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Query: UMLS:C0027651 (
tumor
)
685,946
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Various dose-time treatment plans have been used to obtain long duration pain relief in patients with metastatic bone disease. Very little has appeared in the literature evaluating the relationship of dose and fractionation to initial, delayed and permanent
bone pain
relief. At the Swedish Hospital
Tumor
Institute, 152 treatment fields in 110 patients were evaluated, with a clinical follow-up in many of over five years. Those treated at lower total doses with less fractionation achieved the same quality and duration of pain relief as higher doses. Treatment plans also were compared using the Ellis method of nominal standard dose.
...
PMID:Effective bone palliation as related to various treatment regimens. 5 20
Since prolactin has several modes of action on prostatic growth and physiology, the effect of the antiprolactin bromocriptine on plasma kinetics and intraprostatic metabolism of testosterone was studied in patients with untreated prostatic cancer; a therapy protocol was deduced which was controlled in 27 patients with advanced inoperable prostatic adenocarcinoma. Bromocriptine resulted in a significant suppression of prolactin and testosterone as well and favored testosterone elimination from the plasma pool. Prostatic androgen uptake was enhanced and the intraprostatic metabolism altered in relation to
tumor
grade. Adjunctive administration of bromocriptine to 27 patients, mostly in the state of hormone resistance, resulted in an overall objective regression of 22.2% and in stable disease in 55.6% of the patients. In half of the individuals a prompt relief of
bone pain
from osseous metastases was observed as well as improvement of micturition and decline of phosphatase activity. This preliminary data justify further investigations under controlled and randomized conditions.
...
PMID:[Bromocriptine for palliation of advanced prostatic carcinoma. Experimental and clinical profile of a drug (author's' transl)]. 8 47
Sixty-eight patients with plasmacytic
neoplasia
and osteosclerotic lesions were analyzed. Men predominated in this series. Mean age was 55.3 years and 26 patients were younger than 51 years at diagnosis. Early onset of disease was statistically different from multiple myeloma in general. Thirty patients had peripheral polyneuropathy and often neurological manifestations preceded other symptoms.
Skeletal pain
was less common, whereas hepatomegaly, splenomegaly, and lymphadenopathy were more common than in myeloma in general. Incidence of azotemia, hypercalcemia, high ESR, and anemia was lower than in myeloma. In one fourth of the patients, the number of skeletal lesions did not exceed three. Mean survival was less than 20 months from first symptom and 12 months from diagnosis. Mortality was related sometimes to polyneuropathy. Thus, in several aspects, plasmacytic
neoplasia
with osteosclerotic lesions is different from the classical multiple myeloma.
...
PMID:Plasma cell neoplasia with osteosclerotic lesions. A study of five cases and a review of the literature. 22 10
To assess endocrinologic completeness of transethmoidal trans-sphenoidal hypophysectomy and the relation between postoperative pituitary hormone levels and relief of
bone pain
, we tested pituitary reserve by measuring base-line values of follicle-stimulating hormone and luteinizing hormone, thyrotropin-relasing-factor-stimulated thyrotropin and prolactin, and levodopa-stimulated growth hormone after hypophysectomy in 15 menopausal women with metastatic breast cancer. In all 15
bone pain
diminished or disappeared within 24 hours of operation. Pituitary-function testing identified only one patient as having had an endocrinologically complete hypophysectomy. Base-line gonadotropin levels and thyrotropin-releasing-factor-stimulated prolactin were the most reliable measures of residual pituitary function. We conclude that transethmoidal trans-sphenoidal hypophysectomy may not totally ablate pituitary endocrine function; effective relief of
bone pain
in patients with metastic breast cancer can follow this procedure despite residual pituitary function and the lack of objective
tumor
remission.
...
PMID:Endocrinologically incomplete transethmoidal trans-sphenoidal hypophysectomy with relief of bone pain in breast cancer. 65 92
The clinical findings of bone marrow necrosis in 13 patients undergoing bone marrow examination to investigate a peripheral blood cytopenia or leukoerythroblastic blood smear were reviewed and compared to those in the literature. Excluding sickle cell disease, all cases of bone marrow necrosis diagnosed during life were associated with a neoplastic process involving the marrow. A myeloproliferative disorder was found in five patients, metastatic carcinoma in five patients, a lymphoma in two patients, and both a myeloproliferative disorder and metastatic carcinoma in one patient. Marrow necrosis was found to involve the marrow at multiple sites in a piecemeal fashion with areas of necrotic marrow and structurally intact marrow adjacent to each other. Severe
bone pain
without roentgenographic abnormality was the major symptom in 85% of the patients. Marrow and fat emboli, hypercalcemia and peripheral blood cytopenias were identified as direct complications of marrow necrosis. The prognosis of patients with marrow necrosis secondary to
neoplastic disease
was found to be extremely poor with a median survival of less than one month. However, one patient responded to antineoplastic chemotherapy and showed healing of the bone marrow.
