Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0029463 (osteosarcoma)
16,637 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Since January 1976 high-dose methotrexate (HDMTX) therapy has been used in the management of patients with osteogenic sarcoma at the Orthopaedic Department, University of Vienna. 7500 mg MTX/sqm body surface is administrated in a four-hour infusion with citrovorum factor rescue. This therapy is combined with dactinomycin, adriamycin, bleomycin, cyclophosphamide and vincristine in a multi-drug chemotherapeutic program as a prophylactic regimen after surgical treatment of the primary tumour, as well as in the management of metastases. So far, 12 patients have received a total of 46 infusions with HDMTX at montly intervals (6 patients already had widespread metastases). The use of several precautions such as adequate hydration 3 l/sqm body surface fluid), systematic alkalinization of the urine and regular control of the serum MTX level renders HDMTX therapy less hazardous. Five out of the 46 infusions were followed by mild toxic reactions consisting of mouth ulceration, fever and/or bone marrow depression. One out of the 6 patients with metastases and 5 out of the 6 patients receiving HDMTX as a prophylactic measure are without evidence of disease at present. In view of the short observation period, this report is limited to clinical observations only.
...
PMID:[Clinical observations on the use of high-dose methotrexate treatment in osteogenic sarcoma (author's transl)]. 7 Aug 89

Experience with computed tomography (CT) in 25 patients with histologically proven osteosarcoma is presented. CT was as accurate as conventional radiographic methods in determining the presence of a lesion, but it was definitely superior in defining the extent of disease, particularly intramedullary extension and soft tissue extraosseous tumor component. CT was capable of demonstrating skip metastases in one patient. CT plays a key role in the preoperative evaluation of osteosarcoma patients, particularly when less than radical surgery is planned as primary treatment and when postoperative recurrence is suspected. CT is also useful in assessing the response to therapy in nonsurgical cases. The technique involved in the performance of this examination is discussed.
...
PMID:Computed tomography in the evaluation of osteosarcoma: experience with 25 cases. 10 81

Seventy-six patients with localized Ewing's sarcoma who received primary treatment at M.D. Anderson Hospital from 1948 through December 1975 were reviewed. Patients have been divided into four groups according to the different treatment regimens they received: Group I, moderate dose radiotherapy alone; Group II, high dose radiotherapy alone; Group III, radiotherapy plus vincristine and cytoxan; and Group IV, radiotherapy plus vincristine, Adriamycin, cytoxan and actinomycin. The problem of local recurrence appears to be solved with combined chemotherapy and radiation therapy with only one of 36 patients having a recurrence at the primary site in Groups III and IV. Multimodal therapy is the preferred treatment to obtain control of the primary lesion by radiation therapy while preserving good function. However, the major cause of failure remains distant metastases, 19 of 36 (53%) in Groups III and IV. In addition, 4 of 10 patients who have survived over 5 years have developed osteogenic sarcoma.
...
PMID:Management and results of localized Ewing's sarcoma. 10 49

The early detection of metastatic spread in sixteen patients with osteosarcoma has been studied over a twelve month period, comparing the techniques of bone scanning and radiography. In only two patients were we able to demonstrate changes suggestive of pulmonary metastases any earlier with a 99mTc-EHDP scan than with chest radiographs and one of these resolved spontaneously. However, the bone scan did accurately delineate the extent of the primary tumour and may, therefore, be helpful in deciding the level of the amputation and the response of the patient to treatment, particularly now that chemotherapy and immunotherapy are frequently used in the management of the disease.
...
PMID:The use of 99mc-EHDP as a scanning agent in the detection of metastases from osteosarcoma. 14 18

Osteosarcoma of bone is a tumor composed of malignant cells that produce osteoid. Some tumors show predominant chondroid or fibromatoid ground substance. All, however, are highly malignant and about 80 per cent produce death with metastases. The roentgenogram affords important evidence for the correct diagnosis of many of them. Differential diagnosis should include consideration of those sarcomas with many benign giant cells and the group of "telangiectatic" osteosarcomas that may contain only small diagnostic areas. Malignant fibrous histiocytoma is now considered as a possible diagnosis for some malignant bone tumors, but the exact criteria for the diagnosis of this condition are still somewhat obscure. Newer modalities of adjunctive treatment, such as resection of pulmonary metastases, chemotherapy, and immunotherapy, give promise of improving the prognosis for osteosarcoma.
...
PMID:Pathology of osteosarcoma. 16 99

