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Query: UMLS:C0029463 (
osteosarcoma
)
16,637
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Moloney murine sarcoma virus (M-MSV) was injected directly into the fetuses of Sprague-Dawley rats during the late stage of gestation and into the neonates within 24 hours after birth. Ninety rats developed 188 neoplastic lesions during the 8-week period of observation. Nearly all of the neoplasms were of mesenchymal derivation. Sixty percent of these neoplasms revealed more complex histologic features than those previously reported for neoplasms induced in rodents with M-MSV and were designated "malignant mesenchymoma" which developed preferentially in the proximal parts of the extremities, distant from the inoculation site.
Rhabdomyosarcoma
and
osteosarcoma
which developed in a pure form at the various sites were the next most common tumor type.
Osteosarcoma
developing in a pure form and as a component of malignant mesenchymoma in the humerus and femur was comparable to that of juxtacortical
osteosarcoma
of man; The development of excessive bones were observed in the forelimb and/or hind leg, suggesting a type of skeletal malformation. The reaction to M-MSV merits attention as a model for the study of an
osteosarcoma
and malignant mesenchymoma as well as rhabdomyosarcoma and also for the study of viral teratogenesis in man, as "rubella syndrome".
...
PMID:Pathology of neoplasms and other lesions induced in rats with Moloney murine sarcoma virus. 26 56
Rhabdomyosarcoma
usually presents as a soft tissue mass, which may invade adjacent bone. However, the patient presents occasionally with bony metastases. Recognition of these is important for staging and management. Fifty-eight cases have been reviewed; 14 of these had local bone invasion by the soft tissue tumour. All bones involvel were flat bones; 12 showed permeated bone destruction and two showed geographic destruction. Bone expansion was seen in half the involved bones. Twelve of the 58 cases showed secondary bone deposits, which were the presenting feature in five. Although 10 cases had permeated bone destruction, two were very well defined with a wide range of radiological appearances. The radiological differential diagnosis includes neuroblastoma, leukaemic infiltration, lymphoma, histiocytosis X, solitary and multifocal
osteosarcoma
and other deposits.
...
PMID:The radiology of bone changes in rhabdomyosarcoma. 62 1
Oral rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) was studied by analysis of eight such cases which presented over a 25-year period.
Rhabdomyosarcoma
was the fourth most common oral sarcoma (7.5%) from this period after
osteosarcoma
(32%), fibrosarcoma (19%), and chondrosarcoma (9%). In patients younger than 20 years, RMS was the second most common sarcoma (six cases) after
osteosarcoma
(ten cases). Combined analysis with 113 further cases documented in the literature showed the majority of cases (71.2%) were embryonal. The alveolar subtype was considered a distant second in frequency (12.3%) even though the pleomorphic subtype was apparently more common (16.4%). However, the pleomorphic cases were diagnosed before histologic criteria were established to discern this entity from other pleomorphic sarcomas and this data is probably unreliable. Site predilections were found for the soft palate, maxillary sinus and alveolus, posterior mandibular region, cheek and lip and possibly tongue. The gingiva and floor of mouth were uncommon sites. There was a predilection for occurrence in the first two decades with a decline in the third decade. Documentation of recent cases treated with a multidisciplinary approach indicated that lesions in the oral soft tissues have a good prognosis; 17 of 21 such cases showed no evidence of disease after a mean follow-up period of 7.2 years (SD = 4.4). In contrast, four of five cases in the posterior mandible resulted in death after a mean period of 1.1 years (SD = 0.3).
...
PMID:Rhabdomyosarcoma of the oral and paraoral region. 264 20
Marked dissimilarities in the epidemiology of
osteosarcoma
, Ewing's tumor, and rhabdomyosarcoma indicate differences in their origins. A major clue to the genesis of Ewing's tumor comes not from defining persons at high risk but from the observation that blacks are at unusually low risk. The neoplasm does not aggregate in families and is not part of any known syndrome. No environmental causes have been identified. By contrast,
osteosarcoma
may be caused by external or internal ionizing radiation, and it aggregated in families with the same tumor or with dissimilar tumors and in certain genetic disorders of bone. In man and in dogs, the frequency of the neoplasm is related to bone mass and growth.
Rhabdomyosarcoma
of the upper versus the lower limbs seems related to muscle mass. Age peaks in the occurrence of the tumor elsewhere vary with the anatomic site; head and neck tumors develop in early childhood and urogenital tumors both in early years and in adolescence. The sex ratio (male to female) also varies with the site affected.
Rhabdomyosarcoma
aggregates with certain other tumors in families and overlaps with
osteosarcoma
in some of these relationships but is distinguished from that tumor by its excessive occurrence in neurofibromatosis.
...
