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)

Necropsy of a six year old female German Shepherd revealed the presence of a large oval mass in the thoracic cavity originating from the thickened proximal portion of the right fourth rib. Osteolytic osteosarcoma was diagnosed on the basis of gross appearance, presence of many pleomorphic spindle cells, containing pink stained intracytoplasmic granules in cytological preparations of impression smears of the tumor and histopathology. The tumor was considered highly malignant and was characterized by an abundant osteoblastic and connective tissue stroma with extreme cellular pleomorphism including giant cells, atypical mitoses and occasional trabeculae of tumor bone and osteoid. Metastases were found in the lung and spleen. Electron microscopy was carried out to support the diagnosis.
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PMID:Case report: osteolytic osteosarcoma in a German Shepherd bitch. 28 48

Four cases of extra-osseous osteosarcoma were found among 242 cases recorded as osteosarcoma in the Swedish Cancer Registry during the years 1958 to 1968. The tumours occurred in middle-aged and elderly patients. Three of the tumours were situated in the proximal part of the thigh and one in the scapular region. Histopathologically, all tumours were subclassified as osteoblastic osteosarcomas. The patients were treated by primary local excision which in one case was followed by a radical en bloc excision of the entire tumour bed. All cases subjected to simple excision died of metastatic disease five to twenty-four months after diagnosis. The patient treated by en bloc excision is alive and apparently free from disease fourteen years after diagnosis.
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PMID:Extra-osseous osteosarcoma: a clinical and histopathological study of four cases. 28 33

A retrospective study of patients with osteosarcoma was undertaken to determine whether there was a relationship between biopsy and survival. Fifty-seven patients treated at the Karolinska Hospital, Stockholm, between 1938 and 1959 were included in this study, all of whom were less than thirty years old, had a metaphysial osteosarcoma in a long bone but had no pulmonary metastases at the time of diagnosis; all were treated by amputation. No clinical variants of osteosarcoma were included. Twenty-four of the fifty-seven patients had an amputation without a prior biopsy; the others had biopsies before amputation. These two groups were fairly closely matched in age, sex, site and size of tumour, and in the level of amputation; some patients in each group received radiation before operation. Evaluation of these two groups of patients revealed that the performance of a biopsy, with or without a delay of not more than thirty days between the biopsy and the definitive operation, had no adverse effect on survival.
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PMID:The effect of biopsy on survival of patients with osteosarcoma. 28 34

Primary osteosarcoma of the fifth sternebra is reported in a 6-year-old male Great Dane. Presenting signs were suggestive of myocarditis and pulmonary congestion. Electrocardiography revealed R waves of low and variable amplitude and the plasma alpha-hydroxibutyrate dehydrogenase level was elevated. Radiography revealed neoplasia of the fifth sternebra with extensive bilaterial pulmonary metastases. Histologically the neoplasm showed typical osteosarcoma with plentiful osteoid production.
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PMID:Primary osteosarcoma of the sternum of a dog. 28 60

With 60 cases of osteosarcomas a histological evaluation from + to +++ carried out for mitoses, osteoid formation, presence of multinucleated giant cells, and tumor necrosis. A subclassification in osteoblastic, chondroblastic, and fibroblastic type of osteosarcoma (according to Dahlin) and a histological grading from + to +++ based on degree of cellular atypism was also done. In our material no relations between these three types of osteosarcoma and chance for survival became evident. There was, however, a significant correlation between grade of atypism and rate of mitoses. Grading of oestosarcomas from + to +++ showed that cases with grade III osteosarcoma remained only seldomly without metastases during the course of the disease. Grade I osteosarcomas and also grade II tumors showed a higher number of patients with 2-year survival. However, neither correlation between tumor grade and incidence of metastases, nor with chances for survival were statistically significant. Nevertheless, characterization of osteosarcomas, by a histological grading from + to +++ based on cellular atypism and mitotic count is advisable, in addition to the TNM stages. This histological grading appeared to be more practicable than subclassifications of osteosarcoma by type which had been tested by us in a previous study (Konrad et al., in press).
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PMID:Osteosarcoma: histological evaluation and grading. 28 43

