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Query: UMLS:C0029463 (
osteosarcoma
)
16,637
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
If the study of tumor immunology is to have a profound impact on clinical medicine, certain hypotheses must be proven to be valid. First and foremost, it must be demonstrated that malignant tissue possesses antigenic substances (probably protein moieties) that are unique to that particular malignant process. In addition, these antigenic substances must be very similar in histologically similar tumors. Second, the host defense mechanisms must be capable of reacting to these tumor-associated antigens. The reaction is, of course, necessary in order to develop both diagnostic and therapeutic routes of application. The reaction of the immunologic system to these tumor-associated antigens could be monitored as an early serodiagnostic tool for subclinical cancer, and the cytotoxic reaction holds great promise as an immunotherapeutic tool. The essence of tumor immunologic research can thus be stated in the form of the following questions: 1. Do histologically similar cancers from identical primary sites share common tumor-associated antigens? 2. Does the immunologic system react to these antigens? 3. Can this reaction be assayed on one hand for serodiagnosis and augmented on the other for immunotherapy? Specific antigens have been found in animal tumors and have been divided into two classes: the viral induced tumors, which share common antigens when caused by the same viral agent, and carcinogen-induced tumors, which appear to have unique antigenic determinants for each tumor. In recent years a great many human tumors have been found to have tumor-associated antigens; these include colonic carcinoma,
neuroblastoma
, melanoma, soft tissue and
osteogenic sarcoma
, bladder carcinoma and Burkitt's lymphoma. This report includes evidence for the existence of such antigens in adenocarcinoma of the ovary and squamous cell carcinoma of the cervix. The laboratory evidence that has been presented would suggest that there are both a cell-mediated response and humoral response to the antigenic determinants of these two gynecologic cancers. It would appear that the mediated (lymphocyte) effect is considerably more cytotoxic and definitive than the humoral factors measured. In addition, the allogenic experiments would suggest strongly that indeed (at least with regard to these two cancers) histologically similar cancers from the same organ share common antigenic determinants. The identification and isolation of these tumor-associated antigens appears complex. The complexity is increased when one studies patients afflicted with these cancers for plasma carcinoembryonic antigens. This antigen, which was thought to be specific for adenocarcinoma of the colon, is found in the blood of a significant number of patients with adenocarcinoma of the ovary and squamous cell carcinoma of the cervix.
...
PMID:Tumor-associated antigens in gynecologic cancer. 76 38
cis-Dichlorodiammineplatinum(II) (DDP) was studied in 16 children with far-advanced malignancies. Three dosage schedules were tried: regimen A, 20 mg/m2/day x 5 days for 3-4 weeks (11 patients); regimen B, 50 mg/m2 once a week (four patients); and regimen C, 60 mg/m2/day x 2 days every 3-4 weeks (one patient). Four of 16 patients (25%) showed partial response, including one with
osteogenic sarcoma
, one with
neuroblastoma
, one with seminoma, and one with medullary carcinoma of the thyroid. Two patients showed clinical improvement. The major toxic manifestations included nausea and vomiting (16 of 16), renal toxicity (three of 16), transient pancytopenia (six of 12), and hearing loss (two of 16). It is apparent that DDP has activity in pediatric tumors; however, a more precise response rate must be delineated in a larger series of patients.
...
PMID:Clinical response and toxicity with cis-dichlorodiammineplatinum(II) in children. 89 Jun 92
Combination chemotherapy with adriamycin and DTIC was used in 102 evaluable patients under 15 years of age who had previously treated metastatic solid tumors. Responses, defined as 50% or more reduction in all tumor masses, occurred in 10 out of 27 patients with
neuroblastoma
, 3 out of 8 patients with Wilms tumor, 7 out 15 patients with Ewing sarcoma, 2 out of 6 patients with
osteosarcoma
, 5 out of 13 patients with rhabdomyosarcoma, and 15 out of 33 patients with miscellaneous tumors which included a patient who had a complete regression of an extensive juvenile angiofibroma. Response rate to combination chemotherapy with adriamycin and DTIC in patients with Ewing sarcoma was significantly superior to the response rate obtained with adriamycin alone in another Southwest Oncology Group Study. Major toxicity included nausea, vomiting, myelosuppression, high incidence of pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (5 patients) and congestive heart failure (4 patients). There was 7 drug-associated deaths due to sepsis (1), pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (4), and congestive heart failure (2).