FBJ virus was injected i.p. into 145 neonatal NIH Swiss [N:NIH(s)] mice. Eighty mice developed a total of 110 neoplasms by 5 months of age. The mean latent period of the tumors was 71 days (26 to 145) postinjection. The frequency of occurrence of neoplasms at different sites was: diaphragm, 45%; ribs, 14%; vertebrae, 14%; femora, 9%; pelvic bones, 5%; tibiae, 4%; sternebrae, 3%; and inguinal area, 7%. The neoplasms were characterized histologically by elongated or rounded cells associated with an abundant connective tissue stroma. Occasional areas of bone formation and apparent osteoid metaplasia were seen. Bone tumors appeared to arise from periosteal cells, to grow by expansion, and to invade locally, but they failed to metastasize. Neoplasms of the diaphragm originated in the central aponeurosis and appeared histologically similar to bone neoplasms. Histochemical studies demonstrated abundant alkaline phosphatase in tumor cells, and ultrastructural observations revealed subcellular characteristics of osteoblasts and chondroblasts. Tumors were readily transplantable and had histopathological characteristics similar to those of the primary viral-induced tumors. The results of this study indicate that the FBJ virus induces in NIH Swiss mice a unique type of chondroosseous neoplasm derived from periosteal cells which has a resemblance to human juxtacortical (parosteal) osteosarcoma.
...
PMID:Histogenesis and Morphology of periosteal sarcomas induced by FBJ virus in NIH Swiss mice. 18 21

Bone scintigraphy with 99mTc-polyphosphate or 99mTc-pyrophosphate was carried out in 54 children suspected of bone disease. Signs of skeletal metastases were recognized in 13 children by scintigraphy whereas X-ray examination showed lesions in only 10 of these. In 5 children with primary osteosarcoma, three cases of fibrous dysplasia, and 4 cases of osteomyelitis, the lesions were clearly demonstrated by scintigraphy. Abnormal accumulation of radioactivity in soft tissue lesions was observed in primary adrenal neuroblastoma, Hodgkin's granuloma, and metastatic Burkitt's lymphoma. Several cases are reported, and the value of bone scintigraphy in children is discussed.
...
PMID:Bone scintigraphy in children. 18 23

The evidence that the principles of surgical adjuvant chemotherapy developed in experimental animal systems also apply to a variety of neoplastic diseases in man has been clearly demonstrated. Micrometastatic disease can be eradicated with effective chemotherapy in several diseases. Prolongation of disease-free interval, if not cure, is now possible in diseases in which curative surgery alone or in combination with radiotherapy does not achieve these goals. The previously fatal childhood solid tumors--Wilms', Ewings' sarcoma, embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma--are curable in a high percentage of patients appropriately treated with combinations of surgery, radiotherapy, and chemotherapy. The prolongation of the disease-free interval in osteogenic sarcoma has permitted consideration of entirely new surgical approaches for this tumor in which radical amputation has traditionally been employed. The spectacular results achieved in the treatment of Stage II breast cancer may potentially save hundreds of thousands of lives in the coming decade. Clinically recognizable metastatic disease is rarely curable by any currently available treatment modality. The prolongation of disease-free intervals and production of cures when surgical adjuvant chemotherapy is employed may be partly explained by relatively more circulation, and thus drug delivery to each tumor cell, more favorable cellular kinetics, and a healthier and more immunocompetent host who is better able to withstand drug effects on normal tissues, and to participate in tumor destruction. Cures of certain patients with neoplastic diseases using surgical adjuvant chemotherapy has increased the incentive to learn more about new and old drugs and their effective use alone and in combination. Chemotherapy, in appropriate combinations with surgery, radiotherapy, and immunotherapy, may well be more efficacious in many clinical situations than the traditional use of single-modality treatment. The data presented in this paper relate solid evidence that the possibility of cure in a variety of neoplastic diseases is real.
...
PMID:Surgical adjuvant chemotherapy. 19 34

