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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
)
103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Primary hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is a common malignancy with a dismal prognosis; new modalities of treatment as alternatives to surgery have been developed for unresectable patients. The authors obtain baseline data for the natural history of HCC so that the efficacy of new treatments may be evaluated. A retrospective study of 157 untreated patients with tissue-proven or serodiagnosed HCC was conducted. Clinical characteristics including laboratory investigation, treatment received, survival from the time of diagnosis, and prognostic factors were evaluated. There were 129 men and 28 women (ratio, 4.6:1). Median age was 50.9 years (range, 14.1-85.3 years). The most common symptoms and signs were weight loss (68.2%), abdominal fullness (62.5%), abdominal pain (51.6%), hepatomegaly (73.7%), ascites (45.2%), and jaundice (40.6%). Eighteen percent had extrahepatic
metastases
of which the lungs were the most common site. Seventy percent were hepatitis B virus related. Overall median survival was 8.7 weeks after the time of diagnosis. Survivals by stages were: TNM II, 16.6 weeks; TNM III, 7.3 weeks; TNM
IVA
, 9.7 weeks; TNM IVB, 7.6 weeks; Okuda II, 10.7 weeks; and Okuda III, 7.3 weeks. Multivariate analysis revealed serum total bilirubin and albumin as independent prognostic factors of survival. Common causes of death were upper gastrointestinal hemorrhage (34.1%), cancer-related causes (cachexia, HCC rupture,
metastatic disease
, 31.8%), and hepatic failure (25.0%). Patients with HCC were diagnosed at late stages of their disease and the advanced nature of the tumor precluded effective therapy. Earlier tumor detection at a time when patients are better candidates for treatment may be aided by an active surveillance program of high risk groups.
...
PMID:Natural history of untreated primary hepatocellular carcinoma: a retrospective study of 157 patients. 970 39
The second International Society of Paediatric Oncology (SIOP) study for rhabdomyosarcoma (MMT84) had several goals. The two principal aims were: (1) to improve the survival of children with rhabdomyosarcoma; and (2) to reduce the late effects from therapy by restricting the indications for surgery and/or radiotherapy after good response to initial chemotherapy. A further aim was to investigate the role of high-dose chemotherapy in young patients with parameningeal primary tumours. 186 previously untreated eligible patients entered the study. Patients with completely resected primary tumour received three courses of
IVA
(ifosfamide, vincristine and actinomycin D). Patients with incompletely resected tumour received six to 10 courses of
IVA
according to stage. Patients achieving complete remission with chemotherapy alone did not usually receive radiotherapy or undergo extensive surgery, but patients remaining in partial remission received local therapy with surgery and/or radiotherapy. Only patients over 5 years of age with parameningeal disease and patients over 12 years with tumours at any site were given systematic irradiation. Complete remission was achieved in 91% (170/186) of all patients. With a median follow-up of 8 years, the 5-year overall survival was 68% (+/- 3% standard error of the mean (SEM) and the 5-year event-free survival 53% (+/- 4% SEM). These results show an improvement over previous SIOP study (RMS75) in which survival was 52% and event-free survival was 47%. Among the 54 patients who exhibited isolated local relapse, 35% (19/54) survived in further remission longer than 2 years after retreatment, including local therapy (surgery +/- radiotherapy). Analysis of the overall burden of therapy received by all surviving children (including primary treatment and treatment for relapse if required) showed that 24% (28/116) were treated by limited surgery followed by three courses of
IVA
, 29% (34/116) were treated by chemotherapy alone (after initial biopsy) and 13% (15/116) received chemotherapy plus conservative local treatment (limited surgery or radiotherapy for residual disease). Only 34% (39/116) received intensive local therapy defined as radical wide field radiotherapy or radical surgery or both. Compared with the results obtained in the previous SIOP study, treatment in MMT84 was based on response to initial chemotherapy and, despite an overall reduction of the use of local therapy, significantly improved survival for patients with non-
metastatic disease
. This trial, also for the first time, provides evidence that retreatment after local relapse can achieve long-term second remissions.
...
PMID:Treatment of non-metastatic rhabdomyosarcomas in childhood and adolescence. Results of the second study of the International Society of Paediatric Oncology: MMT84. 984 54
The purpose of this retrospective study was to determine the effect of pretreatment surgical staging on survival of patients with locally advanced cervical carcinoma. Two hundred and seventy-four women with cervical cancer stages IIB-
IVA
treated with primary radiotherapy comprised the study group. Eighty-nine patients underwent pretreatment staging laparotomy (group 1) and 172 patients underwent clinical staging (group 2). Thirteen patients underwent CT guided biopsy of paraaortic adenopathy. Paraaortic
metastases
were detected in 12.3% and intraabdominal
metastases
were found in 4.5% of patients in group 1. Extended field radiotherapy and/or systemic chemotherapy were given in these cases. The median survival of patients in group 1 was statistically longer than that of patients in group 2, 29 months vs 19 months, respectively (p=.01). Multivariate analysis controlling for both stage and age showed pretreatment staging laparotomy is a significant predictor of survival (p=.03). Our data suggest that surgical staging may be beneficial in patients with locally advanced cervical carcinoma.