...
PMID:Combination chemotherapy with adramycin (NSC-123127) and dimethyl triazeno imidazole carboxamide (DTIC) (NSC-45388) in children with metastatic solid tumors. 95 60
Thirty-two children with solid tumors (lymphangioma, fibrosarcoma, hepatocarcinoma,
osteogenic sarcoma
, rhabdomyosarcoma, lymphosarcoma, mesenchymoma, hepatoma, Ewing's sarcoma, reticulum cell sarcoma,
neuroblastoma
, Hodgkin's disease, and brain tumors) were studied for alterations in coagulation by means of platelet counts, platelet aggregation, thrombelastogram, procoagulant and antigenic factor VIII, fibrin split products, and antithrombin III level. Results indicated hypercoagulability as shown by abnormally short thrombelastograms and elevated factor VIII levels and platelet counts in approximately one-half of the group. With the exception of increased fibrin split products in a third of the patients, little laboratory or clinical evidence for disseminated intravascular coagulation was seen. Hypercoagulability, as noted in adult carcinoma patients, can also occur in childhood sarcoma patients.
...
PMID:Hypercoagulability in childhood cancer. 120 73
Adriamycin is a new anticancer antibiotic with a wide spectrum of activity against solid tumours. The results obtained with this agent in 159 patients with histologically confirmed advanced metastastic malignancies are reported. Encouraging results were obtained in patients with sarcomas of bone and soft tissue (12/22). Response was also seen in mesothelioma (3/9) and lung cancer (5/15). A variety of other neoplasms was also treated and results obtained in
neuroblastoma
, testicular tumours, stomach carcinoma, breast cancer and nephroblastoma are reported. Treatment is discussed, with reference to response rates and toxicity. Results in 72 patients with advanced breast cancer, who received adriamycin in combination with other chemotherapeutic agents, are presented. Seventeen patients with primary liver cancer were also treated with adriamycin. To date, this is the only chemotherapeutic agent that appears to significantly improve survival times in patients with this resistant form of cancer. The prophylactic use of adriamycin against
osteogenic sarcoma
is also discussed.
...
PMID:Adriamycin in the treatment of cancer. 125 Dec 78
Nine patients who had an
osteosarcoma
that had developed as a second malignant neoplasm in a previously irradiated site were managed at a major center for the treatment of tumors in children. The doses of radiation had averaged 4144 centigray (range, 2300 to 8000 centigray) and chemotherapy had been administered, when appropriate, for the primary malignant lesion (Ewing sarcoma, malignant fibrous histiocytoma, Hodgkin lymphoma,
neuroblastoma
, neurofibrosarcoma, rhabdomyosarcoma, and Wilms tumor). The interval between the initial treatment and the diagnosis of the secondary sarcoma averaged ten years and one month (range, five years and ten months to twenty-one years and nine months). Three patients were alive, two of them with active disease, at the time of writing. The other six had died within three years (average, fifteen months) after the second diagnosis. The prevalence of secondary
osteosarcoma
is increasing as the survival of children who have a malignant lesion increases. Plans for tumor therapy should take into account the risk of this complication, which is usually fatal.
...
PMID:Osteosarcoma as a second malignant neoplasm in children. 152 94
Ewing's sarcoma is the second most common bone tumor in childhood, with an overall 5-yr survival of 40%. It is one of the poorly differentiated small spherical cell tumors frequently requiring distinction from rhabdomyosarcoma,
neuroblastoma
,
osteosarcoma
, primitive neuroectodermal tumor, and lymphoma. The majority of rhabdomyosarcomas, neuroblastomas, and osteosarcomas are aneuploid, whereas Ewing's sarcomas are usually diploid. To determine whether there is any correlation between DNA content, morphology, site, and survival in Ewing's sarcoma and extraosseous Ewing's sarcoma, 21 tumor samples were studied retrospectively (3 extraosseous Ewing's and 18 Ewing's sarcomas). The DNA analysis was performed on disaggregated paraffin-embedded tissue nuclei by flow (FCM) and image (IC) cytometry and correlated with the histology and clinical history. The DNA ploidy by FCM on 17 of 18 Ewing's sarcoma samples was 12 diploid, 1 aneuploid, and 4 tetraploid. By IC, the DNA ploidy on 16 samples was 13 diploid, 1 aneuploid, and 2 tetraploid. Three samples were nonevaluable (1 by FCM and 2 by IC). The agreement between FCM and IC was 12 of 16 (75%). The extraosseous Ewing's sarcoma tumors were 2 diploid and 1 aneuploid by IC. In this study there was no correlation between the DNA ploidy and either the histology, site, or survival.
