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Query: UMLS:C0029463 (
osteosarcoma
)
16,637
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Computed tomography has been found to be a more accurate diagnostic tool in the analysis of
brain metastases
than radionuclide scanning. Of 1,100 patients studied by CT scan, 57 showed evidence of intracerebral metastasis, and 14 showed evidence of hydrocephalus. Density levels below that of normal brain tissue were found in cases of metastases from the lung (13), breast (7), melanoma (4), kidney (3), lymphoma (3), and nasopharynx (1); levels above normal were found in cases of metastases from melanoma (8), lung (3), colon (3), chorionic carcinoma (2),
osteogenic sarcoma
(1), and kidney (1).
...
PMID:Computed tomography in metastatic disease of the brain. 94
The pathologic material from 56 patients diagnosed initially as Ewing's sarcoma of the distal extremity and treated on National Cancer Institute protocols between 1968 and 1984 was reviewed and correlated with clinical outcome. Histologically, the tumors were categorized, based on recent pathologic criteria, into three diagnostic groups: (1) typical Ewing's sarcoma, (2) atypical Ewing's sarcoma, and (3) other (predominantly peripheral neuroepithelioma [PN]). Thirty-two patients (57%) had typical Ewing's, 13 (23%) were atypical, and 11 (20%) were in the "other" diagnostic category (seven [13%] PN, two primitive rhabdomyosarcoma, one primitive sarcoma of bone, and one synovial cell sarcoma). No cases of metastatic neuroblastoma,
osteosarcoma
, or lymphoma were found. Forty-five patients had localized disease at diagnosis; 11 had metastases. Patients with typical Ewing's sarcoma were less likely to have metastatic disease at the time of diagnosis. Only two of 32 patients with typical Ewing's sarcoma had metastases compared with nine of 24 patients in the two other groups. The pattern of relapse was also different in these other groups compared with typical Ewing's patients; five patients developed lymph node metastases and two patients developed
brain metastases
. Although the presence of metastatic disease at diagnosis was a strong negative prognostic factor, our histologic grouping was independently prognostic of clinical outcome in patients with localized disease. Patients with typical osseous Ewing's sarcoma had an improved overall survival (P2 = 0.03) and patients with other tumors (neither typical nor atypical Ewing's sarcoma) had a poorer disease-free survival (P2 = 0.02). Since no generally accepted histopathologic prognostic criteria exist for Ewing's sarcoma, the potential value of our proposed classification should be evaluated in a larger retrospective and a prospective study.
...
PMID:Prognostic value of histopathology in Ewing's sarcoma. Long-term follow-up of distal extremity primary tumors. 198 13
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
Ifosfamide was given to 61 patients with malignant solid tumors diagnosed before the age of 21 years. In this phase II study, all patients received 1.6 g/m2/day X 5 iv over 15 minutes followed by mesna at a dose of 400 mg/m2 iv at 15 minutes and 4 and 6 hours after ifosfamide. Responses were observed in five of 15 patients with
osteosarcoma
, two of ten with neuroblastoma, two of six with Wilms' tumor, two of five with rhabdomyosarcoma, four of eight with other soft tissue sarcomas, one of one with retinoblastoma, one of two with germ cell tumors, one of one with B-cell lymphoma, and one of one with a primitive neuroectodermal tumor. Fifty-nine of 61 patients had received prior alkylating agent therapy which included cyclophosphamide, cisplatin, mechlorethamine, melphalan, or dacarbazine. Fourteen of 19 responses developed in patients whose tumors were resistant to treatment with cyclophosphamide. A patient with malignant Schwannoma who had received no prior chemotherapy developed a complete response which lasted 12 months. A patient with
brain metastases
of
osteosarcoma
has had complete response for greater than 2 years. Complete response was also observed in a patient with B-cell lymphoma. Toxicity consisted of mild to moderate nausea and vomiting, transient reversible myelosuppression, occasional elevation of serum BUN or creatinine, and transient neurotoxicity characterized by somnolence, confusion, weakness, tremor, hallucinations, or seizures. We conclude that ifosfamide is an important alkylating agent without apparent complete cross-resistance with cyclophosphamide, and as such should be further investigated for determination of its activity in patients with pediatric neoplasms and considered for incorporation into phase II-III trials for certain tumors.
...
PMID:Phase II trial of ifosfamide in children with malignant solid tumors. 310 34
Brain metastasis is uncommon in
osteosarcoma
, but this may be changing with prolonged patient survival in the modern chemotherapy era. We present 5 patients with
brain metastases
out of 39 with lung metastasis (13%) in a total of 87
osteosarcoma
patients. The clinical manifestations of
brain metastases
were catastrophic: massive hemorrhage in 2 and status epilepticus in 3. Metastases were single or multiple, and some were osteoblastic. Surgical intervention in 2 cases resulted in dramatic, though transient, clinical improvement. We advocate periodic neuroradiology screening in
osteosarcoma
patients with lung metastases, for early detection of brain involvement.
