented DNA revealed that treatment with NF-kappaB decoy but not with scramble double-stranded oligodeoxynucleotides (ODN) induced a high level of osteoclast apoptosis in vivo. Immunohystochemical analysis for death receptor Fas revealed strong positivity only in samples treated with NF-kappaB decoys, demonstrating that osteoclasts are sensitive to death induction via Fas signaling. Induction of apoptosis in osteoclasts could be a strategy for treatment of excessive osteoclast activity in pathologic conditions such as osteoporosis, peri-articular osteolysis, inflammatory arthritis, Paget's syndrome and tumour-associated osteolytic
metastases
.
...
PMID:Local in vivo administration of a decoy oligonucleotide targeting NF-kappaB induces apoptosis of osteoclasts after application of orthodontic forces to rat teeth. 1701 9
Matrix metalloproteinase 2 (MMP-2) in
metastatic cancer
tissue, which is associated with a poor prognosis, is a potential target for tumor imaging in vivo. Here, we describe a
metastatic cancer
cell-targeted protein nanocage. An MMP-2-binding peptide, termed
CTT
peptide (CTTHWGFTLC), was conjugated to the surface of a naturally occurring heat shock protein nanocage by genetic modification. The engineered protein nanocages showed a binding affinity for MMP-2 and selective uptake in cancer cells that highly expressed MMP-2 in vitro. In near-infrared fluorescence imaging, the nanocages showed specific and significant accumulation in tumor tissue after intravenous injection in vivo. These protein nanocages conjugated with
CTT
peptide could be potentially applied to a noninvasive near-infrared fluorescence detection method for imaging gelatinase activity in metastatic tumors in vivo.
...
PMID:Systemic delivery of protein nanocages bearing CTT peptides for enhanced imaging of MMP-2 expression in metastatic tumor models. 2554 85