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Query: UMLS:C0029463 (
osteosarcoma
)
16,637
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The effective treatment of systemic cancer began in the 1950s on two fronts, i.e., childhood leukemia and choriocarcinoma. These two diseases were successfully treated as a direct result of the use of antifolate methotrexate. The demonstration of complete durable remissions in these diseases quickly led to development of other anticancer drugs, tested using the prospective clinical trials. In the 1960s as the number of active drugs increased, combination chemotherapy was introduced. Other systemic cancers, such as Hodgkin's, large cell
lymphoma
, and testicular cancer, became curable in the 1970s. For the common low-growth fraction solid tumors, the curability of systemic disease remained elusive until the introduction of adjuvant therapy to treat micrometastases. The past decade of the 1980s has seen improvement in the outcomes for breast cancer,
osteosarcoma
, and possible colon cancer utilizing adjunctive chemotherapy. The 1980s also saw the introduction of biologic therapies that have further improved the outcomes of several leukemias and produced consistent responses in patients with renal cell and melanoma. The 1990s will undoubtedly see more improvements as the effects of current drugs will be enhanced not only by improved integration of systemic and local therapies but also by utilizing cytokines and biologic response modifiers in concert with cytotoxics. Moreover, as we understand more about the process of cancer induction, promotion, and progression, more specific anti-cancer approaches will be developed to control cancer even before clinical cancer is diagnosed. Underlying and facilitating the improvement in cancer therapy have been not only the experimental results of many laboratory scientists but also the outcomes from many controlled clinical trials, the laboratory of clinical scientists.
...
PMID:Progress in the systemic treatment of cancer. Concepts, trials, drugs, and biologics. 230 52
Ultrasonic velocity and attenuation are determined in different types of bone tumors by using a double-probe-through-transmission ultrasonic technique. The average values of propagation velocity in different types of tumors are found as 2106, 2304, 2677.5, and 3586 m/s with 1.49%, 1.04%, and 0.74% standard deviation in Giant Cell,
Lymphoma
, Chondro Sarcoma, and
Osteogenic Sarcoma
, respectively. Absorption coefficient of ultrasound is found to be minimum as 19.7 dB/cm with 0.002% standard deviation in
Lymphoma
, and high in Osteochondroma and not measurable with the present setup. A direct technique for the diagnosis and differentiation of various types of tumors can be developed by standardization of the data.
...
PMID:Measurement of ultrasonic velocity and attenuation in bone tumors, in vitro. 240 61
One hundred eighty-five dogs with histologically confirmed, measurable malignant tumors were used in a prospective study to determine the response to 2 doses of the anthracycline antitumor antibiotic, doxorubicin. Eighty-three dogs had been refractory to one or more previous treatment modalities (surgery, n = 54; chemotherapy, n = 22; radiation, n = 10; hyperthermia, n = 1; biological response modifier, n = 1). The extent of neoplastic disease was determined immediately prior to and 3 weeks after 2 doses of doxorubicin were administered (30 mg/m2 of body surface area, iv) 21 days apart. Eighty-four percent (n = 157) of the dogs received 2 doses of doxorubicin and were evaluated. Of the 28 dogs ruled ineligible, 4 had serious side effects to the first dose of doxorubicin, and 24 others acquired complications resulting from their malignant tumors. A partial or complete remission was obtained in 41% (64/157) of all evaluable dogs: 26% (11/43) of the dogs with carcinoma, 67% (42/63) of the dogs with
lymphoma
, and 22% (11/51) of the dogs with sarcoma. Tumors in which there was at least a 50% volume reduction (partial or complete remission) included malignant
lymphoma
(42/63), fibrosarcoma (1/14), solid follicular thyroid carcinoma (3/13), mammary adenocarcinoma (2/8), hemangiosarcoma (2/8),
osteosarcoma
(1/6), circumanal carcinoma (3/5), synovial cell sarcoma (2/3), undifferentiated sarcoma (2/3), nasal adenocarcinoma (1/2), liposarcoma (1/2), infiltrating lipoma (1/1), malignant melanoma (1/1), sclerosing mesothelioma (1/1), and neurofibrosarcoma (1/2).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Phase II evaluation of doxorubicin for treatment of various canine neoplasms. 259 41
Spontaneous pneumothorax is a rare complication in both primary and metastatic pulmonary neoplasms. Occasionally, pneumothorax is associated with chemotherapy of pulmonary malignancies. Pneumothorax after chemotherapy has been reported only in cases with
osteogenic sarcoma
, synovial sarcoma, fibrosarcoma, germinal tumors, and
lymphoma
with lung metastasis. We report a case of a patient with malignant thymoma who suffered from lung metastasis after radiation and adjuvant chemotherapy from lung metastasis after radiation and adjuvant chemotherapy (cyclophosphamide, adriamycin, and cis-platinum). A chest X-ray taken 2 days after chemotherapy showed bilateral pneumothorax, which was resolved with conservative treatment. The pneumothorax in this patient is believed to have been caused by the rupturing of the tumor into the pleural cavity and the bronchi.