...
PMID:Bone marrow necrosis. 106 33
There is little information in the literature concerning the role of bone scanning in benign bone neoplasms except for sporadic reports. Since the advent of 99mTc-polyphosphate, bone imaging has proven feasible and useful in locating the cause of
bone pain
, such as in osteoid osteomas, which are not always radiologically apparent, and in evaluating whether or not a radiologic lesion is indeed benign and solitary. Blood-pool images are particularly important in
neoplastic disease
, since the absence of hyperemia in the immediate postinjection period favors the diagnosis of a benign
neoplasm
, as does low-grade uptake on the delayed study. The scan, including pinhole magnification images, is especially valuable in diagnosing lesions in the spine and pelvis, which are poorly seen radiologically. We have studied various types of benign bone tumors, including simple and aneurysmal bone cysts, fibrous cortical defects, and nonossifying fibromas, all of which had minimal or no increased uptake of the radiopharmaceutical, unless traumatized. Although osteochondromas and enchondromas showed varied accumulation of activity, the scan was useful in differentiating these from sarcomatous lesions. All osteoid osteomas demonstrated marked activity, and could be accurately located preoperatively, as could the extent of fibrous dysplasia. The bone scan in the reticuloses also showed abnormal accumulation of activity, and aided in arriving at the prognosis and treatment of histiocytic bone lesions.
...
PMID:Benign bone tumors. 108 70
The recent findings regarding the possible relation of prolactin to human breast cancer are reviewed. Prolactin is a single-chain polypeptide hormone secreted by the anterior pituitary; it appears important to the development and growth of mammary tumors in mice and rats. Certain drugs (L-dopa, the ergot derivatives) inhibit the release of prolactin from the anterior pituitary and lower its serum concentration. Chlorpromazine and other phenothiazines block the synthesis, release, or action of prolactin-inhibiting factors leading to increased prolactin secretion. The midcycle serum estrogen elevation does not increase serum prolactin but often high doses of estrogen will. Mammary tumors in mice and rats appear different from those in human, being of alveolar origin while human tumors are thought to be ductal. Also, rodent cancers do not usually metastasize, even when large. About 40% of human breast cancers respond to endocrine therapy while in Sprague-Dawley rats induced mammary tumors are 80% hormone responsive. In mice hyperplastic nodules but not mammary cancers respond to horomone deprivation. Prolactin is a key hormone in the stimulation of hyperplastic nodules in mice and mammary tumors in rats. The effects of progesterone on these growths is not clear. Serum prolactin levels normally vary throughout the day. Levels are not different in cancer patients but certain families with high cancer rates have been shown to have higher than normal serum levels. Although prolactin receptors have been identified in mouse and rat mammary tissue and tumors and prolactin responsiveness of the tumors correlated with the number of such receptors, these receptors have not been identified in human breast cancer cells. Patients have responded to L-dopa with relief of
bone pain
and a 50% decrease in serum prolactin. Suppressing atypical precancerous lesions by depriving them of their hormonal support offers the best chance for preventing eventual development of breast cancer. In vitro determination of the presence of prolactin receptors in human breast
tumor
tissue may allow accurate prediction of response to endocrine ablation. Variations in prolactin receptors may account for response differences of breast tumors to different doses of estrogen. Near-zero prolactin levels following hypophysectomy in some patients have been correlated with clinical remissions. Combinations of drugs to reduce serum prolactin levels or antagonize the hormones's effect on the breast may be needed to obtain results.
...
