Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0027651 (tumor)
685,946 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

15 patients with metastatic cancer were treated with Lonidamine, a substituted indazole carboxylic acid active against the Lewis lung and Sarcoma 180 tumors. Single doses of 600 mg (350-400 mg/m2) mostly induced somnolence and gastro-intestinal side effects. Toxicity occurring during chronic administration of Lonidamine at doses ranging between 45 and 275 mg/m2 twice daily, mainly consisted of somnolence, myalgias, hyperesthesia and mild hair loss. Myalgias and hyperesthesias were markedly relieved with prednisone 5 mg twice daily. No laboratory abnormalities were seen. In 1 patient with breast cancer resistant to standard chemotherapeutic agents, a 30% reduction of measurable tumor masses was seen. In view of the lack of overlapping toxicity between Lonidamine and other chemotherapeutic drugs, and of its potential activity, it is suggested that phase II studies of Lonidamine be initiated at a dose of 135 mg/m2 twice daily.
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PMID:Phase I toxicologic study of Lonidamine in cancer patients. 671 96

Pentamethylmelamine (PMM), a demethylated soluble analog of hexamethylmelamine, was given to 35 patients with solid tumors in a phase I clinical trial. Thirty patients were given single doses ranging from 80 to 2000 mg/m2 in a 2-hour infusion every 3 weeks. Once a maximum tolerated dose was defined for this schedule, an additional five new patients plus four patients who had already received PMM were treated on a multiple-dose schedule of PMM given three times a week every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday (M-W-F) for 4 weeks. Dose-limiting toxic effects for the single-dose schedule were in the central nervous system and gastrointestinal tract, manifested by nausea (60%), vomiting (49%), somnolence (37%), depression (6%), and headache (6%). Other toxic effects observed on this schedule included anorexia (34%), diarrhea (7%), and diaphoresis (21%). The toxic effects were first observed in mild form at 400 mg/m2/dose and became progressively more severe and prolonged with each dose escalation; they were considered intolerable at the 2000-mg/m2 dose level in all patients treated. The nine patients receiving the multiple-dose schedule were given PMM at a dose of 1000 mg/m2 three times a week (M-W-F). This level produced dose-limited nausea and vomiting in all patients so that no patient completed greater than 3 weeks of treatment on this schedule. One patient developed PMM-related visual hallucinations. PMM produced no hematologic, hepatic, renal, allergic, or acute side effects; no alopecia was observed. Minor tumor regressions of 1 month's duration were seen in two patients, one with pleural mesothelioma and one with a parotid gland tumor. The recommended doses for solid tumor phase II studies are 1500 mg/m2 given as a 2-hour infusion every 3 weeks and 1000 mg/m2 given three times a week (M-W-F), repeated at 3-week intervals.
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PMID:Phase I trial of pentamethylmelamine in patients with previously treated malignancies. 678 47

Clinical deterioration during or after radiation of the central nervous system may be due to progression of, or a complication induced in, the lesion being treated. Deterioration may also be due to an adverse effect of the radiation on nervous tissue or vessels within the beam, to alteration in the blood-brain barrier, thus influencing the effects of drug therapy, or to a superimposed catastrophe unrelated to the treatment. Transient effects, which occur within the first 3 months of radiotherapy, include increase in symptoms suggesting enlargement of the tumor and the somnolence syndrome that occurs in children. Classical permanent radiation effects include necrosis, atrophy, calcification, necrotizing leukoencephalopathy, mineralizing microangiopathy, aneurysm formation, tumor induction, and cerebrospinal fluid fistulae. Rarely, demyelination occurs with higher doses than are currently used. The permanent effects tend to occur later than the transient ones; some are progressive and many have serious consequences. The appearances of mineralizing microangiopathy are specific; but the nature of the other complications is only evident in the clinical context, although there may be difficulty distinguishing between radiation necrosis and further growth of an intracerebral tumor. Selected cases illustrate the computed tomographic features of these entities.
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PMID:CT of the adverse effects of therapeutic radiation of the central nervous system. 679 84

