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)

Fifteen patients with osteogenic sarcoma receiving high-dose methotrexate chemotherapy were studied in a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of oral and smoked delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) as an antiemetic. Each patient served as his or her own control. Fourteen of 15 patients had a reduction in nausea and vomiting on THC as compared to placebo. Delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol was significantly more effective than placebo in reducing the number of vomiting and retching episodes, degree of nausea, duration of nausea, and volume of emesis (P less than 0.001). There was a 72% incidence of nausea and vomiting on placebo. When plasma THC concentrations measured less than 5.0 ng/mL, 5.0 to 10.0 ng/mL, and greater than 10.0 ng/mL, the incidences of nausea and vomiting were 44%, 21%, and 6%, respectively. Delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol appears to have significant antiemetic properties when compared with placebo in patients receiving high-dose methotrexate.
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PMID:Delata-9-tetrahydrocannabinol as an antiemetic in cancer patients receiving high-dose methotrexate. A prospective, randomized evaluation. 29 41

Results of treatment for osteosarcoma of the extremity have been poor with metastases usually causing death within 2 years following diagnosis. Because of the great risk of development of metastases, 20 patients have received adjuvant chemotherapy with Adriamycin, cyclophosphamide and high-dose methotrexate-leucovorin rescue for up to 12 months following amputation for osteosarcoma. Sixteen of these patients are surviving; 11 are free of evident tumor from 6 to 34 months following amputation. Five patients were found to have pulmonary metastases while receiving chemotherapy and three patients developed metastases following completion of chemotherapy. One patient died following her third treatment with high-dose methotrexate-leucorovin rescue. Other toxicity included nausea, vomiting, mucosal ulcerations, infections, hematologic abnormalities, changes in kidney and liver functions tests, and minor coagulation abnormalities. The natural history of osteosarcoma may have been modified by the use of these agents for periods exceeding the median time to predicted detection of pulmonary metastases. Microscopic metastases of some patients were eradicated by this adjuvant chemotherapy. For patients who developed metastases, these metastases were delayed in their time of detection and in their number at the time of detection.
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PMID:Adjuvant multiple drug chemotherapy for osteosarcoma of the extremity. 29 29

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).
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PMID:Combination chemotherapy with adramycin (NSC-123127) and dimethyl triazeno imidazole carboxamide (DTIC) (NSC-45388) in children with metastatic solid tumors. 95 60

The interim results of the use of high-dose methotrexate with leucovorin rescue for the treatment of 26 patients with osteogenic sarcoma are discussed. Preoperative chemotherapy was followed by marked regression of primary tumor in one out of seven patients with localized disease. In that group, metastasis-free period lasted 2, 3, 10+, 12, 17+ and 24+ months. Response was observed in two out of 19 (10.6%) cases of metastases. Toxic side-effects were moderate and were mainly nausea (38.5% of patients), vomiting (26.9%), elevation of serum transaminase levels (38.5%) and fever (30.7% of cases).
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PMID:[The results of using high-dose methotrexate in treating osteogenic sarcoma]. 237 85

We treated 14 patients with high grade sarcomas by angiotensin II-induced hypertension chemotherapy. The chemotherapy protocol described by Rosen was selected according to histological classification of sarcomas (small cell sarcoma, spindle cell sarcoma, pleomorphic sarcoma). The level of angiotensin-induced hypertension was one and half times as high as blood pressure at rest. Induced hypertension was maintained for 30-60 minutes. In three cases of 5 primary osteosarcomas, induced hypertension resulted in the increase of tumor stain and/or vascularity angiographically, and chemotherapeutic effects were CR or PR. The six cases with soft-tissue sarcomas were 2 cases each of CR, PR, and NC. The decrease of relative tumor blood flow under the condition of angiotensin II-induced hypertension was detected in 5 cases of 6 soft-tissue sarcomas by 133Xe clearance method. In the case of rhabdomyosarcoma, the decrease of tumor stain and vascularity by induced hypertension was observed on angiogram. As the side effects accompanying induced hypertension, nausea and chest oppression were noted in 2 cases, respectively. In this study it was suggested that angiotensin II-induced hypertension chemotherapy was effective for osteosarcoma, but that it might be ineffective for soft-tissue sarcomas.
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PMID:[Angiotensin II-induced hypertension chemotherapy of bone and soft-tissue sarcomas]. 254 22

Twenty previously treated patients with advanced bone sarcomas received thrice weekly im 50 X 10(6) IU/m2 doses of human alfa-interferon (interferon alfa-2a, recombinant; Roche). Seventeen patients had metastatic osteosarcomas and one each had fibrosarcoma, mesenchymal chondrosarcoma, and malignant fibrous histiocytoma. Two patients with osteosarcoma and the one with malignant fibrous histiocytoma experienced objective partial tumor regression for 1, 3, and 2 months, respectively. Fever, anorexia, myalgia, fatigue, lethargy, and moderate myelosuppression were observed commonly, and some patients developed mild nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea. No patient withdrew because of toxicity and no dose reductions were necessary except adjustments for changes in body surface area secondary to weight loss.
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PMID:Phase II study of recombinant alfa-2a interferon in patients with advanced bone sarcomas. 303 15