The series consisted of 132 patients, 61 with primary bone sarcomas and 71 with primary soft tissue sarcomas. The patients were all evaluated by lymphography. The investigation included both patients who had not yet been treated and patients with suspected or confirmed metastases. All tumour diagnoses were confirmed microscopically. The findings as regards dissemination were based on clinical examinations, laboratory tests, roentgen examinations and lymphographies. In some cases, lymph node biopsies and surgical observations were also used. A total of 151 lymphographies were performed and 281 follow-up films taken. Preoperative lymphography was performed using the technique introduced by Kinmonth. For postoperative lymphography on the stumps of amputated extremities, two simple but useful methods were developed, which are presented here. Changes in the lymphographic appearance of lymph node metastases, the occurrence of new metastases, and the results of treatment were assessed by survey films and repeat lymphography. The generally accepted criteria for metastasis were used as a basis for the analysis of the lymphographic findings. The results may be summarized as follows: 1. Incidence of lymphatic dissemination. Different sarcomas varied greatly in their clinical course, including the frequency of dissemination. The lymphatic involvement in the metastatic cases was as follows: Bone sarcomas: 16 out of 28 (Table 10); of these, 13 were to regional lymph nodes, 8 to distant nodes and 5 to both (Table 14). Soft tissue sarcomas: 24 out of 40 (Table 11). All 24 had metastases in regional nodes, and 8 in distant nodes as well (Table 15). The highest frequencies of lymphatic spread in the different metastasized tumours were found to be: Bone sarcomas: reticulosarcoma 100%, Ewing's sarcoma 50%, osteosarcoma 47%. Soft tissue sarcomas: rhabdomyosarcoma 100%, synovial sarcoma 80%, neurogenic sarcoma 78%, leiomyosarcoma 67%. 2. Time-relation between lymphatic and haematogenic dissemination; The tendency to metastasize first via the lymphatics or via the blood vessels varied. Half of the cases of Ewing's sarcoma and reticulosarcoma had evidence of lymphatic spread before blood-borne metastases were detected. In the osteosarcoma cases, however, lymphatic dissemination was always preceded by haematogenic spread (Table 12). In synovial sarcoma, rhabdomyosarcoma and neurogenic sarcoma, the first dissemination was more frequently lymphatic than haematogenic (Table 13). 3. Possible existence of special lymphographic features of sarcoma metastases. Only reticulosarcoma displayed special characteristics. The lymph node metastases of reticulosarcoma of bone had lymphographic appearances similar to those found in reticulosarcoma of soft tissue or lymph node origin (Fig. 12). The lymph node metastases of other primary bone and soft tissue sarcomas had no specific lymphographic features and were indistinguishable from carcinomatous metastases (Figs 7, 9, 13, 15, 18, 19, 20, 22, 23). 4...
...
PMID:Lymphatic dissemination of bone and soft tissue sarcomas: a lymphographic investigation. 20 99

A 19-year-old woman with a diagnosis of osteosarcoma was initially treated with amputation of her right leg and adjuvant adriamycin. She developed pulmonary metastases 18 months following diagnosis. She was then given cis-dichlorodiammineplatinum(II) (DDP) at a dose of 100 mg/m2 iv approximately every 4 weeks as the sole drug. Following the fifth dose of DDP, she complained of numbness and tingling in her hands and leg. A distal sensory loss extending to both elbows and her remaining knee was found on examination. Nerve conduction tests were compatible with peripheral neuropathy of the "glove and stocking" type. DDP was withheld and her sensory loss improved over the next 2 months, but became worse after another course of DDP was administered. The temporal relationship between the findings and the administration of DDP implicates this drug as the causative agent in the peripheral neuropathy.
...
PMID:Peripheral neuropathy as a complication of cis-dichlorodiammineplatinum(II) treatment: a case report. 20 27


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>