...
PMID:The impact of pretreatment staging laparotomy on survival in locally advanced cervical carcinoma. 1037 20
For a long time, combined external irradiation and brachytherapy has been considered as the standard treatment in patients with advanced cervical cancers. Recently, five clinical randomized trials assessing the role of cis-platin-based chemotherapy delivered concomitantly to radiotherapy have been conducted in the United States. Another clinical randomized trial assessing the role of epirubicin was conducted by the Queen Mary Hospital in Hong Kong. With more than 2,000 enrolled patients, these studies showed converging results with an overall and disease-free survival improvement in the arms combining cis-platin and epirubicin-based chemotherapy and irradiation. These combinations led to a significant decrease in loco-regional evolution or recurrence rates, or even in pulmonary
metastases
rates. The relative risk of recurrences was decreased by 50%. The relative risk of death was decreased by 40%. The differences, however, were less significant in patients with advanced stages III or
IVA
. Hematological and digestive acute toxicity was significantly higher in the radiochemotherapy groups, but long-term complications were comparable. The results of these randomized trials have led to a modification in the standard of treatment in these poor prognosis cervix cancers. Five of the randomized trials evidenced the superiority of cis-platin-based chemotherapy, but the optimal chemotherapeutic regimens remain to be defined.
...
PMID:[Concomitant radiochemotherapy in cancer of the cervix uteri: modifications of the standards]. 1119 51
The clinicopathological characteristics relevant to prognosis after surgical treatment of intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (ICC) remain unclear. In this study, the clinicopathological features of 19 patients with mass-forming ICC, the most common form of the disease, were reviewed to analyze prognostic determinants. Two or more segmentectomies of the liver with systematic lymphadenectomy were performed in 18 patients. Resection of the extrahepatic bile duct was performed in 14 patients, and reconstruction of the portal vein was accomplished in 5 patients. Stage
IVA
or IVB tumors were seen in 13 patients, and lymph node (LN) metastasis was present in 14 patients. The estimated 5-year survival rate after surgery for mass-forming ICC was 28%, with median survival time of 18 months. In univariate analysis, five variables were determined to be significantly correlated with poor survival of patients with mass-forming ICC after surgery. These variables include mass-forming ICC with periductal infiltration, perineural invasion, portal vein invasion, presence of intrahepatic metastasis, and two or more LN
metastases
. Survival rates of 5 patients without LN metastasis and 6 patients with a single LN metastasis were 80% and 33% at 5 years, respectively, while 8 patients with two or more LN metastasis failed to survive beyond 2 years. Multivariate analysis revealed the presence of intrahepatic metastasis to be an independent prognostic factor of poor survival. Hepatectomy with resection of the extrahepatic bile duct and systematic lymphadenectomy yields a good chance for prolonged survival for patients with mass-forming ICC when the lesion is singular and LN metastasis is limited to a regional LN. Because the presence of intrahepatic metastasis was closely related to a poor prognosis in patients with mass-forming ICC, efficacious chemotherapy would be needed to control development of the lesion.
...
PMID:Clinicopathological prognostic factors and impact of surgical treatment of mass-forming intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma. 1205 20
Cervical cancer is one of the most common cancers in women. The purpose of this article is to analyze the main diagnostic and treatment strategies for all stages and recurrences of cervical cancer. The article reviews the epidemiological situation, clinical features, diagnostic procedures for detection of this tumor and for evaluation of the dissemination of the disease, staging criteria, TNM (Tumor, Nodes,
Metastases
) and FIGO (Federation Internationale de Gynecologie et d'Obstetrique) classification, as well as treatment and prognosis. Surgical treatment (radical type II or III hysterectomy and lymphonodectomy) for early stage I and IIA cervical cancer is the main treatment method. Delivery of adjuvant postoperative radiation therapy or concomitant chemoradiation depends on the prognostic factors (tumor penetration to cervical tissues, lymphovascular invasion, tumor invasion to paracervical tissues, and surgical margins). For treatment of more advanced stages of cervical cancer (IIB, IIIA, IIIB,
IVA
) concomitant chemoradiation: external beam radiotherapy with chemotherapy and brachytherapy is used. Description of the treatment guidelines for each stage of cervical cancer is given in this article. These guidelines are useful for good treatment practice.
