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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
)
103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Strontium
-89 is an effective agent for palliation of pain due to bony
metastases
from breast and prostate carcinoma. As a functional analog of calcium, 89Sr is taken up by bone in areas of osteoblastic activity. Since patients with multiple myeloma frequently have osteolytic
metastases
, 89Sr might not be considered to be a therapeutic option. However,
metastases
which appear osteolytic by radiographs may demonstrate osteoblastic activity on bone scans. Consequently, the bone scan may be used to identify a subset of patients with osteolytic
metastases
who may benefit from 89Sr treatment. This report describes a patient with severe rib pain due to multiple myeloma whose chest radiograph showed multiple lucent lesions throughout the bones of the chest wall but whose bone scan showed marked osteoblastic activity. The patient was treated with 89Sr and received substantial pain relief. Bone scans may be useful in selecting myeloma patients or other cancer patients with osteolytic radiographic lesions who may benefit from 89Sr therapy.
...
PMID:Use of bone scintigraphy to select patients with multiple myeloma for treatment with strontium-89. 752 57
The element
Strontium
takes its name from the village of Strontian in Argyll. It was in ore samples taken from lead mines near the village that
Strontium
was first identified as a new element in 1970. A radioactive form of the element has reached medical prominence through its use in the palliation of pain in patients with painful skeletal
metastases
.
...
PMID:Elementary Scots. The discovery of Strontium. 814 40
Prostate cancer is one of the most common tumors in men. At presentation, 50% of patients have advanced disease and 25% have bone metastases. Hormonal palliation is the treatment of choice for metastatic bone pain, with a pain-free response rate of 75% for a period of 16-18 months. Second-line treatment with chemotherapy has a moderate and short-term effect. Once endocrine therapy and chemotherapy cease to be effective, radiotherapy is a good option for recurrent painful bone metastases. Diffuse painful
metastases
can be treated with half-body irradiation with a response rate of up to 70%, but there is considerable toxicity.
Strontium
-89 (Metastron) is a calcium analog radionuclide that is selectively absorbed at bone locations with increased osteoblastic activity. It is a pure beta-emitter with bone penetration of 0.8 cm, and it has been used in multiple trials with response rates of up to 80%. Results are reported with Metastron in 28 patients with diffuse painful bone metastases, in whom a response rate of 82% was seen.
...
PMID:An overview of current clinical experience with strontium-89 (Metastron). 817 12
Strontium
-89 is a radioactive calcium analog that provides an energetic beta particle for radiation therapy of osteoblastic disease.
Strontium
-89 is used as palliative therapy with the primary goal being pain relief. More than 500 patients with painful blastic
metastatic disease
were treated at University of Kansas Medical Center since the initiation of the first clinical trial there 15 years ago. Most patients have had metastatic prostate cancer to bone or breast cancer, as these tumors are commonly associated with bone pain as their primary clinical management problem. Improvement (decrease in pain, increase in physical activity level) was noted in 80% of patients with prostate carcinoma and 81% of patients with metastatic breast cancer to bone. Marrow toxicity levels were acceptable. The therapy can be repeated at 3-month intervals.
Strontium
-89 is a safe and effective systemic therapy for painful blastic
metastatic disease
. There is no longer any reason why the vast majority of persons with painful blastic
metastatic disease
should continue to hurt.
...
PMID:Strontium-89--precursor targeted therapy for pain relief of blastic metastatic disease. 824 75
Until now, patients with a progressive prostatic cancer, in whom all therapies failed and the disease spread locally and distally, was considered "a lost patient"; because it did not exist an effective therapy easily to be used. The skeletal pain control is a serious problem and it is a great responsibility also for the Urologists especially if the patient has not a short survival time and the quality of life is very poor. Physicians feel the need for a systemic, well tolerated and effective therapy also for a long time, uniform and repeatable, able to be efficient for these patients.
Strontium
89 chloride seems to offer all these possibilities and to be the best procedure for Urologist, Radiotherapists and Nuclear Specialists in order to satisfy the patients requirements. International research has shown Sr-849 Chloride is a powerful new therapy. Sr-89 Chloride is a radiopharmaceutical product for the treatment of painful
metastases
from prostatic cancer. It is a new treatment but its effectiveness is well documented and results are reported in the most important international literature. In our Department a clinical research has started and our purpose is to produce more data for a clinical and biological evaluation of the results, hoping that a similar research will extend as a multicenter study.
...
PMID:[Treatment of symptomatic bone metastases of prostatic carcinoma using strontium chloride (Sr-89)]. 833 61
Bone metastases are a major problem in the clinical management of patients with breast or prostate cancer. Severe bone pain can be a particularly debilitating effect of
metastatic disease
, resulting in a growing dependency on opioid analgesics and a reduced quality of life in patients who have a short time to survive. The radiopharmaceutical
strontium
-89 has been demonstrated to be generally well tolerated as well as effective in reducing metastatic bone pain in breast or prostate cancer patients. Unlike other radioisotopes or external radiation treatments, it represents systemic, targeted therapy that is simple and fast to administer in an outpatient setting. Data accumulated over the last 15 years demonstrates that 89Sr provides pain relief in up to 80% of patients with bony
metastases
arising from breast or prostatic malignancies. Pain palliation is maintained for several months, along with improvements in functional status and quality of life. As many as one fifth of 89Sr-treated patients become pain free and require no further pain medication. The adverse effects of intravenous 89Sr are minimal. Bone marrow toxicity is observed in many patients, resulting in some reduction of platelet and white blood cell counts. Despite reductions of 20% to 30%, these hematologic effects are generally reversible and the majority of patients maintain platelet counts that are within normal limits.
