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)

Malignant tumors are often complicated by hypercalcemia (malignancy associated hypercalcemia: MAHC) which causes various clinical symptoms. Hypercalcemia may occasionally lead to death. Unfortunately, many physicians caring for patients with malignant diseases are not aware of this danger. Hypercalcemia is seen in about 15% of patients with solid tumors. This condition is more frequent in some malignant proliferative hematological diseases. In patients with multiple myeloma, the incidence of hypercalcemia is about 20%. The rate of complication by hypercalcemia is as high as 80% in patients with adult T cell leukemia. The symptoms of hypercalcemia include anorexia, easy fatigability, nausea, and vomiting. These symptoms are often mistaken for adverse effects of anticancer drugs or as signs of aggravation of malignant disease. If abnormal thirst and polydipsia are noted in patients with malignant disease, a diagnosis of MAHC should always be considered because these two symptoms are highly characteristic of hypercalcemia. Caution should be exercised when CNS symptoms such as unstable emotions or somnolence are noted. These symptoms in patients with MAHC may lead to death, if untreated. The corrected serum calcium level should always be monitored in patients with malignant disease, so that a possible diagnosis of MAHC may not be overlooked when these symptoms appear. MAHC is caused by the bone resorption stimulating factor (BRSF), which is produced and secreted by the tumor cells. BRSF may act systemically to cause increased bone resorption, resulting in hypercalcemia. MAHC occurring in this manner is called the 'humoral hypercalcemia of malignancy (HHM)'. BRSF produced by multiple myeloma or bone metastasis enhances bone resorption through local osteolysis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Hypercalcemia in malignancy]. 796 19

Sixteen patients with intracerebral tumors received intraarterial cisplatin, teniposide, and BCNU combined with intravenous cisplatin, teniposide, and cytosine arabinoside. Oral glycerol and intravenous mannitol were given along with the intravenous chemotherapy in an attempt to increase drug delivery to tumor by augmenting tumor blood flow. Thirteen additional patients were treated with the same regimen, but received all the chemotherapy intravenously. Of the 16 patients receiving intraarterial chemotherapy (median survival, 14 weeks), none responded, 5 (31%) were stable for > 8 weeks, 8 (50%) failed, and 3 (19%) were unevaluable due to early death. Of the 13 patients receiving all their treatment intravenously (median survival, 13 weeks), 3 (23%) responded, 1 (8%) was stable, 7 (54%) failed, and 2 (15%) were unevaluable due to early death. In the patients receiving intraarterial chemotherapy, toxicity included ipsilateral retinal toxicity (2 patients), ocular pain or headache (10), periorbital swelling and flushing (6), increased brain edema with focal neurological deficits and drowsiness (5), and catheter-related carotid artery thrombosis followed by fatal herniation (1). Myelosuppression was worse in patients who received all their treatment intravenously than in those receiving intraarterial chemotherapy (p < 0.05). Neutropenic sepsis developed in 4 patients on the intraarterial arm (1 fatal) and in 5 patients on the intravenous arm (2 fatal). Other toxic effects were similar whether or not patients received intraarterial treatment or only intravenous treatment. Overall, toxicity of this regimen was excessive, and response rates were lower than would have been expected with single agent therapy.
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PMID:Feasibility study of intraarterial vs intravenous cisplatin, BCNU, and teniposide combined with systemic cisplatin, teniposide, cytosine arabinoside, glycerol and mannitol in the treatment of primary and metastatic brain tumors. 812 May 74

Carcinoid tumor is regarded as a tumor with low grade malignancy, mostly originating from the gastrointestinal tract with little danger of metastasis. The authors encountered a very rare case of bronchial carcinoid tumor that had multiple metastasis to the intracranial space. The characteristics of radiological and hormonal examinations of this tumor are reported and discussed. The patient was a 73-year-old woman who gradually developed unsteadiness in walking and somnolence in daytime one month prior to admission. Those symptoms were aggravated and she began to vomit. On admission, neurological examination showed slight ataxia of left upper and lower extremities and dominant truncal ataxia. Chemical and hormonal examinations of blood and urine showed, gastrin was 230 pg/ml (37-172), ACTH was 67 pg/ml (< 60), serotonin was 565 ng/ml (53-200), and urinary 5-HIAA was 9.9 mg/day (0.8-4.8). Tumor markers (CEA, AFP, HGG, NSE) were all negative. Radiological examinations (chest X-P, CT scan) of her lung demonstrated a 3 x 3 cm tumor mass adjacent to the hilum of the left lower lobe. CT-scan of the head demonstrated cystic tumor in the vermis of the cerebellum (3 x 3 cm), the right posterior parietal lobe and the right temporal lobe. The wall of each tumor was enhanced by contrast medium. T1 weighted MRI demonstrated the walls of cystic tumors as iso intensity and the contents as low and high intensity with niveau formation. Little edema was recognized around the tumors. The wall of each cystic tumor was enhanced by Gd-DTPA.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Bronchial carcinoid tumor with multiple brain metastasis]. 816 99