A retrospective review of all recorded cases of osteosarcoma diagnosed and treated in Manitoba from 1930 to 1977 was carried out. There were 95 patients (64 males, 31 females). The peak age was 10 to 19 years. The most common sites of osteosarcoma were the femur (38 patients), tibia (14 patients), humerus (13 patients) and pelvis (9 patients). The survival rate (excluding parosteal and periosteal types) was 28% at 2 years and 16% at 5 years. Patients who were operated upon had a somewhat better prognosis than those who had radiotherapy. Initial results of chemotherapy are encouraging. Patients with distal limb tumours had a better prognosis than those with more proximal neoplasms. Patients with tumour secondary to Paget's disease and to irradiation did poorly, those with parosteal and periosteal osteosarcoma did better. Thirteen patients had 31 thoracotomies for pulmonary metastases; their average duration of survival after this procedure was 9.3 months.
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PMID:Osteosarcoma in Manitoba: review of 95 patients. 29 64

Levels of alkaline phosphatase were measured in the primary tumor of 26 patients with osteosarcoma. One of seven patients with a tissue alkaline phosphatase level less than 0.6 microM/min/mg developed pulmonary metastases. In contrast, 16 or 17 patients with a tissue alkaline phosphatase level greater than 0.6 microM/min/mg developed pulmonary metastases. It thus appears that tissue alkaline phosphatase levels of primary osteosarcomas are strongly correlated with prognosis (p less than .01).
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PMID:Alkaline phosphatase levels in osteosarcoma tissue are related to prognosis. 29 11

Data from 106 patients with osteosarcoma who developed metastases during treatment were analyzed for prognostic factors for postmetastic survival time. Patients diagnosed in 1971 or later received more intensive chemotherapy and had significantly longer postmetastatic survival time than those diagnosed in 1970 or earlier (P = 0.002). Patients whose metastasis occurred 13 or more months after diagnosis had signicantly longer postmetastatic survival time than those whose metastasis occurred during the first 12 months after diagnosis (P = 0.005). Life-table regression analysis revealed an interaction between "year of diagnosis" and "months to metastasis" which provided a postmetastatic survival advantage for those having metastasis after diagnosis over metastasis at diagnosis for patients diagnosed in 1971 or later but not for those diagnosed in 1970 or earlier (P = 0.093).
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PMID:Prognosis after metastases in osteosarcoma. 29 32

For period from 1971 to 1975, 18 cases of osteosarcoma were experienced among 9132 spontaneously hypertensive rats. The onset was at 72 to 145 days of age and death occurred before 423 days of age. The tumors were multiple being distributed in the skull (11 of 14 cases), caudal vertebrae (8 of 14 cases), and fore- and hind-limb. All the tumors were mainly composed of sarcomatous tissue with some osteoid and cartilage. Metastasis was never observed. Serum A1-P levels of tumor bearing animals were 2 times higher than those without tumor. Bronchiectasis and abscess formation of submaxillary lymph nodes were noted in most affected animals.
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PMID:[Multiple osteosarcoma in spontaneously hypertensive rats (author's transl)]. 29 56

An animal model for human osteosarcoma was established in newborn Syrian golden hamsters by injecting productively infected TE-85 cells (cultured human osteosarcoma cells) adjacent to the femur. Tumors were palpable 10 to 15 days following cell injection and enlarged progresively until the animal died (mean survival time was 36 days). The tumor take was 100% and all animals developed pulmonary metastases. Osteoid and bone were identified in sections of the tumor by light and electron microscopy. Invasion of the marrow spaces and adjacent skeletal muscle by the malignant osteoblasts, anaplastic sarcoma cells and multinucleated giant cells was frequently observed. The tumor was transplantable. TE-85 cell surface antigens were demonstrable by immunofluorescence on the surface of the cells of the induced tumors. The present tumor model had unique immunologic characteristics in that no antibodies were demonstrable in the sera of the tumored animals.
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PMID:A model for human osteosarcoma in hamsters. 29 56


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