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Query: UMLS:C0027819 (
neuroblastoma
)
27,800
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
During the last 5 years massive chemotherapy and autologous bone marrow transplantation have been increasingly explored in the treatment of pediatric solid tumors, mainly for
neuroblastoma
, Ewing's sarcoma, rhabdomyosarcoma, Wilms' tumor, germ cell tumors,
osteosarcoma
, and retinoblastoma. Although the disease course could be changed successfully in most instances, the long-term survival has not yet been improved much over the best available conventional treatments. Despite this, in responding relapsed patients this approach seems promising and may represent the only chance of cure. New and better induction regimens are needed.
...
PMID:Autologous bone marrow transplantation in pediatric solid tumors. 216 30
We are giving a report about the results of treatment of children (0 till 15 years old), who were from January 1, 1971 till December 31, 1985 with a
neuroblastoma
, a nephroblastoma or an
osteosarcoma
hospitalized in the Clinic of Paediatrics of the University at Rostock or in the Children's Clinic of the District Hospital at Schwerin. All together there were 65 cases with such a diagnosis. There is a summarizing life table analysis.
...
PMID:[Neuroblastoma, nephroblastoma and osteosarcoma in patients at 2 pediatric oncologic centers. A 15-year report]. 217 15
Survival rates were analysed for a population-based series of over 15,000 childhood cancers registered in Great Britain during 1971-85. There were highly significant improvements (P less than 0.001 for trend) in survival for many major diagnostic groups. Between 1971-73 and 1983-85 the actuarial 5-year survival rates increased from 37% to 70% for acute lymphoblastic leukaemia, from 4% to 26% for acute non-lymphoblastic leukaemia, from 76% to 88% for Hodgkin's disease, from 22% to 70% for non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, from 61% to 72% for astrocytoma, from 24% to 42% for medulloblastoma, from 15% to 43% for
neuroblastoma
, from 58% to 79% for Wilms' tumour, from 17% to 54% for
osteosarcoma
, from 26% to 61% for rhabdomyosarcoma, from 59% to 94% for malignant testicular germ-cell tumours and from 43% to 77% for malignant ovarian germ-cell tumours. These increases in population-based survival rates reflect the substantial advances in treatment of a wide range of childhood cancers since 1970. The two principal diagnostic groups for which there was no evidence of any trend were retinoblastoma, which already had an excellent prognosis with a 5-year survival rate of over 85%, and Ewing's sarcoma, for which the survival rate remained below 45%.
...
PMID:Trends in survival for childhood cancer in Britain diagnosed 1971-85. 217 43
Seventy-two children with recurrent, progressive, or metastatic lymphomas and other solid tumors, exclusive of primary central nervous system (CNS) tumors, were treated with aziridinylbenzoquinone (AZQ, diaziquone) at 9 mg/m2/day by 30-min intravenous infusion for 5 days every 3 weeks. Fifty-four patients were evaluable for response. Three partial responses occurred, two in patients with recurrent Hodgkin's disease and one in a patient with intraocular retinoblastoma. Sufficient numbers of patients with
osteosarcoma
,
neuroblastoma
, and Wilms' tumor were evaluable to demonstrate inactivity of this dosing regimen in these tumor types. Numbers of evaluable patients for other tumor types were insufficient to conclusively demonstrate inactivity. Myelosuppression, which was profound and prolonged, was observed. As administered in this study, AZQ has marginal activity and severe myelotoxicity in children with solid tumors.
...