...
PMID:[The guidelines for diagnostics and treatment of cervical cancer]. 1511 56
Chemotherapy has an important role in the treatment of advanced thymic tumors. Early stage tumors are successfully treated with surgery. Locally advanced tumors (Masaoka stage III and
IVA
) are often treated with combined modality treatment including surgery, radiation, and chemotherapy. For patients with curable thymic tumors, the ability to attain a complete resection is a critical prognostic factor. Locally advanced tumors have a relatively high risk of recurrence and decreased rates of long-term survival. A multimodality approach including induction chemotherapy and postoperative radiation therapy can improve complete resection rates and long-term outcomes. Thymic tumors are chemoresponsive with optimal responses achieved with cisplatin-based combination chemotherapy. Chemotherapy with radiation can result in long-term progression-free survival for patients with locally advanced disease who remain inoperable following induction therapy. Patients with disseminated (stage IVB) thymic tumors can also have significant disease response and palliation of symptoms when treated with chemotherapy. Octreotide and corticosteroids also have shown efficacy. For best results, it is important that thoracic surgeons, radiation oncologists, and medical oncologists work together to obtain the best local control of tumor and optimal treatment of
metastases
.
...
PMID:Role of chemotherapy in the management of advanced thymic tumors. 1610 60
We evaluated the accuracy of FDG-PET in diagnosing metastatic para-aortic and pelvic lymph nodes in patients with cervical cancer by comparing this noninvasive imaging technique with surgicopathologic results. We performed FDG-PET in 54 patients with cervical cancer at FIGO stages IB-
IVA
who were about to undergo lymphadenectomy. For region-specific comparisons, we divided the nodes into eight regions (four on each side: para-aortic, common iliac, external iliac, and internal iliac/obturator). Histological examination revealed
metastases
in 15 (28%) of the patients, with region-specific analysis identifying 37 (8.6%)
metastases
in 432 regions. The region-specific findings of FDG-PET exhibited a sensitivity of 38% and a positive predictive value (PPV) of 56%. The sensitivity increased to 52% and 65% when we restricted the pathologic criterion for
metastases
to tumour-invasion diameters of >5 and >10 mm, respectively. These results indicate that FDG-PET exhibited low sensitivity and PPV (especially for microscopic
metastases
) and hence cannot replace surgical staging, although it might still be useful for detecting
metastases
in patients with clinical conditions that make surgical staging inappropriate.
...
PMID:Role of positron emission tomography in pretreatment lymph node staging of uterine cervical cancer: a prospective surgicopathologic correlation study. 1612 28
The current FIGO staging system for locally advanced cervical cancer (Stages IIB to
IVA
) is considerably inaccurate, especially because lymph node
metastases
are ignored. Surgical staging has been used to overcome this insufficiency, allowing individualisation of therapy. However, this approach is controversial and should not be routinely undertaken considering the feasibility, adequacy and morbidity involved with the surgical procedure. Moreover, the survival benefit of surgical staging has yet to be proven and accurate non-invasive imaging alternatives, such as position emission tomography (PET) scanning, have become available. The management of patients with locally advanced cervical cancer based on PET and computed tomography (CT) imaging is proposed and discussed.
...
PMID:Patients with locally advanced cervical cancer should not undergo routine pretreatment surgical staging. 1662 49
The purpose of this study was to determine the pretreatment serum squamous cell carcinoma antigen (SCC-ag) level as a generally applicable measurement in predicting and estimating the treatment outcome of patients with locally advanced SCC of the cervix. Three hundred fifty-two patients with stage IIB-
IVA
SCC of the cervix were managed with both external irradiation and high-dose rate intracavitary brachytherapy. A significantly higher median SCC-ag was seen in association with increasing stage, tumor size, and lymph node involvement. The difference in disease-free survival (DFS) between stages IIB and III patients was not statistically significant with SCC-ag level <2 ng/mL. In multivariate analysis, median SCC-ag level (> or =6.0 ng/mL) and lymph node
metastases
had significant independent effects on absolute survival and DFS. A direct linear relationship (y=-2.932x+ 84.896) existed between the median SCC-ag of groups distributed by pretreatment prognostic factors and the 5-year DFS rate. The 5-year DFS rate as a function of SCC-ag level defined by cervix size, lymph node status, and hydronephrosis was obtained from a formula combining risk scores and the baseline survival function. From the obtained formulas, we can objectively estimate the treatment outcome in patients with locally advanced squamous cell cervical cancer.
...
PMID:The role of pretreatment squamous cell carcinoma antigen level in locally advanced squamous cell carcinoma of the uterine cervix treated by radiotherapy. 1680 91
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