PMID:Prolactin and breast carcinoma. 108 86
A study was conducted to evaluate the effect of external radiation therapy on hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and its metastatic lesions. A total of 33 patients with cytopathologically proven HCC were subjected to radiation therapy over a 4-year period, and treatment was discontinued in 8 cases due to jaundice, severe discomfort, or early mortality. Thus, 25 patients with 28 lesions underwent irradiation with a total dose ranging between 3000 and 5600. Of these, seven were irradiated for liver tumors, and the results showed that two lesions decreased in size, the symptoms improved in 1 case, and another patient maintained stable disease for 4 months. Among the 21 metastatic lesions treated, only 2 patients failed respond to the treatment. Nine subjects were irradiated for bone metastases, and the
bone pain
subsided in all but one case. The survival for bone metastasis was as long as 23 months when the primary tumor was treated effectively. Three of the four cases of irradiated skin nodules disappeared and had not recurred after 5 months, 1 year, and 4 years, respectively.
Tumor
shrinkage or symptoms of relief were noted for three abdominal lymph nodes, one neck lymph node, one pleural
tumor
, and one lung
tumor
. Clinical improvement associated with a stable lesion was observed in two patients with brain metastasis. Follow-up revealed regrowth of the
tumor
or recurrence of symptoms in most of the patients. However, none of the patients died as a direct result of a metastatic lesion. Although external radiation therapy is palliative in intent, it appears to be useful in the treatment of HCC and its metastatic lesions.
...
PMID:Radiotherapy in the treatment of hepatocellular carcinoma and its metastases. 133 95
Local radiotherapy plays an important role in the management of bone metastases. Because it is given with palliative intent to patients with limited, if variable, life expectancy, radiotherapy schedules need to be identified which give maximum patient benefit (short and long term) with minimum associated morbidity and minimum disruption of the patients' remaining life. For localized
bone pain
, a single fraction of radiotherapy, repeated if necessary, appears to fulfill these criteria in patients with a short life expectancy. There are, however, unanswered questions regarding fraction size and the adequacy of one fraction for long-term control and for all pathological
tumor
types. Only randomized trials can answer these questions. Uncertainties also exist regarding the precise indications for radiotherapy to prevent and treat pathological fractures and the optimal dose schedule which will provide adequate local
tumor
control without inhibiting bone healing or interfering with bone integrity. Because of the many variables, guidelines on selection of cases of spinal cord compression for decompression by surgery or radiotherapy are likely to be of more value than randomized prospective studies in this condition. Experimental work and clinical experience to date suggest an advantage for a few large fractions of radiotherapy, at least initially, to achieve a rapid response, but this too needs confirmation. Treatment decisions based on past teaching and local custom rather than on valid clinical trial data have led to considerable differences in clinical practice among radiotherapists. Bone metastases are common and warrant a great deal more experimental and clinical study than they have received to date.
...
PMID:A review of local radiotherapy in the treatment of bone metastases and cord compression. 137 63
RU-486 or mifepristone is best known as an antiprogestin and an abortifacient, but it has broad medical applicability. The drug is also a potent blocker of corticosteroid receptors, and it has shown promise in the treatment of breast cancer, inoperable meningioma, and cushing's disease. Cushing's is a model for the symptomatology of aging which may involve enhanced response to corticosteroid. RU-486 has reversed the osteoporosis, thinning of skin, muscle atrophy, obesity, adult onset diabetes, depression, hypertension, and immunosuppression associated with this disease. RU-486 may be of value in aiding cervical dilation, lactation, and the treatment of endometriosis. In addition, breast, bowel, kidney tumors, hepatomas, endometrial cancer, and fibrosarcomas can show corticosteroid dependency, suggesting that RU-486 may have clinical value against inoperable tumors. In a preliminary 1987 phase I study, in estrogen-positive, chemotherapy-refractory breast cancer patients in Montpelier, France, Ru-486 produced objective
tumor
regression (6 of 22) that was prolonged (3 months) in 4 patients. Clinical relief of
bone pain
was observed in 7 of 23 patients with a decline in carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA)
tumor
makers in 8 patients. Growing in vitro data also show that RU-486 can directly inhibit breast cancer cell proliferation. RU-486 has application for HIV infection, based on data that there is a serum factor in AIDS patients that enhances corticosteroid lympholysis. IN addition, the immune restorative action of RU-486 suggests that it could counteract the immunosuppression seen in aging, in cancer, or in viral or stress-related disease, which has recently focused clinical attention on its potential in the treatment of senile dementia and depression. Scientific conferences and workshops are needed to alert scientists, physicians, and the public to the potential medical benefits of this drug.
...
PMID:RU 486: how abortion politics have impacted on a potentially useful drug of broad medical application. 150 96
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