Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0027627 (metastases)
103,950 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Formal axillary dissection is a precise anatomical procedure by which the lymphatic contents of the axilla are removed en bloc. It is used as both a staging and a therapeutic procedure for carcinoma of the breast, and as a therapeutic or palliative procedure for established axillary metastases.
...
PMID:Formal axillary dissection. 208 9

Formal parotidectomy was performed in 120 patients by one surgeon over 7 years. Eighteen patients were referred with malignant salivary tumours (eight recurrent). Low-grade tumours (LGT) were treated by surgery alone; untreated high-grade tumours (HGT) were treated by pre- or post-operative radiotherapy according to clinical findings. The aim of surgery was to obtain tumour clearance, to preserve the facial nerve where possible, and to perform radical neck dissection for HGT when peroperative jugulodigastric lymph node biopsy confirmed metastasis. Five patients (all HGT) with complete facial palsy due to tumour underwent radical parotidectomy; of the remainder, only one suffered further deterioration of facial nerve function after surgery. After 5 years median follow-up from presentation, four patients with HGT have died from metastases; one has developed local recurrence. No patient with LGT has died or developed local recurrence. The survival difference between patients with HGT and LGT is statistically significant (P less than 0.05). A logical management policy for malignant parotid tumours requires knowledge of tumour grade.
...
PMID:Malignant epithelial parotid tumours. 238 48

Formal parotidectomy was undertaken in 271 patients by one surgeon over 11 years. Forty patients were treated for malignant salivary tumours (nine were recurrent). Low-grade tumours (45 per cent) were treated by surgery alone, untreated high-grade tumours (55 per cent) by surgery and radiotherapy, before or after operation, depending on clinical findings. The aims of surgery were to obtain tumour clearance, to preserve the facial nerve if possible, and to perform radical neck dissection for palpable malignant lymphadenopathy proven cytologically and for high-grade tumours when intraoperative jugulodigastric lymph node biopsy confirmed metastasis. Four patients sustained facial weakness as a result of surgery. At a median of 46 months follow-up two patients had developed local recurrence. Eleven patients with high-grade but none with low-grade tumours died from metastases. Patients with high-grade lesions with facial weakness from malignant infiltration and those with lymphatic metastasis have a significantly worse prognosis than those without. Locoregional control of parotid cancers can be achieved by formal parotidectomy and selective irradiation without routine sacrifice of the facial nerve.
...
PMID:Malignant epithelial parotid tumours: a rational treatment policy. 761 31

The advanced tumours of the digestive tract are generally less responsive to conventional chemotherapies. Moreover, preliminary results with IL-2 immunotherapy also seem to show a low efficacy. On the basis of our previous studies suggesting s synergistic action between IL-2 and some neurohormones, such as the pineal indole MLT, a clinical trial was performed to investigate the clinical efficacy and tolerability of an immunotherapy with IL-2 plus MLT in patients with advanced neoplasms of the digestive tract. The study included 35 patients (colorectal cancer: 14; gastric cancer: 8; hepatocarcinoma: 6; pancreas adenocarcinoma: 7). Distant organ metastases were present in 31/35 patients. MLT was given orally at a daily dose of 50 mg at 8.00 p.m., starting 7 days before IL-2, which was given subcutaneously at a dose of 3 million IU/day at 8.00 p.m. for 6 days/week for 4 weeks, corresponding to one cycle of immunotherapy. In nonprogressed patients, a second cycle was given after a 21-day rest period. A complete response was achieved in two patients (gastric cancer: 1; hepatocarcinoma: 1). Six other patients obtained a partial response: (gastric cancer: 2; hepatocarcinoma: 2; colon cancer: 1; pancreas cancer: 1). Therefore, the overall response rate was 8/35 (23%). Stable disease was obtained in 11/35 (31%) patients, whereas the remaining 16 patients (46%) progressed. The response rate was significantly higher in untreated patients than in those previously treated with chemotherapy. Toxicity was low in all patients, who received the treatment as a home therapy. This study shows that the immunotherapy with low-dose IL-2 plus the pineal hormone MLT is a new well tolerated and effective therapy of advanced tumours of the digestive tract, mainly in gastric cancer and hepatocarcinoma.
...
PMID:Immunotherapy with subcutaneous low-dose interleukin-2 and the pineal indole melatonin as a new effective therapy in advanced cancers of the digestive tract. 851 25

