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)

Experience with 70 patients having osteogenic sarcomas treated between 1968 and 1973 demonstrated the importance of persistence in the management of the disease of these patients. Resection for pulmonary metastases in one or both lungs, often on more than one occasion, will salvage a number of these patients, thus improving the cure rate. Adriamycin has proved an effective palliative agent and a useful adjuvant to surgical therapy. Although the cure rate of tumors arising distal to the knee is much higher than that of more proximally situated tumors, resection of osteogenic sarcomas of the distal part of the femur does not require removal of the entire femur when care is taken to resect well above the site of the apparent tumor. Some osteogenic sarcomas are sensitive to adequate dosages of radiation therapy, but the exact role of this method is yet to be determined. No definite beneficial result could be attributed to any of a variety of modalities of immune stimulation therapy.
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PMID:Improvement in the results of treatment of osteogenic sarcoma. 4 34

Forty-three patients with disseminated germ cell cancer were treated with a combination of vincristine, Adriamycin, cyclophosphamide, actinomycin-D, and medroxyprogesterone acetate. All the 43 patients were considered evaluable for response. Thirty-one patients (72%) achieved a complete or partial remission and 14 (32.5%) achieved a complete remission. The patients who attained an objective response obtained a significant prolongation of life compared with the nonresponders (median survival 55 vs. 23 weeks). Responses were seen in all histologic categories and most frequently in patients with metastases confined to the lungs. The major side effects were leukopenia and stomatitis. There were no deaths related to toxicity of the chemotherapy.
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PMID:Combination chemotherapy of germ cell tumors of the testis with vincristine, adriamycin, cyclophosphamide, actinomycin D and medroxyprogesterone acetate. 7 Feb 66

Single-drug chemotherapy was employed in a multicentric co-operative trial. Adriamycin was given to 18 patients, VM-26 to 30 and Bleomycin to 33. Almost all patients were suffering from a T3 or T4 bladder cancer with known metastases in almost 40% of cases. The vast majority of patients had already received previous treatment either chemotherapy, surgery of irradiation. Complete regression was obtained in 5% of cases; partial objective regression in 11.1% of patients treated with Adriamycin, 26.6% with VM-26 and 33.3% with Bleomycin. The results were uniformly better when high dosages of drug were employed. No clear-cut superiority of one drug over the others can be demonstrated.
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PMID:Single-drug chemotherapy of bladder cancer with adriamycin, VM-26 or bleomycin. A phase II multicentric, co-operative study. 7 Mar 52

Patients with metastatic nonseminomatous testicular cancer received an induction regimen consisting of bleomycin in 24-hour infusions and bolus iv doses of vinblastine followed by an Adriamycin and cis-dichlorodiammineplatinum(II) combination. Patients achieving complete remission after one or two cycles of this induction chemotherapy were then randomized to receive either radiotherapy (RT) to the previously involved tumor areas or maintenance chemotherapy (MCT) with CCNU, methotrexate, and vinblastine for 2 years. Among 62 evaluable patients, induction chemotherapy achieved 15 (24%) partial remissions and 35 (56%) complete remissions. Two patients with partial remission and single pulmonary metastases were rendered disease-free by surgical resection of residual tumor. Twenty patients received MCT and 15 received RT. To date, median survival is 10,8+ months in the MCT group with five relapses and 12.5 months in the RT group with two relapses. Toxicity in the induction phase was moderately severe with two drug-related deaths.
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PMID:Treatment of metastatic nonseminomatous testicular cancer: a preliminary report of induction chemotherapy followed by maintenance chemotherapy or radiotherapy. 9 36

A multimodality treatment program for disseminated testicular cancer using vinblastine/bleomycin/cis-dichlorodiammineplatinum(II) remission-induction therapy followed by surgery and cyclophosphamide/Adriamycin maintenance therapy has been used in 25 patients. The overall complete and partial response rate was 100%. Six of six patients (100%) with stage II (advanced abdominal) disease have remained in complete remission for a median followup period of 8 months. Seventeen of 19 patients (89%) with stage III metastatic disease have been in complete remission for a median duration of 20 months. No relapses have occurred in any patients who achieved a complete remission. Two of 19 patients (11%) with stage III disease achieved a partial response; one died at 4 months and the other died at 14 months. The toxicity was severe, especially during remission induction. However, there were no drug- or surgically related deaths.
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PMID:Sequential combination chemotherapy and surgery for disseminated testicular cancer: cis-dichlorodiammineplatinum(II), vinblastine, and bleomycin remission-induction therapy followed by cyclophosphamide and adriamycin. 9 38