PMID:A phase II study of diaziquone in children with recurrent or progressive solid tumors. Report from the Childrens Cancer Study Group. 224 Apr 75
Since May 1979, 47 patients with pediatric malignancy aged 1 to 18 years (median: 7) were treated with cryopreserved autologous bone marrow transplantation (ABMT) in the department of pediatrics, National Cancer Center Hospital. The malignancies were acute non-lymphocytic leukemia (n = 8), acute lymphocytic leukemia (n = 5),
osteosarcoma
(n = 7),
neuroblastoma
(n = 6), brain tumor (n = 5), rhabdomyosarcoma (n = 4), retinoblastoma (n = 3), Ewing's sarcoma (n = 3), non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (n = 2), malignant histiocytosis (n = 1), hepatoblastoma (n = 1), malignant melanoma (n = 1) and malignant neuroepithelioma (n = 1). Conditioning regimens for solid tumors were multi-agent high-dose chemotherapy, mainly consisted of cyclophosphamide (CY) 120 mg/kg or melphalan 180mg/m2 and that for hematological malignancies were CY with fractionated total body irradiation (12 Gy). In vitro purging by 4-hydroperoxycyclophosphamide was performed in 12 leukemia patients and 5 solid tumor patients. Of the 13 patients with acute leukemia, 1 died from relapse 1 year after the unpurged marrow transplantation and 1 relapsed in the testis. Remaining 11 patients are alive in continuous complete remission with a median follow up of 30 months (range, 2 to 65 months) after transplantation. The disease-free survival rate of them was 78%. Of the 34 patients with solid tumor, 21 patients died, their cause of death were relapse in 18 and each one of infection, graft failure and brain hemorrhage. Thirteen patients are alive without disease with a median follow up of 28 months (range, 2 to 107 months) posttransplant. The longest survivor is a brain tumor girl, and there are 5 other long survivors; 2 of them are
osteosarcoma
and each one of rhabdomyosarcoma, Ewing's sarcoma and malignant histiocytosis. The disease-free survival rate of total 34 solid tumor patients is 29%, but that of 17 patients who received ABMT in responsive and minimum tumor residue (MTR) period was 69%. These results suggest that autologous bone marrow transplantation is an effective and tolerable treatment for poor prognostic pediatric malignancies, especially for acute leukemia and such solid tumor as that in MTR state.
...
PMID:[Autologous bone marrow transplantation in pediatric cancer]. 226 Aug 67
We have studied 60 pediatric patients with different neoplastic diseases, treated with anthracyclines. We have followed them clinically and echocardiographically to detect the cardiotoxicity due to anthracyclines and the enhanced factors promptly. We have detected a more important incidence of cardiomyopathy in patients with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma,
osteosarcoma
and
neuroblastoma
despite cumulative doses under 550 mg/m2 of anthracyclines. The 2 first groups were treated with high doses of cyclophosphamide and methotrexate, and neuroblastomas with melphalan. The anthracyclines cardiotoxicity is evaluated around 5% in patients treated with doses under 550 mg/m2, and is increased in case of previous or simultaneous aggressive therapy. Continued echocardiography enables a premature detection of cardiotoxicity in these high risk patients.
...
PMID:[Enhancing factors in the cardiotoxicity of anthracyclines]. 232 60
Retinoblastoma (RB) tumours form in the eyes of young children when homozygosity for a mutation at the Rb-1 locus develops in a somatic retinal cell. A similar shift to homozygosity for the RB mutation has been observed in
osteogenic sarcoma
(OS) tumours that commonly arise as second tumours in children who survive RB. This observation suggests that the Rb-1 locus controls the expression of genes with oncogenic potential; a possible target is the oncogene N-myc, which is sometimes amplified and over-expressed in the neuroectodermal tumours
neuroblastoma
and RB. However, N-myc is developmentally regulated in normal murine embryogenesis, and an alternative possibility is that the expression of the gene in tumour cells reflects their embryonic origin and is unrelated to the RB mutation. We have therefore examined N-myc expression in various fetal, adult and tumour tissues, and report here that the gene is expressed in fetal but not in adult brain and retina and in near-diploid RB tumour samples at levels similar to those observed in normal fetal retina. Only RB tumours with genomic amplification of the N-myc gene exhibited increased levels of expression; and no N-myc transcripts were detected in osteogenic sarcomas initiated by mutations at the Rb-1 locus. We therefore conclude that the expression of N-myc in RB tumours probably reflects the origin of the tumour from an embryonic tissue normally expressing the gene and is not directly associated with the mutation at the RB locus.
...
