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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
)
103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
High-grade dysplasia and intramucosal adenocarcinoma are premalignant and malignant lesions of the esophagus. The incidence of lymphatic or systemic
metastases
is low and esophagectomy is curative in most patients. Until recently, complete removal of the neoplastic tissue was reliably accomplished with only esophagectomy. New technologies have been developed that allow endoscopic mucosal resection and ablation with preservation of the esophagus for these lesions.
Optimal
treatment of the patient requires consideration of not only the stage of the lesion but also the pathophysiology of the esophagus and the severity of the underlying reflux disease. Only with this approach can outcomes be optimized for both the dysplasia or cancer and the patient's reflux disease and long-term quality of life. In this article, we summarize the experience from a surgical center's perspective.
...
PMID:Treatment of Barrett's esophagus with high-grade dysplasia and intramucosal adenocarcinoma. 1981 71
Prolonged survival with targeted therapies has sometimes come at the expense of an increased risk of CNS relapse; because many of these agents poorly penetrate the BBB, malignant cells may remain viable within the CNS. The ability of anticancer drugs to penetrate the BBB is a major consideration in the treatment of CNS parenchymal
metastases
.
Optimal
chemotherapy approaches for treating CNS metastases remain unclear due to a lack of evidence-based recommendations. Recent hypothesis-generating studies evaluating intra-cerebrospinal fluid administration of targeted agents indicate that these drugs may be effective in treating leptomeningeal disease and are associated with a low incidence of drug-related adverse events. Newer strategies for treating cerebrospinal fluid
metastases
may co-opt endogenous systems of the BBB, such as those involved in receptor-mediated transcytosis or classic carrier-mediated transporter systems to facilitate drug delivery across the BBB.
...
PMID:Anticancer therapies and CNS relapse: overcoming blood-brain and blood-cerebrospinal fluid barrier impermeability. 2036 7
Low anterior resection or abdominoperineal resection is considered standard treatment for early rectal cancer. These procedures, however, carry a risk of morbidity and mortality that may not be warranted for early distal lesions, which may be treated with local excision. Emerging data has investigated the efficacy of local excision in patients with early stage rectal cancers. An expert panel designated by the American College of Radiology has reviewed supporting data, from a few prospective multi-institutional trials and a number of single-institution, retrospective reviews. The consensus recognizes the importance of accurate staging to identify patients who may be candidates for a local excision approach.
Optimal
candidates for local excision alone include small, low-lying T1 tumors, without adverse pathologic features. A number of procedures may be safely used including transanal, posterior trans-sphincteric, posterior proctotomy, transanal excision, or transanal microsurgery. It is important to note that none of these include lymph node evaluation, and depending on the risk of lymph node
metastases
, adjuvant radiation with or without chemotherapy may be warranted. Patients with positive margins or T3 lesions are at high risk of local recurrence and should be offered immediate APR or LAR. However, patients with high-risk T1 tumors, T2 tumors, or those who are not amenable to more radical surgery may benefit from adjuvant treatment. Data have also reported excellent local control rates for neoadjuvant radiation +/- chemotherapy followed by local excision in higher risk patients, but it is not yet clear if this approach reduces recurrence rates over surgery alone.
...
PMID:ACR Appropriateness Criteria: local excision in early-stage rectal cancer. 2054 Oct 57
With continued growth of the elderly population and improvements in cancer therapies, the number of patients with symptomatic spinal
metastases
is likely to increase, and this is a condition that commonly leads to debilitating neurological dysfunction and pain. Advancements in surgical techniques of resection and spinal reconstruction, improvements in clinical outcomes following various treatment modalities, generally increased overall survival in patients with metastatic spine disease, and a recent randomized trial by Patchell and colleagues demonstrating the superiority of a combined surgical/radiotherapeutic approach over a radiotherapy-only strategy have led many to suggest increasingly aggressive interventions for patients with such lesions.
Optimal
management of spinal
metastases
encompasses numerous medical specialties, including neurosurgery, orthopedic surgery, medical and radiation oncology, radiology, and rehabilitation medicine. In this review, the clinical presentation, diagnosis, and management of spinal
metastatic disease
are discussed. Ultimately, the goal of treatment in patients with spinal
metastases
remains palliative, and clinical judgment is required to select the appropriate patients for surgical intervention.
...
PMID:Diagnosis and management of metastatic spine disease. A review. 2059 24
Optimal
care of patients with head and neck squamous cell cancer (HNSCC) involves a pre-determined period of post-treatment follow-up for the detection of recurrent or persistent disease,
metastases
and second primaries at the earliest opportunity. There is little evidence in literature as to whether the surveillance schemes should be based on patient survival, quality of life or cost-adjusted parameters. This article aims at highlighting some of the issues pertinent to the optimization of surveillance strategies in HNSCC.
...
PMID:Head and neck squamous cell cancers: need for an organised time-bound surveillance plan. 2083 32
Localized prostate tumors have various clinical, biological and histopathologic characteristics that lead to different progression profiles. High-risk, clinically localised disease has been classically defined by clinical examination, PSA levels and histopathologic data. High-risk localized prostate tumors have usually a worse outcome, but classic stratification predictive of outcome for prostate cancer is a matter of debate concerning its accuracy. Diagnosis of high-risk prostate cancer has been improved by the use of MRI for local extension and risk of
metastases
. Pet-scan shows promising results for lymph node metastasis detection. Bone scan is widely used, as recommended.