...
PMID:Flow and image cytometric DNA analysis in Ewing's sarcoma. 154 36
The sequential outcome was evaluated for all childhood cancers in which the Pediatric Oncology Group has conducted a series of clinical trials, with constant eligibility, on patients with newly diagnosed cancer. The analysis was applied to more than 7000 patients with cancer diagnosed between 1976 and 1989. These include acute leukemia (4 subgroups), non-Hodgkins lymphoma (4 subgroups),
osteogenic sarcoma
, and advanced
neuroblastoma
. In 8 of these 10 disease areas, significant improvement in outcome has occurred. In rare diseases such as pediatric cancer, collaborative studies may be the only way to conduct therapeutic trials of sufficient statistical power. A cooperative group has distinct advantages over a series of ad hoc collaborative studies in that it can maintain a unified data base, study its history with minimal confounding effects of changing institutional participants, and develop long-term research relationships among its participants.
...
PMID:Progress against childhood cancer: the Pediatric Oncology Group experience. 155 37
Newcastle disease virus (NDV), strain 73-T, has previously been shown to be cytolytic to mouse tumor cells. In this study, we have evaluated the ability of NDV to replicate in and kill human tumor cells in culture and in athymic mice. Plaque assays were used to determine the cytolytic activity of NDV on six human tumor cell lines, fibrosarcoma (HT1080),
osteosarcoma
(KHOS), cervical carcinoma (KB8-5-11), bladder carcinoma (HCV29T),
neuroblastoma
(IMR32), and Wilm's tumor (G104), and on nine different normal human fibroblast lines. NDV formed plaques on all tumor cells tested as well as on chick embryo cells (CEC), the native host for NDV. Plaques did not form on any of the normal fibroblast lines. To detect NDV replication, virus yield assays were performed which measured virus particles in infected cell culture supernatants. Virus yield increased 10,000-fold within 24 hr in tumor and CEC supernatants. Titers remained near zero in normal fibroblast supernatants. In vivo tumoricidal activity was evaluated in athymic nude Balb-c mice by subcutaneous injection of 9 x 10(6) tumor cells followed by intralesional injection of either live or heat-killed NDV (1.0 x 10(6) plaque forming units [PFU]), or medium. After live NDV treatment, tumor regression occurred in 10 out of 11 mice bearing KB8-5-11 tumors, 8 out of 8 with HT-1080 tumors, and 6 out of 7 with IMR-32 tumors. After treatment with heat-killed NDV no regression occurred (P less than 0.01, Fisher's exact test). Nontumor-bearing mice injected with 1.0 x 10(8) PFU of NDV remained healthy. These results indicate that NDV efficiently and selectively replicates in and kills tumor cells, but not normal cells, and that intralesional NDV causes complete tumor regression in athymic mice with a high therapeutic index.
...
PMID:Newcastle disease virus selectively kills human tumor cells. 161 12
High-dose thiotepa was given as a single agent at a total dose of 1125 mg/m2 with autologous bone marrow rescue to nine patients with recurrent/refractory/poor risk pediatric malignancies (primitive neuroepithelial tumor (PNET), two;
neuroblastoma
, one; Wilms' tumor, one;
osteosarcoma
, one; Ewing's sarcoma one, Hodgkin's disease one, high-grade glioma, two). The response rate in these heavily pretreated patients was 71% (five out of seven evaluable patients) including two complete responses (Wilms', glioma), three partial responses (
osteosarcoma
, Ewing's sarcoma, Hodgkin's disease), and two with stable disease (PNET, glioma). The median duration of response was 2.5 months. The extramedullary toxicity was acceptable with symptoms mainly of skin and gastrointestinal tract. The data indicate that high-dose thiotepa is effective in several types of recurrent pediatric solid tumors, and merits further evaluation in combination regimens.
...
PMID:High-dose thiotepa with autologous bone marrow rescue in pediatric solid tumors. 176 72
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