PMID:Contrasting epidemiology of childhood osteosarcoma, Ewing's tumor, and rhabdomyosarcoma. 702
The early occurrence of five cases of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) in children treated for primary rhabdomyosarcoma on the Intergroup
Rhabdomyosarcoma
Study III (IRS III) has prompted this report. These patients received cyclophosphamide and four received etoposide in addition to other agents. There were 1,062 eligible patients entered on IRS III between 1984 and 1991. Following surgery, treatment consisted of multiagent chemotherapy and radiotherapy in select clinical groups. Median follow-up time is 3.7 years (range 0-7.4 years). Incidence densities and odds ratios for AML were calculated for various treatment groups. Five cases of secondary AML have been reported through August 1992. A single case of
osteogenic sarcoma
was reported in the same period and a patient with myelodysplastic syndrome has occurred since that time. Median time to development of AML was 39 months. Incidence density of AML for patients receiving neither cyclophosphamide nor etoposide was 0, for those receiving cyclophosphamide but no etoposide it was 7.6, and when both agents were given, it was 51.6. The odds ratios of AML for the latter two groups indicated a risk of AML which was seven times higher in the patients who received both agents. A history of breast cancer was present in all five families of patients with AML and several other cancers had occurred in three families. Preliminary analysis suggests a possible causal role for low-dose etoposide in addition to that assumed for cyclophosphamide in the early development of AML among pediatric patients treated for rhabdomyosarcoma.
...
PMID:Acute myeloid leukemia in patients treated for rhabdomyosarcoma with cyclophosphamide and low-dose etoposide on Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Study III: an interim report. 820 48
We reviewed patients with primary soft tissue and bone sarcomas treated in our department. Malignant tumors arising in somatic, connective, soft tissues, especially those of the head and neck, are uncommon and few reports have been published. Between 1980 and 1995 15 patients with head and neck sarcoma were seen. The major sites involved included: paranasal sinuses and orbits (2 patients), neck (4) and 1 each in the forehead, temporal region, mandible, parapharyngeal space, tongue, hypopharynx, larynx, cervico-mediastinal region and nasal cavity. Follow-up ranged from 1-16 years. The youngest patient was a 12-year-old male.
Rhabdomyosarcoma
, one of the most common mesenchymal tumors found in the head and neck, especially in children, was excluded from our study because of its different clinical behavior and its chemosensitivity, unlike other sarcomas. Most of our patients were treated with wide-field resection; 12 received postoperative radiation, and 3 combined surgery and chemotherapy. Wide excision with negative margins is considered an important, positive, prognostic factor, as the extent and adequacy of excision largely determines survival and the incidence of local recurrence. All our patients underwent initial, wide, local excision of the lesion. Our observations strongly suggest that wide resection is the most effective means of therapy for sarcoma of the head and neck. Radical neck dissection was not only performed for manifest regional neck metastases, but was also used for completing the enlarged, wide-excisions of liposarcomas. The worst survival was in patients with
osteosarcoma
, angiosarcoma and fibrosarcoma, with an absolute 5-year survival of 60% (9/15).
...
PMID:[Head and neck sarcoma]. 879 75
The four national paediatric cancer clinical trials organisations in the United States--the Children's Cancer Group, the National Wilms' Tumor Study Group, the Intergroup
Rhabdomyosarcoma
Study Group and the Pediatric Oncology Group--were formed in 1955, 1969, 1972 and 1979, respectively. Together, the Children's Cancer Group and Pediatric Oncology Group serve as a national registry of nearly all childhood cancers in the United States, provide a national network of communication for researchers, care providers and families of paediatric patients with malignant disease and conduct laboratory investigations and clinical trials of new treatments of cancers in infants, children, adolescents and young adults. Nearly 95% of patients with cancer in the United States who are below 15 years of age are registered by the Children's Cancer Group and the Pediatric Oncology Group and more than half of American children with cancer are entered into at least one trial by a paediatric group. Improved survival of children receiving treatment according to well-defined protocols in specialised children's centres, in contrast to children who received treatment outside of these centres, has been shown for those with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia, lymphoma, Wilms' tumour, medulloblastoma, rhabdomyosarcoma and Ewing's sarcoma. By the year 2000, the overall cure rate for United States children and adolescents with cancer should exceed 85%. To reach this goal, the way forward will depend on international collaboration, implementation of global harmonisation, prevention of the erosion of biomedical research and clinical trials by the managed health care industry, increased public and private financial support and continued recruitment into paediatric oncology of brilliant and dedicated young investigators. The specific challenges ahead include: (1) transferring the knowledge, methodologies and technologies to countries that are less fortunate; (2) conducting multinational clinical trials in conjunction with paediatric cooperative groups in other countries; (3) accessing older adolescent patients who currently do not participate in cooperative group trials; (4) merging clinical trials by adult collaborative groups that overlap with the paediatric groups, as in acute lymphoblastic leukaemia, acute myelogenous leukaemia, Hodgkin's disease,
osteosarcoma
and germ cell tumours; (5) establishing a stable source of funding for national and international cooperative paediatric cancer clinical trials; (6) creating an informatics system that can link paediatric cooperative group operation centres around the world, and the institutions within each collaborative group; and (7) securing the support of the insurance industry and government in covering clinical trials.
...