Strontium
-89 is effective systemic radioisotopic therapy for the palliation of painful bony
metastases
from breast and prostate carcinoma.
...
PMID:Clinical experience with strontium-89 in prostatic and breast cancer patients. 850 27
Fifteen patients with breast cancer and skeletal
metastases
who had bone pain refractory to opioid analgesics and who were not eligible for or had not responded to local field radiotherapy, were treated with
strontium
-89. All patients had received previous treatment with chemotherapy and radiotherapy for bone metastases. Severity of bone pain, sleeping pattern, mobility and dependency on analgesics were evaluated before and 4, 8 and 12 weeks after 89Sr administration. Patients received 2 MBq/kg (118-148 MBq) of 89Sr by i.v. injection. Pain relief and a reduction in analgesic requirements were observed in 7 of the 15 (47%) patients, with a reduction in the severity score from 34% to 71%. Duration of the response varied from 3 to 7 months. A decrease in peripheral blood cell count was observed in 11 patients: a 15%-66% reduction in white cell count and a 14%-75% reduction in platelet count were detected at 12 weeks after treatment in these patients. We conclude that 89Sr is effective (47% response rate) for bone pain palliation in patients with bone metastases from breast cancer. Dependency on opioid analgesics may be reduced in patients with refractory bone pain.
...
PMID:Bone pain palliation with strontium-89 in breast cancer patients with bone metastases and refractory bone pain. 854 91
The role of
strontium
chloride Sr 89 in the palliative treatment of pain associated with metastatic bone disease is reviewed. Conventional therapies to relieve metastatic bone pain include nonopioid and opioid analgesics, hormonal therapy, external-beam irradiation, and chemotherapy. Limitations in the long-term safety and effectiveness of these treatments have increased interest in using systemic radioactive isotopes for palliation of pain. Strontium chloride Sr 89 is a relatively new bone-seeking radiopharmaceutical that has FDA-approved labeling for use in relieving pain associated with skeletal
metastases
. An analogue of calcium,
strontium
chloride Sr 89 is rapidly cleared from the blood after i.v. injection. The agent selectively irradiates metastatic sites while generally sparing normal soft-bone tissue. In clinical studies, a majority of patients with prostate or breast cancer obtained substantial relief from bone pain after receiving
strontium
chloride Sr 89 alone or in combination with external-beam irradiation. Adverse effects tend to be mild, but patients should be monitored for possible hematologic toxicity. Patients should discontinue any calcium-containing products before receiving the agent. The typical dose is 4 mCi (148 MBq) administered by slow i.v. push over one to two minutes; doses can be repeated at three-month intervals. Pain relief usually begins in 10-20 days and lasts up to six months. Radiation safety measures are necessary in handling
strontium
chloride Sr 89 and the wastes of patients. Strontium chloride Sr 89 is costly, but preliminary analysis indicates that it may reduce management expenditures overall.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Strontium chloride Sr 89 for treating pain from metastatic bone disease. 856 88
Strontium
-89 chloride (Metastron) is an FDA-approved treatment for palliation of cancer pain. We evaluated blood count changes and pain relief in 28 patients with widespread painful bony metastasis treated with
strontium
-89 at the University of Minnesota Hospital and Clinics. Eighteen patients had prostate cancer (all hormone-refractory cancer), seven patients had breast cancer, and three patients had lung cancer, all previously treated with either radiation, chemotherapy, or a combination of the two. Serial blood counts were performed weekly up to 8 weeks and at 12 weeks after administering Metastron. Pain scale and blood values were monitored simultaneously. The mean baselines of hemoglobin (Hgb), white blood count (WBC), and platelets (Plts) were 11.4, 5900, and 258,000, respectively. The mean dose of Metastron was 3 mCi (range 2.2-4.4). The median time (range) to nadir was about 6 weeks. The percentage reductions relative to baseline were 32% (range 0-72%) for WBC; 14% (range 0-50%) for Hgb; 15% (range 0-47%) for the red blood cell (RBC) count; and 40% (range 0-85%)for Plts. We did not find a close relationship among the baseline blood count, reduction of subsequent blood counts, or previously irradiated active bone marrow volume. The median time of survival was 23 weeks (range 2-66 weeks). At 12 weeks, 29% of patients had moderate to dramatic improvement of pain, 32% had some relief of pain, and 50% had no improvement in pain. Thirty-two percent of the treated patients required additional palliative external beam radiation to their bony lesions within the study period. Our results show that Metastron for palliation for bony
metastases
should be used with caution because of moderate to severe bone marrow toxicity, especially in platelets, associated with its use. Careful evaluation of patients given Metastron is needed to assess accurately its full benefit.
...
PMID:Strontium-89 chloride (Metastron) for palliative treatment of bony metastases. The University of Minnesota experience. 861 Jun 30
We report two cases of children with metastatic bone disease who received
strontium
-89 intravenously. An 11-year-old boy with stage IV neuroblastoma received 50 microCi/kg of
strontium
-89. He had a good response, and his pain abated to the point that he could be taken off IV Dilaudid and was discharged from the hospital. A 7-year-old girl with the diagnosis of squamous cell carcinoma of the lung disclosed minimal increased uptake on a bone scan. Following the
strontium
-89 therapy, she did not have any significant improvement in pain, probably due to the minimal osteoblastic activity evidenced by the minimal abnormalities on the bone scan. Until this report there has been no reported case of using
strontium
-89 in the treatment of children with
metastatic disease
.
...
PMID:Pain palliation with strontium-89 in children with metastatic disease. 943 36
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