A 60-year-old obese woman was admitted for evaluation of excessive daytime sleepiness, loud snoring, cyanosis, systemic edema, hypertension and diabetes mellitus. Laboratory examination showed severe hypoxemia, hypercapnea, metabolic alkalosis, hypokalemia and hyperaldosteronism. CT scan showed a left adrenal tumor. A diagnosis of obstructive sleep apnea syndrome associated with primary aldosteronism was established. Metabolic alkalosis, hypokalemia and sodium retention due to hyperaldosteronism were thought to be factors exacerbating her sleep apnea.
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PMID:[A case report of obstructive sleep apnea syndrome associated with primary aldosteronism]. 818 53

Retelliptine dihydrochloride (SR 95325 B, NSC D-626717-W) is an ellipticine derivative having a very high level of antitumor activity in resistant murine solid tumor models. We studied in a Phase I trial escalating doses of retelliptine using a single 2-hour IV infusion schedule. Data from other Phase I studies allowed a starting dose of 80 mg/m2 and a rapid dose escalation. Included were 15 patients (M/F = 13/2) with a median age of 55 (range: 17-72). There were 22 courses delivered at the following dose levels: 80, 180, 700, 900, 1,200, and 1,500 mg/m2. Primary tumor types were kidney (6 patients), colon (3 patients), pancreas (2 patients), and others (4 patients). Mild dose-related visual troubles (blurring, accommodation troubles, oculomotor paresis) occurred in 9/11 patients starting from 700 mg/m2. Asymptomatic EKG anomalies, including significant prolongation of PR and QRS intervals occurred at 1500 mg/m2 (in 3/3 patients) marking the maximum tolerated dose. Both visual and EKG anomalies were spontaneously reversible few minutes to few hours after the end of infusion. Other possible drug-related toxicity occurred sporadically such as somnolence, bronchospasm, dry mouth, and vomiting (2 patients each). There were no significant laboratory anomalies. Neither drug-related deaths nor objective complete or partial responses were observed. The recommended dose for Phase II trial using the 2-hour intravenous infusion schedule is 1,200 mg/m2.
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PMID:Phase I study of retelliptine dihydrochloride (SR 95325 B) using a single two-hour intravenous infusion schedule. 819 11

Antitumor activity of the butyrophenone dihydrolenperone in non-small cell lung cancer was initially suggested by in vitro screening against tumor cells derived from fresh surgical samples using the human tumor colony-forming assay. We have completed a directed phase I trial in patients with lung cancer. Thirty-two patients with lung cancer have completed 25 courses of therapy at doses of 10 to 60 mg/square meter orally on a twice daily schedule. Twenty-three men and 9 women with a median age of 55 (range 24-69) were entered. Twenty-four were performance status 0 or 1 and 8 were 2. The maximum tolerated dose was 50 mg/square meter orally twice daily and the dose limiting toxicity was somnolence. Of the 32 patients, 18 developed symptomatic hypotension (grade 1 or 2). There was no significant hematologic, renal, or hepatic toxicity. In vitro drug testing using the MTT [3-(4,5- dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyl-tetrazolium bromide (thiazolyl blue)] assay confirmed 50% inhibition of non-small cell and small cell lung cancer cell line growth at 70-450 micromolar concentrations. Plasma dihydrolenperone levels were at least 75-fold less than levels at which in vitro activity was observed. We conclude: 1) the maximum tolerated dose in our study is 50 mg/square meter orally twice daily, 2) the dose-limiting side effect of dihydrolenperone is somnolence, and 3) the concentrations of dihydrolenperone observed in plasma are significantly lower than those associated with in vitro activity.
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PMID:Phase I trial of dihydrolenperone in lung cancer patients: a novel compound with in vitro activity against lung cancer. 834 33

