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Query: UMLS:C0027651 (tumor)
685,946 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Twenty-one patients with pathologically proven Ewing sarcoma without overt metastases at diagnosis were treated with a protocol designed by the Royal Marsden/St. Bartholomew's Hospitals Children's Solid Tumour Group (CSTG). They received megavoltage radiotherapy to the involved bone and adjuvant chemotherapy with a combination of four cytotoxic drugs. Seven patients have so far relapsed, four at the original site and three in other bones. The other 14 are clinically free of disease a median of 36 months from diagnosis. Comparison with a historical control group of 19 patients treated with surgery or radiotherapy, but without initial chemotherapy, shows a significant improvement in survival for the study group (P = 0.03). Seventeen of the controls have died. The treatment regime was moderately toxic, but there were no treatment-related deaths. These results confirm that an improved survival time and hopefully cure rate can be expected from treating Ewing tumour with high doses of megavoltage radiation and combination chemotherapy. Future goals must be the better control of large primary lesions and the eradication of micrometastases in other bones. The place of surgery should be re-evaluated in the treatment of the primary tumour, and better adjuvant chemotherapy regimes are needed.
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PMID:Ewing sarcoma: treatment with high dose radiation and adjuvant chemotherapy. 11 28

Among 31 long-term survivors of Ewing's sarcoma, two patients developed second primary cancers, compared to an expected number of 0.03 (relative risk = 72; 95% confidence limit = 8-259). One patient had renal medullary neuroblastoma, which is not known to be related to Ewing's tumor or its therapy. The second patient had a bone fibrosarcoma, arising at the primary tumor site, which was thought to be radiation-induced. The risk of radiation-induced bone sarcomas was lower, although not significantly so, than in a recently reported series of Ewing's tumor. These two reports suggest that patients with Ewing's sarcoma have a tendency to develop radiogenic sarcomas following primary megavoltage radiation therapy. The lowest radiation dose consistent with local tumor eradication should be employed to minimize the risk of subsequent radiogenic cancer.
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PMID:Subsequent cancer in patients with Ewing's sarcoma. 11 4

In addition to a light-microscopical and histochemical investigation of primary and metastic lesions in 27 cases of Ewing's sarcoma, biopsy materials from the primary bone lesions of 7 patients with this neoplasm were examined histochemically, enzyme-cytochemically and electron microscopically to elucidate the histogenesis and nature of the neoplasm. Ultrastructural observation has revealed that besides intracytoplasmic and extracellular deposition of glycogen the tumor cells possess several cytological features characterized by intracytoplasmic microfilaments of varying thickness up to 80 A, occasional appearance of dense patches, fat droplets, desmosomal connections and reminiscent attachment bodies. The tumor cells are mostly round, oval or polygonal in shape, but spindle or elongated cells are intermingled and occasionally contain well-developed rough endoplasmic reticulum, resembling pericytes or fibroblasts. In the intercellular spaces amongst the tumor cells, varying amounts of variable-shaped amorphous materials are found, which are compatible with acid mucopolysaccharides and glycoproteins histochemically verified. These findings may suggest that Ewing's sarcoma is a highly malignant neoplasm originating from a transitional cell developed from pericytes to vascular smooth muscle cells in the bone marrow.
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PMID:Cytological characterization and histogenesis of Ewing's sarcoma. 13 79

Tumour tissue surgically excised from 10 patients bearing Ewing's tumour of bones was examined electron microscopically and histoenzymologically. In all cases the tumour was composed of polygonal cells with cytoplasm poor in organelles but with conspicuous aggregates of glycogen particles. There were numerous intercellular connections of desmosomal type and a distinct cell membrane bound positivity for alkaline phosphatase activity. In two cases in which there was a negative reaction for alkaline phosphatase, the lack of enzyme activity might have been related to cytotoxic treatment carried out for several months immediately before excision of the tissue used for histoenzymological studies. The problem of histogenesis of Ewing's tumour remains unresolved although some of the present findings support a haemangiogenic origin of the tumour.
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PMID:Ultrastructure of Ewing's Tumour. 14 54

Clinicopathologic study of five cases of soft tissue tumors revealed distinct differences from skeletal Ewing's sarcoma in preferential localisation and mean age. The cases examined here are similar to cases described earlier as "extraskeletal Ewing's sarcomas". They show light- and electronmicroscopical features analogous to skeletal Ewing's sarcoma. The term extraskeletal Ewing's sarcoma appears to be appropriate for this type of soft tissue tumor.
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PMID:Extraskeletal Ewing's sarcoma. 14 17