The need for cost-effectiveness analyses is based on the unfortunate but universal situation of limited financial resources that ideally should be used to maximal benefit. Formal cost-effectiveness analyses assume a societal utilitarian perspective with the objective of maximizing net health benefit for members of a population within a limited level of resources. This societal perspective is in stark contrast to the clinician's perspective, whose goal is to maximize his or her patient's health status (no matter what effect those decisions have on other patients or resources). This difference in perspective and objectives explains why many clinicians object to the use of cost-effectiveness analysis in setting policies. When considering the natural history of breast cancer from screening, evaluation of suspicious lesions, primary therapy, staging, adjuvant therapy, monitoring, metastatic disease, and palliative care, it is striking that most cost-effectiveness studies have been related to screening or the use of adjuvant drug therapies. In prior work our group has shown that the use of chemotherapy in node-negative breast cancer and of tamoxifen alone or in combination with chemotherapy in premenopausal women are cost-effective compared with other common medical treatments. Given the increasing pressure to contain costs in contemporary medicine, one should remember that cost effectiveness is related to value, value defined as quality/costs. Examples are discussed when the controversy focuses on increasing quality (eg, valued outcomes, such as additional years of life or years of breast preservation) and on controlling costs (eg, integrating multidisciplinary care, minimizing superfluous testing, or reducing surgical biopsy rates). Efforts should be directed at both sides of this ratio.
...
PMID:Economic and cost-effectiveness issues in breast cancer treatment. 861 53

Mortality rates from thyroid cancer have fallen significantly in recent decades, almost certainly as the result of earlier diagnosis and improved treatment of differentiated (papillary and follicular) thyroid cancer. Enhanced survival is likely a result of early diagnosis and therapy applied at a disease stage when treatment is most effective. In the United States and Europe, most patients at high risk for relapse and death from thyroid cancer are treated with total or near-total thyroidectomy and receive radioiodine ablation of residual normal or malignant thyroid tissue, followed by treatment with thyroid hormone, a strategy that cures more than 80% of patients. Still, some die of the disease and nearly 15% have local recurrences, while another 5% to 10% develop distant metastases. Over 50% of recurrences appear in the first five years, but distant metastases may surface years, and sometimes decades, after initial therapy. Much has been learned about risk stratification to predict recurrence and death from thyroid cancer but individual patients continue to have adverse outcomes not always foreseen by a low tumor stage. Follow-up must accordingly be meticulous and prolonged. The National Cancer Center Network (NCCN) has recently established consensus practice guidelines that give explicit advice about the diagnosis and management of benign and malignant thyroid tumors, including paradigms for long-term follow-up and the treatment of recurrent disease. The guidelines confirm that diagnostic scanning with 131I and measurement of serum thyroglobulin (Tg) levels are the mainstay of follow-up, offering the opportunity to detect recurrent or persistent cancer at very early stages. These guidelines advocate TSH-stimulated serum Tg measurements, done either during thyroid hormone withdrawal or stimulation with recombinant human TSH (rhTSH, Thyrogen), that often identify the presence of cancer well before diagnostic whole-body scanning or other imaging studies can spot the tumor, which offers the opportunity to treat recurrent disease at an early stage. The use of rhTSH adds a new dimension to long-term follow-up that avoids putting patients through the symptoms of hypothyroidism, and offers the opportunity to follow some patients with rhTSH-stimulated serum Tg levels without performing 131I whole-body scans. A multicenter international study has shown that serum Tg measurements alone are not as sensitive in the identification of patients with persistent or recurrent tumor as are rhTSH-stimulated serum Tg determinations. Although not yet approved for preparation of patients for 131I therapy, rhTSH has been used successfully in a compassionate use program for this purpose in a relatively large number of patients. Formal clinical investigations now planned to provide guidelines for the use of rhTSH for therapeutic 131I portend a new set of effective therapeutic paradigms for the management of differentiated thyroid cancer.
...
PMID:Using recombinant human TSH in the management of well-differentiated thyroid cancer: current strategies and future directions. 1104 54

In this study the evidences governing the management of the axilla were examined and on the base of these evidences, the optimal clinical practice was outlined. Computerized searches for publications, debating specific treatment of axilla, were done of MEDLINE data. Level of evidence was determined using standard criteria: 1. metaanalysis of randomized trials, 2. randomized trial, 3. prospective and retrospective studies, 4. reports and opinion of expert committees and working teams. The probability of lymph node involvement is related directly to the size of the primary tumour, and even with small tumour (up to 10 mm), the risk of nodal metastases is in the order of 10-20%. To date, the best strategy for determining complete lymph node status (qualitative and quantitative information) is through axillary dissection. For an accurate staging, at least ten nodes have to be obtained. Formal axillary sampling does not provide total quantitative data in patients with involved axilla. Sentinel node biopsy is a promising alternative to axillary dissection for staging but it is still under way. Axillary dissection should be omitted in patients with ductal carcinoma in situ since the probability of nodal involvement is less than 1%. In invasive breast cancer, the risk of axillary recurrence in the untreated axilla varies from about 10% to 40%. For women with stage I-II breast cancer at least level I and II axillary node dissection should be offered as the standard procedure to reduce the risk of regional recurrence. Women at high risk of axillary recurrence (> or = 4 involved nodes, < 6 nodes were obtained from a positive axilla) will require axillary irradiation after axillary dissection. However, there is a lack of higher level evidence to support the benefit of post-dissection axillary irradiation. Evidences suggest that axillary irradiation is as effective as axillary dissection in preventing regional recurrence. The following factors have to be considered for decisions regarding dissection or irradiation: patient wishes, general condition, age, the necessity of pathological nodal status for systemic therapy and the risk of post-treatment morbidity. At this time, there is no well defined subgroup of patients in whom axillary intervention can be safely omitted. In selected patients with clinically negative axilla, the decision to observe the axilla rather than use surgery or irradiation should be made jointly between the women and her specialists (surgeon, radiation and medical oncologist). The benefits of axillary treatment in prolonging survival are unclear. Studies have reported different effects on survival. Until evidences remain insufficient, the risk of axillary recurrence has to be minimized, and more and more patients have to be provide to get treatments in randomized clinical trials. Patient should be fully informed about the benefits and the potential side effects of treatments. A combination of radiotherapy and axillary dissection results an increased morbidity rate compared with either alone.
...
PMID:[Management of the axilla in breast cancer: evidences and unresolved issues]. 1168 99