Optimal
treatment for these men is the combination of androgen deprivation therapy and radiation therapy, although surgery can be used in some cases. Recent and major advances in the field of molecular biology are expected to provide new tools to better stratify men with prostate cancer at diagnosis. Indeed, numerous biomarkers are in development, as a consequence of a better comprehension of molecular basis of prostate cancer. New biomarkers (including circulating tumor cells) and genetic variations associated with prostate cancer aggressiveness should help us to define more precisely high-risk disease. Endly, these data should help to determine predictive factors for individual treatment response and indications, leading to an individualized management by targeted therapies.
...
PMID:[High-risk clinically localised prostate cancer]. 2122 Feb 28
Optimal
surgical treatment for patients with stage IIIA N2 non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) remains a matter of debate, because of the outcomes. The outcomes may be affected from variations in patterns of lymph node metastasis. As the patterns of lymph node sub-classifications, multiple station
metastases
of mediastinal lymph nodes (MN2), highest metastasis of the mediastinal lymph nodes (HM), distribution of metastatic nodes (skip N2 or non-skip N2), and clinical (c-) N factor have been cited. We investigated these factors for patients with pathological stage IIIA (pIIIA) N2 NSCLC. We reviewed 121 consecutive patients with pIIIA N2 who underwent complete resection. Age, gender, tumor laterality, histology, lobe location of the tumor, c-T factor, pathological (p-) T factor, c-N factor, MN2, HM and skip N2 condition were used as prognostic variables. Overall five-year survival rate was 41.8%. Based on log-rank testing, c-T factor (P = 0.022), p-T factor (P = 0.0002), c-N factor (P = 0.009), HM (P = 0.019) and skip N2 (P = 0.030) were identified as significantly prognostic. Using these variables, p-T factor, c-N factor and skip N2 showed significance and independence on Cox multivariate analysis. The sub-classification of lymph node metastasis in patients with p-stage IIIA N2 NSCLC has clinical implications for the prognosis.
...
PMID:Validation of pN2 sub-classifications in patients with pathological stage IIIA N2 non-small cell lung cancer. 2155 38
Optimal
conditions have been defined to grow primary cultures of malignant melanoma suitable for in vitro pharmacological studies. A feasibility of primary cultures was observed in 60% of 62 clinical melanoma lymph node
metastases
. The neoplastic nature of the cells grown in culture, as assessed by the highly specific monoclonal antibodies anti-S100 and HMB45, was confirmed in 100% and 65% of the cases, respectively. Flow cytometric analysis showed a high stability of DNA content profiles observed in clinical samples through all the methodologic steps used to obtain in vitro cultures. The intertumor variability of the degree of the antiproliferative effect of melphalan and its relation with DNA interstrand cross-links (DNA ISC) provided preliminary evidence of the reliability of the experimental system for in vitro evaluation of anticancer drug activity.
...
PMID:Reliability of a primary culture system to test cytotoxic drug activity in human-malignant melanoma. 2158 90
Primary cutaneous mucinous carcinoma is a neoplasm of sweat gland origin.
Optimal
management guidelines have not been established for this rare tumor. It is treated most commonly by traditional excision and more recently by Mohs micrographic surgery in an effort to decrease its recurrence rate. We report a case of primary cutaneous mucinous carcinoma with multiple recurrences and
metastases
following 3 excisions and 2 Mohs procedures, highlighting the potential difficulty in treating this cancer and suggesting the need for a more effective treatment approach.
...
PMID:Recurrent and metastatic primary cutaneous mucinous carcinoma after excision and Mohs micrographic surgery. 2169 28
Changes in iron regulation characterize the malignant state. However, the pathways that effect these changes and their specific impact on prognosis remain poorly understood. We capitalized on publicly available microarray datasets comprising 674 breast cancer cases to systematically investigate how expression of genes related to iron metabolism is linked to breast cancer prognosis. Of 61 genes involved in iron regulation, 49% were statistically significantly associated with distant metastasis-free survival. Cases were divided into test and training cohorts, and the supervised principal component method was used to stratify cases into risk groups.
Optimal
risk stratification was achieved with a model comprising 16 genes, which we term the iron regulatory gene signature (IRGS). Multivariable analysis revealed that the IRGS contributes information not captured by conventional prognostic indicators (HR = 1.61; 95% confidence interval: 1.16-2.24; P = 0.004). The IRGS successfully stratified homogeneously treated patients, including ER+ patients treated with tamoxifen monotherapy, both with (P = 0.006) and without (P = 0.03) lymph node
metastases
. To test whether multiple pathways were embedded within the IRGS, we evaluated the performance of two gene dyads with known roles in iron biology in ER+ patients treated with tamoxifen monotherapy (n = 371). For both dyads, gene combinations that minimized intracellular iron content [anti-import: TFRC(Low)/HFE(High); or pro-export: SLC40A1 (ferroportin)(High)/HAMP(Low)] were associated with favorable prognosis (P < 0.005). Although the clinical utility of the IRGS will require further evaluation, its ability to both identify high-risk patients within traditionally low-risk groups and low-risk patients within high-risk groups has the potential to affect therapeutic decision making.
...
PMID:An iron regulatory gene signature predicts outcome in breast cancer. 2233 77
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