A group of 213 unselected postmenopausal women with advanced breast cancer were treated with aminoglutethimide, 250 mg 4 times a day, and hydrocortisone, 20 mg 2 times a day. Follow-up is 10 months to 4 years from the start of treatment. In 190 assessable patients, there were 6 complete responses (CR), 47 partial responses (PR), 25 stable disease (SD), and 3 mixed responses. Overall objective response rate was 28% and with SD was 41%. Median duration of objective response was 14 months. Objective response by site was: soft tissue, 31%; nodes, 27%; bone 23: liver, 22%; and lung, 16%. A further 32% of patients with bone deposits had SD, and 19 of 60 patients with progressive disease had pain relief. Years after menopause, age and tumor-free interval did not affect response rates. Thirty-eight % of patients responding to previous endocrine therapy responded to aminoglutethimide compared with 19% of patients who had progressed on previous endocrine therapy. A group of 213 patients were assessable for toxicity. Main side effects were drowsiness (33%), rash (23%), and nausea (15%). Eleven patients stopped treatment because of toxicity. Median survival from start of treatment was 28 months for PR-CR and for SD and 10 months for progressive disease (p less than 0.001). Median survival from first metastasis was 43 months for PR-CR, 40 months for SD (not significantly different), and 22 months for progressive disease (p less than 0.001). Aminoglutethimide is an effective endocrine therapy in advanced postmenopausal breast cancer, particularly for bone deposits. Disease stabilization is associated with symptomatic and survival benefit similar to CR-PR.
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PMID:Aminoglutethimide in the treatment of advanced postmenopausal breast cancer. 708 7

Though most of ectopic pinealoma occurs in the midline of cerebral base, only ten cases of frontal subcortical germinomas were reported in Japan as far as we know in literature. The patient, 20 year-old male, was admitted to our hospital because of blurred vision of the right eye and somnolence. Neurological examination on admission revealed bilateral choked discs and impaired visual acuity of both eyes with visual field defect of the right eye. A large deep bifrontal tumor was noted by cerebral angiography and pneumoventriculography done at the time of ventricular drainage. After subtotal removal of left frontal tumor and bifrontal V-P shunt, he came alert. No abnormality of posterior part of third ventricle was noted on the post-operative pneumonencephalogram. As the microscopic examination revealed that the tumor was germinoma of two-cell pattern, Co60 with a total dose of 5,900 rads was irradiated to the rest of the tumor. Brain scan with Tc99m 6 months after the surgery showed the disappearance of the tumor and CT scan 3 years later confirmed no recurrence of the tumor. Fine structure of the tumor was also presented and discussed.
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PMID:[A case of large germinoma in bilateral frontal region (author's transl)]. 739 99

High-dose thymidine (dThd) was given to 12 patients with advanced hematological and solid tumors. The dose schedule used was 75 g/sq m/day, given i.v. continuously for 5 days or more. Myelosuppression, especially leukopenia, was the dose-limiting toxicity. Nonhematological toxicities affected the gastrointestinal tract (nausea, vomiting, anorexia, diarrhea, and indigestion) and the central nervous system (somnolence, headache, visual illusions, and memory impairment). Patients who had received cumulative doses of dThd developed alopecia. Thymine crystals were noted in the urine after refrigeration. Tumor regression (less than partial remission) occurred in one patient with melanoma. Three of four patients with acute leukemia had a fall in peripheral white blood cell counts and blasts but no marrow improvement. Four patients with adenocarcinoma (three colon, one unknown primary) had stable disease. Pharmacokinetic studies revealed that, at a dThd dose of 75 g/sq m/day, millimolar concentrations of dThd and thymine can be achieved in the plasma. The half-life of dThd was approximately 100 min. One-third of the plasma concentrations was measurable in the cerebrospinal fluid. dThd was mainly excreted by the kidneys.
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PMID:Clinical phase I-II and pharmacokinetic study of high-dose thymidine given by continuous intravenous infusion. 747 Oct 98

An autopsy case of primary intracranial T-cell-rich B-cell lymphoma in a 69-year-old female is presented. The patient was admitted with a diagnosis of a brain tumor in July 1993 and a month long history of mental deterioration, motor weakness of the right arm and leg, and a tendency toward somnolence. Neurological examination revealed disturbance of consciousness, right hemiparesis, and papilloedema. However, her general physical examination was unremarkable. A CT scan and MR imaging revealed an irregular enhanced mass lesion at the paraventricular deep white matter in the bilateral parieto-occipital lobe. The patient was treated with surgical biopsy of the tumor followed by combined radiotherapy (a total of 50 Gy) and chemotherapy. Following repetitive episodes of remission and exacerbation, the patient expired about seven months after the onset of symptoms. Histopathological diagnosis of the tumor was malignant lymphoma (diffuse medium-sized cell type). In the immunohistochemical study, most of the lymphoma cells had T-cell markers, such as UCHL1. Some of the lymphoma cells were L26-positive. Neither glial fibrillary acidic protein nor neuron specific enolase were reactive with the lymphoma cells. At post-mortem examination, the specimens disclosed diffuse infiltration of medium-sized lymphoma cells. By contrast, most of the lymphoma cells were shown to be positive by the analysis of L26. None of the lymphoma cells exhibited the presence of UCHL1. These immunohistochemical evaluations conform to the criteria of T-cell-rich B-cell lymphoma.
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PMID:[Primary malignant T-cell-rich B-cell lymphoma of the central nervous system: a case report]. 747 7

