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

The study aimed to determine the activity and toxicity of taxol in the treatment of recurrent or metastatic soft tissue sarcomas or osteosarcomas. The major findings are that five patients had stable disease after two cycles of chemotherapy but two of these patients were subsequently removed from the study at their own request. The other three patients progressed after an additional two cycles of chemotherapy. Seven patients progressed during the first two cycles and were removed from the study. One patient completed only one cycle of therapy and was deemed inevaluable for study response. There were eight episodes of grade 3 or 4 neutropenia and two episodes of grade 3 thrombocytopenia. One patient experienced grade 3 neurological toxicity and one patient grade 3 mucositis. Two patients are currently alive with progressing disease and one patient is alive with no evidence of disease after undergoing surgery and radiotherapy. The principal conclusions are that Paclitaxel is ineffective in treating recurrent or metastatic soft tissue sarcoma and osteosarcoma. Treatment at this dose is quite myelosuppressive, but toxicity is generally manageable. Further study of this agent is not justified in this setting.
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PMID:A phase II trial of paclitaxel in the treatment of recurrent or metastatic soft tissue sarcomas or bone sarcomas. 941 3

Ifosfamide, Carboplatin and Etoposide (ICE) therapy was used to treat 4 patients, 2 with refractory osteosarcoma, and one each with relapsed brain tumor and newly diagnosed brain tumor. ICE therapy was administered in doses of Ifosfamide 1,800 mg/m2 x 5, Carboplatin 400 mg/m2 x 2 and Etoposide 100 mg/m2 x 5. A total of 30 courses were administered. Two cases of osteosarcoma had a stable disease (range, 3-9 months) and 2 cases of brain tumor had a complete response by magnetic resonance imaging. Moderate or severe toxicity evaluated on a per course basis included: neutropenia 83%, thrombocytopenia 93%, fever 30%, hepatotoxicity 3%, and hemorrhagic cystitis 3%. The median time to hematologic recovery was 20 days. ICE therapy is highly effective for the treatment of refractory or recurrent solid tumors with acceptable toxicity.
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PMID:[Pilot study of relapsed osteosarcoma and brain tumor with ifosfamide, carboplatin and etoposide (ICE therapy)]. 949 32

From 1987 to 1995, 22 children with refractory solid tumors entered a phase II study of high-dose thiotepa (HDT) (900 mg/m2) followed by stem cell transplantation (SCT) in the Pediatrics Department of the Institut Gustave Roussy. Tumor types were rhabdomyosarcoma (eight), osteosarcoma (seven), neuroblastoma (three), Ewing's sarcoma (three) and Burkitt's lymphoma (one). Before HDT, all had been extensively treated with conventional chemotherapy, surgical resection of the primary tumor (13/22) and of metastases (6/22), and radiotherapy of the primary tumor in three patients. All had measurable disease, at the site of the primary tumor (3 patients), of the metastases (9 patients) or both (10 patients). Toxicity from the HDT was severe but acceptable. No toxicity-related death occurred. The median duration of neutropenia and thrombocytopenia was 18 days (5-37) and 30 days (7-377), respectively. Septicemia was documented in four patients. Severe diarrhea was observed in seven patients. Mild hepatic toxicity occurred 18 times. No CR and 11/22 PR were documented: osteosarcoma 4/7, rhabdomyosarcoma 4/8, Ewing's sarcoma 2/3; 1/1 Burkitt's lymphoma progressed. We conclude that at a dose of 900 mg/m2 followed by SCT support in these heavily pretreated children, the main toxicity induced by thiotepa was digestive. The response rate observed, especially in sarcoma, is particularly encouraging. Thiotepa should be further evaluated in HDC regimens either in combination with other alkylating agents or in rapidly cycled courses of HDC with SCT.
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PMID:Phase II study of high-dose thiotepa and hematopoietic stem cell transplantation in children with solid tumors. 975 39