PMID:The U.S. pediatric cancer clinical trials programmes: international implications and the way forward. 933 87
The use of fine-needle aspiration biopsy (FNAB) in the initial evaluation of pediatric bone and soft tissue tumors is controversial, especially for those patients being considered for histiogenetic-specific therapeutic protocols, e.g., the Intergroup
Rhabdomyosarcoma
Study Group, the Pediatric Oncology Group. We retrospectively reviewed 33 consecutive FNAB specimens (28 primary tumors, 5 metastases) from 32 pediatric patients (< or = 19 yr of age), none of whom had a previously established tumor diagnosis. In one patient, FNAB of the primary tumor and a presumed axillary metastasis were obtained concomitantly. The cytomorphologic analysis included
osteosarcoma
, eight patients; rhabdomyosarcoma, five; neuroblastoma, five; Ewing's sarcoma/primitive neuroectodermal tumor, four; Langerhans' cell histiocytosis, three; and one each synovial sarcoma, undifferentiated sarcoma, infantile myofibromatosis, fibroma, chondroblastoma, chondromyxoid fibroma, and desmoplastic small round-cell tumor. Ancillary studies, e.g., immunocytochemical analysis, were used in 13 cases. Cytogenetic analysis helped to confirm one Ewing's sarcoma [t (11;22) (q24;q12)] and one synovial sarcoma [t(X;18) (p11;q11)]. With adequate FNAB specimens, a histogenetic-specific diagnosis was rendered in 27 (93%) of 29 cases, and all were correctly recognized as either benign or malignant. One case each of Langerhans' cell histiocytosis, chondroblastoma, and infantile myofibromatosis yielded unsatisfactory specimens. Fibroma and desmoplastic small round-cell tumor were initially misclassified as nodular fasciitis and rhabdomyosarcoma, respectively. Of 18 patients clinically eligible for histogenetic-specific therapy protocols, an accurate diagnosis was obtained in 17 patients. With a multidisciplinary approach and judicious use of ancillary studies, FNAB represents a highly accurate and cost-effective technique for the diagnosis of pediatric bone and soft tissue tumors, especially sarcomas, and should be considered as a viable diagnostic technique for pediatric therapeutic protocols.
...
PMID:The role of fine-needle aspiration biopsy in the initial diagnosis of pediatric bone and soft tissue tumors: an institutional experience. 979 16
Primary cardiac malignancies are rare tumors that are difficult to diagnose clinically. Different primary cardiac malignancies may have different clinical, morphologic, and radiologic features and intracardiac locations. Angiosarcoma is the most common primary cardiac malignancy. It tends to occur in the right atrium and involve the pericardium. Because of its tendency to hemorrhage, angiosarcoma often demonstrates areas of increased signal intensity with T1-weighted sequences. Undifferentiated sarcomas typically occur in the left atrium and have variable epidemiologic and radiologic features.
Rhabdomyosarcoma
is the most common primary cardiac malignancy in children and is more likely than other primary cardiac sarcomas to involve the valves. Primary cardiac
osteogenic sarcoma
almost always occurs in the left atrium and frequently demonstrates calcification. Certain features (eg, broad base of attachment, origin at a site other than the atrial septum) help differentiate this tumor from left atrial myxoma. Leiomyosarcoma favors the left atrium and tends to invade the pulmonary veins and mitral valve. Fibrosarcoma also tends to occur in the left atrium and is often necrotic. Liposarcoma is very rare and usually manifests as a large, infiltrating mass. Foci of macroscopic fat are occasionally seen. Primary cardiac lymphoma occurs more commonly in immunocompromised patients, frequently involves the pericardium, and, unlike other primary cardiac malignancies, may respond to chemotherapy. The advent of cross-sectional imaging has allowed earlier detection of primary cardiac malignancies as well as more accurate diagnosis and characterization.
...
PMID:CT and MR imaging of primary cardiac malignancies. 1055 66
There is a wide range of malignant tumours with an embryonic origin that can affect children in their early childhood including
Rhabdomyosarcoma
,
Osteosarcoma
, Chloroma, Retinoblastoma and neuroblastoma. Different protocols have been developed over the past years to treat these tumours and different combinations of radiotherapy, surgery and chemotherapy were used. This improved the survival rate considerably. This treatment has a marked effect on growth of soft and hard tissues in the affected regions of the head and face, leading to facial and dental abnormalities that become evident with growth. The great effect of radiotherapy and chemotherapy on craniofacial skeletal growth should be considered in all cases undergoing treatment for tumours. The resulting dental and maxillofacial abnormalities should be expected in all cases and its management require involvement of different members of the medical team including maxillofacial surgeon, restorative dentist, orthodontist, psychologist, dietician, speech therapist, the patient and the parents in order to achieve maximum results. This paper presents four patients who underwent radiotherapy and chemotherapy for treatment of embryonic tumours and discusses the main side effects of the treatment.
...
PMID:Dental and maxillofacial abnormalities following treatment of malignant tumours in children. 1516 92
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