Seventy-six patients with localized Ewing's sarcoma who received primary treatment at M.D. Anderson Hospital from 1948 through December 1975 were reviewed. Patients have been divided into four groups according to the different treatment regimens they received: Group I, moderate dose radiotherapy alone; Group II, high dose radiotherapy alone; Group III, radiotherapy plus vincristine and cytoxan; and Group IV, radiotherapy plus vincristine, Adriamycin, cytoxan and actinomycin. The problem of local recurrence appears to be solved with combined chemotherapy and radiation therapy with only one of 36 patients having a recurrence at the primary site in Groups III and IV. Multimodal therapy is the preferred treatment to obtain control of the primary lesion by radiation therapy while preserving good function. However, the major cause of failure remains distant metastases, 19 of 36 (53%) in Groups III and IV. In addition, 4 of 10 patients who have survived over 5 years have developed osteogenic sarcoma.
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PMID:Management and results of localized Ewing's sarcoma. 10 49

The addition of chemotherapy to older standard treatment with surgery and radiotherapy has increased survival to more than 80% in localized Wilms' tumor, and about 50% in metastatic disease. Actinomycin-D and vincristine have proved to be the two most active agents. Multiple-course maintenance treatment with actinomycin-D has allowed fewer relapses, but not a significantly different survival rate than a single course of this drug. Use of actinomycin-D and vincristine in combination has been under study; initial indications show that the combination is superior to either drug employed singly. The need for postoperative radiotherapy in totally resected tumors confined to the kidney is also under study. Adriamycin is at present the most encouraging new drug that has had clinical trial.
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PMID:Advances in the treatment of Wilms' tumor. 16 42

Diethylnitrosamine (DEN) was applied orally to a total of 250 female Wistar rats in a single dose (d) of 3 mg/kg body weight 5 times a week for a duration of 20 weeks. After approximately 150 days exploratory laparotomy was performed to all animals. By inspection of the liver they were divided into 4 stages of disease according to the extent of cancer formation. The reaction of rats with DEN induced liver tumors was tested using a 4-drug combination chemotherapy with different equitoxic doses of Adriamycin (Adm), Methotrexate (Mtx), 5-Fluorouracil (5-FU) and Cyclophosphamide (CP). No benefit of drug treatment could be noted. In drug treated animals no decrease in the development of the liver tumors, in the frequency of metastases nor in the frequency of tumors of other origin could be demonstrated. The parallels of chemotherapy in chemically induced liver cancer to clinical experience are discussed.
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PMID:Chemotherapy studies in autochthonous rat tumors: hepatomas. 20 2

Four children presenting with unresectable hepatoblastomas and one with metastatic disease are reported. Following initial biopsy all were treated with chemotherapy which included Adriamycin. Three of the four children showed a significant reduction in tumor size, and in two, delayed resection of the primary lesion was possible. Chemotherapy including Adriamycin represents effective initial cytoreductive therapy for childhood hepatoblastoma, thereby reducing the morbidity and mortality associated with the extensive hepatic resection usually required for an untreated lesion.
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PMID:Primary chemotherapeutic management of unresectable and metastatic hepatoblastoma in children: report of four cases. 21 90

A 9-year-old male German Shepherd Dog with osteogenic sarcoma involving the right humerus was treated by scapulohumeral disarticulation and adjuvant chemotherapy. Doxorubicin was used, at a dosage of 30 mg/m2 of body surface. Chemotherapy was unsuccessful, and 4 months after surgery, the dog developed multiple metastases of osteogenic sarcoma in the appendicular skeleton, a metastatic pattern rarely observed with primary bone tumors.
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PMID:Multiple skeletal metastases of osteogenic sarcoma in a dog. 29 98


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