...
PMID:Spontaneous pneumothorax following chemotherapy for malignant thymoma with pulmonary metastasis: report of a case. 268 36
Sinonasal neoplasms and neoplasm-like proliferations composed of light microscopically poorly differentiated or undifferentiated, small- to medium-sized cells cause considerable diagnostic confusion. Lesions in this category include lymphoepithelioma (undifferentiated carcinoma), olfactory neuroblastoma, small-cell undifferentiated (oat cell) carcinoma, sinonasal undifferentiated carcinoma, malignant melanoma, pituitary adenoma, lymphoid hyperplasia, malignant
lymphoma
, plasmacytoma, lymphomatoid granulomatosis, rhabdomyosarcoma, mesenchymal chondrosarcoma, small cell
osteosarcoma
, Ewing's sarcoma, and synovial sarcoma. Many of these lesions can be definitively diagnosed based on light microscopic features alone, but, in some instances, additional techniques such as immunohistochemistry are of value. The authors review the pertinent clinicopathologic features of the above lesions, with emphasis on light microscopic, immunohistochemical, and ultrastructural features of particular utility in differential diagnosis.
...
PMID:"Undifferentiated" neoplasms of the sinonasal region: differential diagnosis based on clinical, light microscopic, immunohistochemical, and ultrastructural features. 269 5
Primary tumors of the vertebral column are rare: 20 per cent of all primary tumors of the spinal column. The distribution by type of tumor shows that the three most frequent primary tumors considered to be "radio and/or chemo resistant lesions" are the chordoma (15.5 to 24.5%), the chondrosarcoma (20%) and the giant cell tumor (10%). A second group with "chemo and/or radiosensitive lesions" include the Ewing sarcoma, primary
lymphoma
and plasmocytoma (5%). We consider a third group with the benign tumor: osteochondroma, chondroma, osteoid osteoma, osteoblastoma, aneurysmal bone cyst, hemangioma and eosinophilic granuloma (2 to 3%). The last tumoral group agrees with sarcomatous tumors:
osteogenic sarcoma
, fibrosarcoma, malignant fibro-histiocytoma, angiosarcoma and hemangio-pericytoma (1 to 3% of primary tumors of the vertebral column); they are most frequently secondary to Paget's disease, giant cell tumor or to radiation therapy and their prognosis is poor.
...
PMID:[Primary tumors of the spine. Initial oncologic aspects: epidemiology, anatomo-prognostic and therapeutic classification]. 269 50
Postoperative course is reported in 52 children with malignant tumors (neuroblastoma, Wilms-tumor, non-Hodgkin-
lymphoma
,
osteosarcoma
etc.) who were operated on between 1979 and 1987. 26 children received chemotherapy prior to surgery, whereas 26 children were operated on without preceding chemotherapy (control group). Most children were under six years of age. 15 Children (57.7%) with preoperative chemotherapy developed early postoperative complications, such as sepsis, pneumonia, suture dehiscence, woundhealing disturbances and ileus, whereas this was the case in only 5 children (19.2%) without preoperative chemotherapy (P 0.0005). Four of the children with preoperative chemotherapy (15.4%) sustained late complications, such as local recurrence or mechanical bowel obstruction, whereas none of the control children did so. Lethality rate from underlying disease did not differ in both groups during follow-up (5 = 19.2% vs. 5 = 19.2%). This demonstrates that the surgeon must carefully be aware of an increased possibility of early and late complications in children who have to undergo surgery for malignant tumors following preoperative chemotherapy.