Pain treatment for 17 pediatric cancer patients in our institution was evaluated and disirable cancer pain management for children was discussed. Most of the patients (aged 1-17 years) suffering severe pain for about one month were in the advanced stage of the malignant diseases (e.g. leukemia). The pain etiology was mostly tumor-associated while therapy-related pain accounted for 23.5%. These pains were treated with NSAIDs or pentazocine before the consultation with inadequate relief. Oral morphine sulfate or continuous intravenous morphine chloride was administered to 16 patients with successful pain relief and side effects such as nausea (52.9%) and drowsiness (41.2%). It took 5.5 days on average until adequate pain control methods were determined. It is known that most NSAIDs frequently used for pediatric pain possibly cause adverse effects such as platelet dysfunction or mucous membrane injury with a suppository, which could lead to a fatal disorder in clinically ill pediatric cancer patients. Moreover sufficient doses for the pain relief are not necessarily given to the pediatric patients because of a limit to the dosage of NSAIDs. The period of pediatric cancer pain in which the patient require a methodical treatment and receive benefit from pain relief is relatively short in the advanced stage, not to mention the early stage in which chemotherapy is efficacious against cancer disease itself. Therefore, to obtain effective pain control within a short time, the authors propose the pain management for advanced pediatric cancer patients by the two-step analgesic ladder prescribing weak or strong opioid analgesics first, adapted from the three-step ladder of the WHO Cancer Pain Relief, 1986.
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PMID:[Pain management in advanced pediatric cancer patients--a proposal of the two-step analgesic ladder]. 754 19

A 43-year-old man was admitted suffering from dyspnea on exertion and edema of the neck and face. Chest X-ray film and CT scan revealed a mediastinal tumor and a right pleural effusion. A biopsy of the tumor revealed poorly differentiated carcinoma. Severe snoring at night and excessive daytime sleepiness were noticed after admission. Nocturnal oxygen desaturation was documented with a pulse oximeter, and obstructive sleep apnea syndrome was diagnosed on the basis of results of respiratory inductive plethysmography. The severity of snoring and oxygen desaturation during sleep correlated well with the progression of facial swelling. Combination chemotherapy (carboplatin 300 mg/m2 day 1, vindesine sulfate 3 mg/m2 day 1 and 8) was started but no improvement was seen. An expandable metallic stent was inserted into the stenotic vena cava, and the facial swelling, snoring, and oxygen desaturation during sleep were promptly relieved. In this case, obstructive sleep apnea was caused by edema and vascular congestion in the upper airway, and by the decrease in pharyngeal inspiratory muscle function caused by superior vena cava syndrome.
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PMID:[Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome associated with superior vena cava syndrome]. 773 76

Interleukin-1 (IL-1) plays a central role in the immune system, partly by stimulating the production of interleukin-2 (IL-2) and other cytokines by lymphocytes. In preclinical studies, recombinant interleukin-1 (rIL-1 beta) has shown antitumor activity. We conducted a phase II trial to evaluate the efficacy of rIL-1 in metastatic renal cell carcinoma (RCC). rIL-1 beta was given at a dose of 50 ng/kg i.v. daily for 5 days on a 28-day schedule. Nineteen patients were registered; 16 completed two cycles and were evaluable for response. There were no complete or partial responses to treatment. Toxicity was generally mild and typically involved grades I and II fever, rigors, hypotension, and weight gain. Severe neurologic toxicity was seen in two patients, grade IV seizures were seen in one, and grade III somnolence was seen in another. Analysis of soluble IL-2 receptor (sIL-2r) levels revealed an increase from a mean pretreatment level of 4,567 pg/ml to a mean of 6,124 pg/ml posttreatment (p < 0.001). The mean pretreatment IL-6 level was 51 pg/ml, increased to 84 pg/ml posttreatment (p < 0.05). Patients with bulky disease had higher sIL-2r levels, and patients with tumor fevers had higher IL-6 and sIL-2r levels than patients without fever did. A neutrophilic leukocytosis and a mild thrombocytosis were observed in response to rIL-1 beta administration. We conclude that rIL-1 beta in this dose and schedule is inactive in metastatic RCC.
J Immunother Emphasis Tumor Immunol 1994 Oct
PMID:Phase II trial of recombinant interleukin-1 beta in patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma. 783 20


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