We report the results of a prospective Tunisian study using primary chemotherapy followed by conservative surgery in primitive limb osteosarcoma. From January 1988 to January 1998, 56 patients affected by limb osteosarcoma entered in a prospective study of neoadjuvant chemotherapy with the T10 protocol before surgery with a conservative intent. Initial work-up include: clinical exam with tumor measurements, chest and limb X-rays, limb CT-scan or MRI, chest CT-scan, bone scintigraphy and hematological and renal biological exams. Patients receive pre- and post-operative chemotherapy according to the T10 modified protocol. Fifty-six patients (33 M/23 F) with a mean age of 19 years (8 to 28) are included. Mean clinical and radiological tumor size is around 14 cm. Main histologic type is classic osteosarcoma (50% of cases) and 10 patients (9%) presented with initial metastasis; 42 patients on 56 receive the whole pre-operative protocol. Treatment is well tolerated excluding 18 episodes of mucositis, 29 of leucopenia (< grade 3), 7 of thrombopenia (< grade 3), 4 of cutaneous toxicity, 2 of pulmonary toxicity and 3 of nausea-vomiting. We observe 36% of good histological responders and 64% of bad responders to primary chemotherapy, 27 patients on 49 operated (53%) have a conservative surgery and 18 (47%) a radical surgery. With a median follow-up of 51 months (8 to 128), 29 patients remain alive free of disease (15/17 GR and 14/30 BR), 2 are alive with disease, 2 died by toxicity, 14 died by progressive disease and 9 are lost to follow-up with evolutive disease. Five year disease-free survival is 55% for the 46 non metastatic patients. In univariate analysis, seric alkaline phosphatase level (p = 0.0014) and histological response to chemotherapy (p = 0.0218) are significant factors for prognosis.
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PMID:[Primary chemotherapy with the Rosen T10 protocol before conservative surgery in limb primitive osteosarcomas: results about 56 cases]. 1070 89

With the intention of starting an international protocol between Italy and Scandinavia on neoadjuvant treatment of extremity osteosarcoma using the four active drugs at maximum doses (doxorubicin 75 mg/m2 pre-operatively, and 90 mg/m2 post-operatively, cisplatin 120 mg/m2, methotrexate 12 g/m2, and ifosfamide 15 g/m2), a single center (the Rizzoli institute) performed a pilot study to closely monitor toxicity, safety, and tumor necrosis. Only 7 patients (10%) had a reduced number of the scheduled cycles. A total of 1,050 of the expected 1,076 cycles (98%) were administered. Delays and dose reduction were minimal, leading to a mean received dose intensity of 89%. Limb salvage surgery was performed in 59 cases (87%), with 6 amputations and 3 rotation plasties. Chemotherapy-induced necrosis higher than 95% was observed in 38 patients (56%). Eleven patients had total necrosis (16%). At a median follow-up of 60 months (range 50-65 months), 53 patients (73%) were continuously disease-free. Six of the relapsed patients were rescued with further treatments leading to an overall survival of 87%. Hematological toxicity was remarkable despite the use of G-CSF and hospitalization due to febrile neutropenia occurred in 25 patients (37%). Platelet transfusions were required in 77 of the 194 episodes of grade 4 thrombocytopenia, but no case of major bleeding was observed. Red blood cell transfusions were necessary in all patients (in 15 cases perioperatively only). Non-hematological toxicity comprised grade 1-2 nephrotoxicity in 3 cases, CNS toxicity in 2 cases, and dilata- tive cardiopathy leading to heart transplantation in 1 case. In conclusion, the pilot study was feasible in the vast majority of cases with toxicity not superior to that of the previous protocols where chemotherapy was given in lower doses. The rate of limb salvage procedures, event-free survival and overall survival seemed to be higher than in previous protocols. On the basis of this study, in March 1997 the Italian and Scandinavian Sarcoma Groups started a new protocol for osteosarcoma of the extremities.
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PMID:High dose ifosfamide in combination with high dose methotrexate, adriamycin and cisplatin in the neoadjuvant treatment of extremity osteosarcoma: preliminary results of an Italian Sarcoma Group/Scandinavian Sarcoma Group pilot study. 1201 78

Canine osteosarcoma, the most common bone tumor in dogs, is a well-established, naturally-occurring animal model for human OS. The aim of this study was to evaluate the clinical and hematological side-effects and to assess the efficacy of lobaplatin chemotherapy in dogs with appendicular osteosarcoma as an adjuvant therapy to surgical resection. Twenty-eight dogs without systemic signs of disease were treated with surgical resection of the tumor and adjuvant lobaplatin chemotherapy at a dose of 35 mg/m2, i.v., once every three weeks, for a maximum of 4 doses. Clinical signs of toxicosis were uncommon and consisted mainly of vomiting and depression. Hematological signs of toxicoses were common 7 to 10 days after lobaplatin chemotherapy and consisted of thrombocytopenia, leukopenia and neutropenia. All the signs were transient and most disappeared within three weeks of lobaplatin administration. A one-year disease-free fraction of 21.8% and a one-year survival fraction of 31.8% were calculated. Multivariate Cox regression analyses showed that a high histological tumor grade and presence of metastasis in the tumor vessels were associated with significantly shorter disease-free interval and survival time. Also, an increased pretreatment plasma alkaline phosphatase level at first presentation and a high histological level of tumor necrosis were associated with a shorter survival interval. Lobaplatin was easy to administer as an i.v. bolus injection at a three-week interval in dogs without the need for pretreatment infusions.
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PMID:Lobaplatin as an adjuvant chemotherapy to surgery in canine appendicular osteosarcoma: a phase II evaluation. 1252 94