...
PMID:[Postoperative course in children with malignant tumors following preoperative chemotherapy]. 273 47
A patient with peripheral T-cell
Lymphoma
and acquired, systemic osteosclerosis is described. Bone histology showed a spectacular activation of osteoblasts accompanyed by massive new bone formation. Alkaline phosphatase in serum was elevated and increased to greater than 2000 U/l when the
lymphoma
became refractory to chemotherapy. In the patient's serum an osteoblast-activating factor could be demonstrated using a rat osteogenic
osteosarcoma
cell line (ROS 17/2.8). The factor was absent during remission of the tumor. We conclude that osteosclerosis was a paraneoplastic syndrome in this patient due to the secretion of an osteoblast-stimulating factor by the T-cell lymphoma. This situation is similar to the secretion of osteoclast-activating factors described in B-cell lymphomas, particularly multiple myeloma. The characterization of such a factor could be of therapeutic relevance.
...
PMID:Evidence for an osteoblast-activating factor in a patient with peripheral T-cell lymphoma and osteosclerosis. 278 45
The use of totally implantable right atrial catheters was evaluated in pediatric oncology patients. From September 15, 1987 to March 31, 1989, 26 catheters were inserted in patients (1 year to 20 years of age) with the following diagnosis: acute leukemia (6),
osteosarcoma
(5),
lymphoma
(4), central nervous system tumors (6),
osteosarcoma
(5),
lymphoma
(4), central nervous system tumors (6) and other solid tumors (5). Total number of catheter days was 5,475. The catheters were maintained for a mean of 210 days (range 10-534). Complications included: documented local infection in 1 patient, successfully treated with antibiotics without removing the catheter and transient obstructions resolved with injection of heparin or urokinase in other children. The use of these right atrial catheters has been widely accepted by patients and families as well as by the health team. Complications have been minimal. Our experience confirms that these catheters contribute to improving quality of life in pediatric patients with neoplasms.
...
PMID:[Use of central venous catheters implanted subcutaneously in children with neoplasms]. 279 84
We report a study of 27 patients with small cell
osteosarcoma
(SCO), 17 from the M. D. Anderson Cancer Center (MDAH) and ten from the Pediatric Oncology Group (POG). There were 12 male patients and 15 female patients; 19 were white, five were black, and three were Hispanic. They ranged from 6 to 28 years of age with a median of 14 years. Histologically there were three patterns: Ewing's-like,
lymphoma
-like, and spindle cell. All cases showed osteoid formation and a few had chondroid areas. There was cytoplasmic glycogen in ten cases. Initial treatment for MDAH patients included intraarterial infusion of cisplatin in ten, amputation in four, partial mandibulectomies in two, and biopsy with local radiotherapy and systemic chemotherapy in one. All POG patients had resection or amputation followed by adjuvant chemotherapy. Twelve patients are alive, of whom nine have had significant follow-ups for 25 to 90 months. Fourteen patients are dead of lung, spine, and brain metastases from 1 to 23 months after initial diagnosis. One patient is alive with lung relapse at 4 months. In summary, SCO is a high-grade variant of
osteosarcoma
, with an incidence of up to 4% of all osteosarcomas, that affects patients of the same age group and has the same anatomic location as conventional
osteosarcoma
. Currently, SCO appears to have a prognosis that is the same as or slightly worse than that of conventional
osteosarcoma
. Furthermore, although intraarterial infusion is effective for the primary tumors in the bone, distant metastases are difficult to control.
...
PMID:Small cell osteosarcoma. A clinicopathologic study of 27 cases. 280 5
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