A 37-year-old man presented with a four-week history of progressive left-sided weakness, frontal headache, confusion, and drowsiness. A computed tomography evaluation of the head revealed a 7-cm pneumatocele in the right frontoparietal region with shift of the falx to the left. The patient was taken to surgery, where the pneumatocele was decompressed and an epidermoid tumor that originated in the left ethmoid sinus was removed. After the operation, the presenting symptoms resolved promptly.
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PMID:Tension pneumocephalus related to an epidermoid tumor of ethmoid sinus origin. 842 44

A 39-year-old female presented with acute intraventricular hemorrhage manifesting as sudden onset of headache associated with gradually progressing somnolence and left oculomotor nerve paresis. Intraventricular hemorrhage occurred from a meningioma of the lateral ventricle. Computed tomography and magnetic resonance (MR) imaging revealed intraventricular hemorrhage and a mass in the right trigone. The tumor was totally removed. Her postoperative course was uneventful except for left homonymous hemianopia. The histological diagnosis was fibroblastic meningioma. The MR imaging was highly suggestive of hemorrhage from the tumor periphery.
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PMID:Spontaneous intraventricular hemorrhage caused by lateral ventricular meningioma--case report. 883 Dec 3

Cabergoline (CAB), a new, potent, and long-lasting PRL-lowering agent, was shown to be effective in tumoral hyperprolactinemia. The aim of this study was to investigate the effectiveness of CAB in patients with prolactinoma proven to be resistant to bromocriptine (BRC) and quinagolide (CV 205-502). Twenty-seven patients (19 macro- and 8 microprolactinomas) were treated with CAB at a weekly dose of 0.5-3 mg for 3-22 months. All patients were previously shown to be resistant to BRC, and 20 of them were resistant to CV 205-502 as well. Basal serum PRL levels before CAB treatment ranged from 108-3500 micrograms/L in macroprolactinomas and from 64-205 micrograms/L in microprolactinomas. Gonadal failure was present in all patients, whereas symptoms of tumor expansion, such as visual field defects and headache, were present in 10 of 27 patients. Eight macroprolactinomas had previously undergone surgery and/or radiotherapy. CAB treatment normalized serum PRL levels in 15 of 19 macroprolactinomas and in all 8 microprolactinomas. In 3 of the remaining 4 patients it caused a notable decrease in prolactinemia (89%, 80.5%, and 68.7% of the baseline). Only 1 patient was withdrawn from CAB therapy after 3 months at the weekly dose of 2 mg due to the absence of any significant clinical, hormonal, or radiological improvement. Gonadal function was restored in 18 of 27 patients, galactorrhea disappeared in 5 of 6 women, and headache improved in 7 of 8 patients. A significant tumor shrinkage was detected by computed tomography and/or magnetic resonance imaging in 9 macroprolactinomas and 4 microprolactinomas. CAB was well tolerated by all patients, except 6 who referred slight and short-lasting nausea, postural hypotension, abdominal pain, dizziness, and sleepiness at the beginning of treatment. In particular, CAB was well tolerated by 19 patients previously shown to be poorly tolerant to BRC and CV 205-502. In conclusion, CAB may represent, at the moment, the only successful therapy for prolactinoma-bearing patients resistant to BRC and CV 205-502, as it normalized PRL levels in 22 of 27 patients, reduced tumor size in 13 of 27 patients, and improved clinical symptoms in 25 of 27 patients in the present study.
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PMID:Prolactinomas resistant to standard dopamine agonists respond to chronic cabergoline treatment. 925 67

We studied the toxicity and efficacy of adding in sequence 4 resistance modulators to combination chemotherapy and radiotherapy in the treatment of glioblastoma multiforme and poor prognosis anaplastic astrocytomas. Patients received cisplatin plus mitomycin-C concurrently with and following 60 Gy of radiotherapy administered over 6 weeks. Resistance modulators were added in sequence to chemotherapy in each cohort of 6 patients as follows: metronidazole + pentoxifylline (cohort 1); + dipyridamole (cohort 2), + beta carotene (cohort 3). Central nervous system toxicity (which ranged from drowsiness to seizures and loss of consciousness) was frequent. The incidence of gastrointestinal symptoms was substantial, but was usually mild to moderate in severity. Three of 11 patients evaluable for response achieved a partial remission with treatment. The median survival duration for all patients was 26 weeks from initial diagnosis. The study was terminated prematurely because of significant toxicity (in this study as well as in parallel concurrent studies of similar design in other tumor types) and apparent lack of benefit.
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PMID:Cranial radiation and concomitant cisplatin and mitomycin-C plus resistance modulators for malignant gliomas. 912 May 46


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