From the author's hitherto studies on the reticuloendothelial system (RES) it was concluded that the RES is not a single cell system of identical origin, morphology and function but is a group of several types of cells of different origin. From this point of view the heterogeneity of tumors of the RES was studied to reveal the following results. Tumors of the "Reticuloendothel" (Aschoff) reveal pictures of endothelioma, while tumors of histiocytes in connective tissue show findings of fibrohistiocytoma. Histiocytes and reticulum cells of lymph nodes are respectively independent cells, and reticulum cells do not partake in the in the development of histiocytosis or histiocytic sarcoma. Follicular lymphoma is a neoplastic growth of reticulum cells having desmosomes in lymph follicles, and tumor cells of the majority of reticulum cell sarcoma are similar to the cells forming the lymph node anlage in the early fetal stage (lymphoreticular cell). Ewing's sarcoma is considered to be a kind of angiopericytoma.
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PMID:Tumor growth of the reticuloendothelial system. 18 58

Cytologic and cytochemical examination of eighteen cases of round-cell sarcoma of bone allowed classification of these tumors into four cytologic groups. Additional cytochemical examinations based on the PAS and D-PAS reactions, and the demonstration of the activity of peroxidase, naphtol-ASD-Chloracetate esterase, alpha-naphthylacetate esterase, naphthol-AS-acetate esterase with and without sodium fluoride inhibition, acid and alkaline phosphatases yielded no evidence of uniform behavior among the individual groups or within any single group. The studies showed that a positive glycogen reaction cannot be used as a basic criterion for the classification of such tumors as Ewing's sarcoma and for regarding them as a uniform tumor group. It is possible that a pool of tumors is involved, including tumors of monocytic and probably of lymphocytic origin, reticulum-cell sarcoma, tumors of myelocytic and erythroplastic origin, stem-cell tumors, and endothelial-cell tumors. Histologic examination alone is not sufficient for the classification of round-cell sarcomas of bone, and it should be supplemented by cytologic and cytochemical or histochemical methods. Osteosarcomas (23 cases) and chondrosarcomas (8 cases) display cells which are characteristic for these tumors and which could be correlated with their benign counterparts, osteoblasts and chondroid cells. The histologically recognizable degree of malignancy of chondrosarcoma can be evaluated better with the cytologic than with the histologic technic. Indications of the possibilities of differential diagnosis based on the cytologic pictures of benign and malignant osteoplastic and chondroplastic tumors, giant-cell tumors and chordoma are discussed.
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PMID:Cytologic and cytochemical behavior of primary malignant bone tumors. 18 69

"Second-look" operations were performed in 32 infants and children with initially unresectable or recurrent solid tumors treated with combination chemotherapy and/or irradiation. Tumors were resectable in 26 of 32 cases (81%). These procedures often yielded information affecting staging and treatment. Disease-free survival was achieved in 18 of 32 patients (56%). Mortality was related to progressive disease in seven cases and opportunistic infections due to immunosuppression in three. Four additional patients are alive with evidence of persistent tumor. Second-look procedures were beneficial in patients with Wilms' tumor previously operated upon by a flank approach and in children with bilateral tumors. These procedures were particularly useful in children with stage III localized neuroblastoma and cases of metastatic neuroblastoma that respond to chemotherapy. Second-look operations were also useful in selected cases of rhabdomyosarcoma, teratoma, and Ewing's sarcoma. These observations suggest that combination chemotherapy has increased the use of second-look operations in a variety of less favorable (e.g. initially unresectable or recurrent) pediatric solid tumors.
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PMID:Experience with "second-look" operations in pediatric solid tumors. 20 64

This report describes a unique clinicopathologic entity characterized as a malignant small cell tumor of the thoracopulmonary region in 20 children and adolescents (average age 14.5 years). There was a female predilection (75%) for this tumor which appeared to originate in the soft tissues of the chest wall or the peripheral lung. The neoplasm tended to recur locally and did not seem to disseminate as widely as some of the other small cell tumors of childhood (rhabdomyosarcoma, Ewing's sarcoma, neuroblastoma and malignant lymphoma). However, the median survival was only 8 months. Electron microscopy of 3 cases suggested a neuroepithelial derivation, but, at the present, the histogeneis remains a subject for further investigation.
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PMID:Malignant small cell tumor of the thoracopulmonary region in childhood: a distinctive clinicopathologic entity of uncertain histogenesis. 22 26

Twenty-four patients who had osseous lesions with histological features of both Ewing's sarcoma and osteosarcoma were studied. Because of their appearance, these lesions have been labeled small-cell osteosarcomas. They appear to represent a definite histological entity and the prognosis may be worse for these lesions than for conventional osteosarcomas. It is most important not to misdiagnose this tumor as Ewing's sarcoma because it appears not to be radiosensitive. Radical surgery and modern adjuvant chemotherapy seem to offer the best chance of cure.
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PMID:Osteosarcoma with small cells simulating Ewing's tumor. 28 9


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