...
PMID:Brain metastases in osteosarcoma: incidence, clinical and neuroradiological findings and management options. 316 12
Five patients with nonlymphomatous sarcoma metastatic to the brain are presented and the literature reviewed. In 50 patients, brain metastasis was verified pathologically and some case data were available, including the five reported here. In five patients, there was pathologic verification but no case data. Thirty-nine other patients were found without such verification. Reportedly, most types of sarcomas are able to metastasize to the brain, and are represented in these 94 patients. Fibrosarcoma and alveolar soft-part sarcoma tumors metastasize to the brain without regard to treatment technique. There may be a group of tumors, including malignant fibrous histiocytoma, rhabdomyosarcoma, and perhaps leiomyosarcoma and
osteosarcoma
, in which the incidence of
brain metastases
has increased with improved sarcoma chemotherapy (CT). In this group particularly, but also in alveolar soft-part sarcoma and others, the presence of lung metastases may increase the probability of brain metastasis occurring subsequently.
...
PMID:Sarcoma metastatic to the brain. 327 83
We reviewed the records of 31 children under the age of 21 years with parenchymal
brain metastases
diagnosed by CT scan (13 patients) or necropsy (18).
Brain metastases
were found in 18 of 139 (13%) children with solid tumors in whom complete postmortem examinations were done.
Osteogenic sarcoma
and rhabdomyosarcoma were the most frequent primary tumors causing
brain metastases
in patients younger than 15 years, and testicular germ cell tumor, from age 15 to 21 years. Evidence of intratumoral hemorrhage was found in 50% of autopsy cases. Pulmonary metastases were present in 28 of 31 (90%). The median interval from recognition of pulmonary metastases to the development of
brain metastases
was 10 months. No patient had evidence of
brain metastases
at diagnosis of the systemic cancer. In only one patient was the brain the only site of relapse. Following detection of
brain metastases
, the median survival was seven months in six patients who underwent surgery and whole-brain radiation therapy and four months in 15 given radiotherapy (3000 rads) alone. Patients with relatively radioresistant
brain metastases
may benefit from surgical excision or higher doses of radiation, or both.
...
PMID:Brain metastases in children. 662 15
We report on 21 patients surgically treated for intraparenchymal brain metastasis from sarcoma, including six osteosarcomas, four leiomyosarcomas, three malignant fibrous histiocytomas, two alveolar soft-part sarcomas, two Ewing's bone sarcomas, one extraskeletal
osteosarcoma
, one extraskeletal Ewing's sarcoma, and two unclassified sarcomas. Median survival after craniotomy was 11.8 months. Patients with a preoperative Karnofsky performance score of > 70 survived for 15.7 versus 6.6 months for those with a Karnofsky performance score < or = 70. Patients. undergoing complete resection survived 14.0 versus 6.2 months for patients undergoing incomplete resection. Patients with evidence of lung metastases at the time of surgery survived 11.8 months, which was similar to the 10.5-month survival for patients with disease limited to the brain. The two patients with alveolar soft-part sarcoma are alive at 16 and 25 months after surgery. We conclude that surgery is effective in treating selected patients with sarcoma metastatic to the brain and that patients with metastasis from alveolar soft-part sarcoma may have a relatively good prognosis if they are surgically treated. The complete removal of all
brain metastases
and a Karnofsky performance score > 70 are associated with a favorable prognosis, whereas the presence of concurrent lung metastases is not a contraindication to surgery.
...
PMID:Sarcoma metastatic to the brain: results of surgical treatment. 796 24
We report a case of femoral
osteosarcoma
with
brain metastases
in a female patient with longstanding von Recklinghausen disease.
Osteosarcoma
of a long bone has not yet, to our best knowledge, been reported in association with type I Neurofibromatosis. Central nervous system metastases occur very rarely in
osteosarcoma
.
...
PMID:[The rare metastasis of osteosarcoma of a long bone associated with von Recklinghausen's neurofibromatosis]. 807 7
We report the case of a patient in whom brain MR imaging was requested for initial symptoms of intracranial hypertension. The presence of multiple intracranial hemorrhagic lesions suggested
brain metastases
. Body screening showed periosteal
osteosarcoma
of the left fibula with no lung metastases, but with a patent foramen ovale which probably allowed neoplastic cells to reach the brain without being filtered through the lungs. The conclusion of this study was that a left-right cardiac communication is to be considered in cases of isolated
brain metastases
from
osteosarcoma
.
...
PMID:Isolated brain metastases of osteosarcoma in a patient presenting with a patent foramen ovale. 908 59
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