A 73-year-old woman was admitted with bilateral pulmonary nodules, one on each side, which were suspected to be metastases of an unknown primary tumor. Enucleation of the lesion in the upper right lobe was performed. The histological examination showed a typical carcinoid tumor. A subsequent octreotid scan revealed high suspicion of a carcinoid in the left lower lobe as well. Formal right upper lobectomy and left lower lobectomy were performed in staged procedures. The radiological 1 year control with CT-scan demonstrated no further pathological lesions. To the best of our knowledge this is the first description of curable synchronous pulmonary carcinoid tumors.
...
PMID:Synchronous bilateral typical pulmonary carcinoid tumors. 1289 41

A computer-based decision support system to assist radiologists in diagnosing and grading brain tumours has been developed by the multi-centre INTERPRET project. Spectra from a database of 1H single-voxel spectra of different types of brain tumours, acquired in vivo from 334 patients at four different centres, are clustered according to their pathology, using automated pattern recognition techniques and the results are presented as a two-dimensional scatterplot using an intuitive graphical user interface (GUI). Formal quality control procedures were performed to standardize the performance of the instruments and check each spectrum, and teams of expert neuroradiologists, neurosurgeons, neurologists and neuropathologists clinically validated each case. The prototype decision support system (DSS) successfully classified 89% of the cases in an independent test set of 91 cases of the most frequent tumour types (meningiomas, low-grade gliomas and high-grade malignant tumours--glioblastomas and metastases). It also helps to resolve diagnostic difficulty in borderline cases. When the prototype was tested by radiologists and other clinicians it was favourably received. Results of the preliminary clinical analysis of the added value of using the DSS for brain tumour diagnosis with MRS showed a small but significant improvement over MRI used alone. In the comparison of individual pathologies, PNETs were significantly better diagnosed with the DSS than with MRI alone.
...
PMID:Development of a decision support system for diagnosis and grading of brain tumours using in vivo magnetic resonance single voxel spectra. 1676 71

The most important predictor of prognosis in breast cancer is lymph node status, yet little is known about molecular changes associated with lymph node metastasis. Here, gene expression analysis was performed on primary breast (PBT) and corresponding metastatic lymph node (MLN) tumors to identify molecular signatures associated with nodal metastasis. RNA was isolated after laser microdissection from frozen PBT and MLN from 20 patients with positive lymph nodes and hybridized to the microarray chips. Differential expression was determined using Mann-Whitney testing; Bonferroni corrected P values of 0.05 and 0.001 were calculated. Results were validated using TaqMan assays. Fifty-one genes were differentially expressed (P < 1 x 10(-5), less than twofold differences) between the PBT and paired MLN; 13 with significantly higher expression in the MLN and 38 in the PBT. qRT-PCR validated the differential expression of 40/51 genes. Of the 40 validated genes, NTS and PAX5 were found to have >100-fold higher expression in MLT while COL11A1, KRT14, MMP13, TAC1 and WNT2 had >100-fold higher expression in PBT. Gene expression differences between PBT and MLN suggests that expression of a unique set of genes is required for successful lymph node colonization. Genes expressed at higher levels in PBT are involved in degradation of the extracellular matrix, enabling cells with metastatic potential to disseminate, while genes expressed at higher levels in metastases are involved in transcription, signal transduction and immune response, providing cells with proliferation and survival advantages. These data improve our understanding of the biological processes involved in successful metastatis and provide new targets to arrest tumor cell dissemination and metastatic colonization.
Clin Exp Metastasis 2009
PMID:A gene expression signature that defines breast cancer metastases. 1911 99


1 2 Next >>