Twenty-four client-owned dogs with histologically diagnosed appendicular osteosarcoma (OSA) and no evidence of gross metastatic disease were treated with amputation or limb salvage followed by combination chemotherapy consisting of carboplatin (175mg/ m2 IV, day 1) and doxorubicin (15 mg/m2 IV, day 2) given on a 21-day cycle for a maximum of 4 cycles. Hematologic and gastrointestinal adverse effects were graded according to National Cancer Institute guidelines. Thoracic radiographs were obtained before the 3rd chemotherapy cycle and then every 2 months. Median disease-free interval was 195 days (95% confidence interval 111-228 days) and median survival was 235 days (95% confidence interval 150-283 days). Two patients required dose reductions: 1 for grade 3 thrombocytopenia and 1 for grade 3 adverse gastrointestinal effects. Patients with a longer duration of clinical signs before definitive diagnosis and surgery (greater than 30 days) were more likely to develop progressive disease and to die or be euthanized because of progressive disease on any day; hazard ratios were 3.0 (P = .02) and 3.7 (P .02), respectively. In conclusion, although this combination chemotherapy protocol was well tolerated, it did not provide any improvement over historical single-agent protocols.
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PMID:Carboplatin and doxorubicin combination chemotherapy for the treatment of appendicular osteosarcoma in the dog. 1268 21

Trabectedin is a marine-derived cytoxic alkaloid which has shown promising antitumour activity in a variety of human malignancies including sarcoma. Fifty-four patients with advanced sarcoma (age 43 yrs, range 18-70), all pretreated with prior chemotherapy, were enrolled on a named individual basis for treatment with trabectedin. Diagnosis was adult soft tissue sarcoma (STS) in 46 patients, Ewing's family tumour (EFT) in 4, and osteosarcoma (OS) in 4. The initial 23 patients (total number of courses administered: 68) did not receive premedication prior to trabectedin, while the other 31 patients (total number of courses administered: 134) received premedication with dexamethasone 4 mg po bid 24 hours before therapy. Incidence of toxicity (grade 3-4), expressed as percentage of courses, was as follows: in patients without dexamethasone, elevation of transaminases 34%, neutropenia 24% and thrombocytopenia 25%; in patients with prior dexamethasone, elevation of transaminases 2%, neutropenia 2% and no thrombocytopenia. The median received dose intensity of trabectedin was superimposable in the two groups (404 microg and 400 microg per week, respectively), as well as progression-free survival (19% at 6 months). Among STS patients, 9% had objective responses. In this unselected patient series, premedication with dexamethasone strongly reduced drug-induced hepatotoxicity and myelosuppression.
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PMID:Steroid premedication markedly reduces liver and bone marrow toxicity of trabectedin in advanced sarcoma. 1673 8

We report a rare case of multifocal osteosarcoma (MFOS) with involvement of skeleton, lung, bone marrow, and soft tissues, presenting with paraparesis, cranial nerve palsies, subcutaneous nodules, anemia, and thrombocytopenia. MFOS with involvement of unusual sites presents problems in diagnosis and has a poor prognosis. The literature on 11 cases of MFOS with extraosseus, extrapulmonary involvement reported previously has been reviewed.
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PMID:Multifocal osteosarcoma involving unusual sites. 1680 55

Samarium-153 lexidronam (153Sm-EDTMP) is FDA approved for painful osteoblastic bone metastases that image on bone scan. 153Sm-EDTMP decay has a therapeutic beta-emission and a gamma-photon for bone scan imaging. Monitoring of osteosarcoma radiation treatment effectiveness was performed with bone, CT, MRI and PET/CT fusion imaging. Bone scan and PET/CT improved in 5 out of 9 and 16 out of 18 osteosarcoma sites, respectively. 153Sm-EDTMP targets multiple sites of disease, with a single administration. Side effects of 153Sm-EDTMP (0.5-2.5 mCi/kg) have been minimal and include transient thrombocytopenia and neutropenia. 153Sm-EDTMP can be combined with radiation therapy, bisphosphonates and/or chemotherapy to synergistically improve palliation. This article reviews the rationale, indications and monitoring of standard-dose samarium and investigational high-dose 153Sm-EDTMP treatment of cancer involving bone.
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PMID:Samarium for osteoblastic bone metastases and osteosarcoma. 1685 31


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