PMID:Tumour induction by the retinoblastoma mutation is independent of N-myc expression. 242 1
The pharmacokinetics of alkylating activity were studied in 17 children treated i.v. with ifosfamide (IF) at 3 g/m2 as a 1-h infusion for 2 consecutive days every 3 weeks, with mesna as a uroprotector. Two patients were treated for a newly diagnosed rhabdomyosarcoma according to the current SIOP (International Society of Pediatric Oncology) protocol. The other 15 patients were treated in a phase II study and presented with one of the following malignancies in relapse:
neuroblastoma
(7),
osteosarcoma
(3), soft tissue sarcoma (2), Wilms' tumor (1), non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (1), and acute lymphoblastic leukemia (1). Plasma alkylating activity levels determined by using 4(4'-nitro-benzyl)-pyridine showed considerable inter-individual and intercyclic variations and decreased biphasically, with mean alpha and beta half-lives of 60 min and 6-7 h, respectively. Probably as a result of liver mixed-function oxidase induction, on the 2nd day of treatment the terminal half-lives were shorter, the plasma exposures were lower, and the mean plasma clearances were higher. Renal excretion was almost complete after 24 h, accounting for a mean of 19% of the injected dose. The CSF alkylating activity levels, obtained in four children, were always lower than the plasma levels and ranged from 8 to 51 micrograms/ml, with a mean CSF/plasma ratio of 0.53 +/- 0.23 during the first 12 h. We conclude that IF alkylating activity was biphasically cleared from the plasma, with significant interindividual and intercyclic variability, that the renal contribution to the clearance was low, and that high levels of CSF alkylating activity could possibly contribute to the CNS toxic side effects observed in pediatric patients treated with high-dose IF/mesna.
...
PMID:Alkylating activity in serum, urine, and CSF following high-dose ifosfamide in children. 250 56
Ifosfamide/mesna was given to 97 patients who had malignant solid tumors diagnosed before they were 21 years of age. Patients received 1.6 g/m2 ifosfamide daily x 5, given i.v. over 15 min, followed by 400 mg/m2 i.v. mesna at 15 min and 4 and 6 h after ifosfamide. Responses were noted in patients with
osteosarcoma
, Ewing's sarcoma, rhabdomyosarcoma and other soft-tissue sarcomas, rhabdoid tumor,
neuroblastoma
, Wilms' tumor, primitive neuroectodermal tumor, retinoblastoma, germ-cell tumors, and B-cell lymphoma. Toxicity included mild to moderate nausea and vomiting, transient, reversible myelosuppression, transient elevations of serum blood urea nitrogen (BUN) and creatinine and liver enzymes, infections, and self-limiting neurotoxicity characterized by changes in mental status, motor dysfunction, cranial nerve palsy, cerebellar dysfunction, and seizures. Neurotoxic symptoms were generally seen in patients who had previously received cisplatin. Ifosfamide is an important alkylating agent that should be combined with other agents in phase II and III trials. Alternate dose schedules should also be investigated.
...
PMID:Ifosfamide in pediatric malignant solid tumors. 250 57
The evidence for human tumor suppressor genes is reviewed. Initial evidence was provided by somatic cell hybridization, where somatic cell hybrids derived from the fusion of malignant and normal parental cells were found to be transformed but nontumorigenic. Tumorigenic segregants appeared at later intervals and were associated with the loss of specific normal chromosomes. Evidence for loss of tumor suppressor genes in many human malignancies was provided by a combination of cytogenetic and restriction fragment length polymorphism analyses. Functional analyses, using monochromosome transfer from normal cells into cancer cells, have confirmed the existence of suppressor genes and their critical role in control of tumor formation. Recently, the tumor suppressor gene Rb-1 has been cloned and also shown to have tumor-suppressing properties. Most recently, a candidate tumor suppressor gene on chromosome 17 (p53) has been implicated in colorectal carcinomas and other human malignancies. It is of interest to note that this gene was originally described as an oncogene. The biological mechanism of tumor suppression has been linked to the induction of differentiation in both somatic cell hybrids and
osteosarcoma
cells transfected with the normal Rb-1 gene. However, recent studies with monochromosome transfer into
neuroblastoma
cells indicates that differentiation may be dissociated from tumor suppression. Tumor suppressor genes do not act directly as negative regulators of conventional "dominantly-acting" oncogenes and therefore cannot be considered as anti-oncogenes in the sense of directly interacting with and regulating the expression of such oncogenes as ras and myc. However, it is speculated that they may negatively regulate an, as yet undiscovered, family of oncogenes which would not be dominantly expressed.
...
PMID:The evidence for human tumor suppressor genes. 257 36
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