From January 1978 to May 1983, 41 patients with primary high-grade osteogenic osteosarcoma of a limb were treated with a combination of intensive chemotherapy and prophylactic lung irradiation (PLI) intercalated between the first two cycles of chemotherapy. The primary tumor was treated according to its size and location by amputation, resection, high-dose radiotherapy, and salvage amputation for a tumor progressing under radiotherapy. Two weeks after surgery or simultaneously with radiotherapy, a three-drug regimen (cycle A) consisting of mitomycin C on day 1, vincristine followed by a 6-hour infusion of methotrexate on day 2 was given. Folinic acid rescue was started 6 hours after the end of the methotrexate infusion. A PLI of 20 G was given from day 10 to 22. On day 28, a four-drug regimen (cycle B) combining doxorubicin on day 1, vincristine on day 2 and dacarbazine with cyclophosphamide on days 3 to 6 was administered. Thereafter, five additional cycles of A and B were administered provided that the absolute number of polymorphonuclear cells and platelets had recovered. When these values were not attained, treatment was delayed until recovery. After a mean follow-up of 60.6 months, 16 patients have developed distant metastases, associated in four cases with local recurrence. Sixteen patients have died: 15 with metastases, one with no evidence of disease (toxic death). The overall survival of the entire group is 66% and the continuously disease-free survival 58% at 5 years. Alopecia, nausea, vomiting, asthenia, anorexia, and infraclinical and reversible impairment of lung ventilatory function were universal. A noticeable hematologic toxicity also was seen. One toxic death occurred after a pulmonary infection. Two patients developed cardiomyopathy. A multiparametic analysis of prognostic factors shows the very significant influence of age on treatment outcome. The continuous disease-free survival among the 17 patients younger than 15 years is 41% compared to 79% in older patients. The prognostic influence of age was independent of other factors. The delay (for more than two cycles) of methotrexate administration was the second independent prognostic factor. These results raise the question of using different protocols of adjuvant chemotherapy for patients younger or older than 15 years in order to optimize the curability/toxicity ratio.
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PMID:Age and dose of chemotherapy as major prognostic factors in a trial of adjuvant therapy of osteosarcoma combining two alternating drug combinations and early prophylactic lung irradiation. French Bone Tumor Study Group. 312 57

From 1977 to 1982, 62 patients with various advanced malignant solid tumors were treated by HD-MTX-CFR therapy and totally 129 courses were given. Majority of the patients suffered from malignant lymphoma (10), osteogenic sarcoma (11), lung cancer (16), esophageal cancer (3), breast cancer (3) and malignant melanoma (4). All were confirmed by cytology or pathology except one primary liver cancer. There were clinically measurable lesions in 59 patients for evaluation of the treatment, and 3 osteogenic sarcoma patients without metastasis were given a postoperative adjuvant chemotherapy. 33 out of 62 had received chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy before. Dose of MTX ranged from 2 to 3 gm per course in most patients and dose of CF, from 9 to 12 mg every 6 hours for 3 days. 2 (3.4%) patients achieved complete remission (1 osteogenic sarcoma and 1 malignant lymphoma) and 8 (13.6%), partial remission (1 osteogenic sarcoma, 5 malignant lymphoma, 1 esophageal cancer and 1 breast cancer) with a total response rate of 15.9%. No response was observed in all 16 lung cancers. The main side effects of HD-MTX-CFR therapy were leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, elevation of SGPT, nausea, vomiting, mucositis, skin rash, fever and fatigue. All patients were followed more than 3 years. 4 patients are still alive (9, 9, 4 and 7 years, respectively), including 3 osteogenic sarcoma patients who received postoperative adjuvant chemotherapy and 1 mycosis fungoides.
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PMID:[High-dose methotrexate with citrovorum factor rescue (HD-MTX-CFR) in the treatment of malignant solid tumors--clinical analysis of 62 patients]. 326 85

The primary site of the metastasis of osteosarcoma is the lung. More than 90% of patients have died of pulmonary metastasis in one to two years. Control of osteosarcoma depend upon the prevention of its pulmonary metastasis. The introduction of chemotherapy consisting mainly of Adriamycin, high-dose methotrexate with Leucovorin rescue and Cisplatinum, dramatically improved the prognosis of osteosarcoma. In the past, when systemic chemotherapy was not available, the five-year survival rate was around 19%. In patients who receive chemotherapy with the current combination of chemotherapeutic agents (ADM, HD-MTX, VCR, CPM, CDDP), the incidence of pulmonary metastasis was low, and the five-year survival rate increased to 65%. In patients who receive chemotherapy, pulmonary metastasis may be either delayed, with a single metastasis appearing after termination of treatment (late isolated type), or early and multiple, emerging in reaction to treatment (early multiple type). It is generally accepted that post-operative chemotherapy can inhibit pulmonary micro metastasis and prove to be of great significance in improving the survival rate of patients with osteosarcoma of extremities and achieve limb salvage operation. On the other hand, effective control of the side effects of drug administration such as nausea, vomiting, alopecia, cardio (ADM) and renal (CDDP) toxicity and bone marrow suppression, is a problem that must be solved as soon as possible.
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PMID:[Significance of surgical adjuvant chemotherapy in osteosarcoma]. 349 46

In a prospective study, 18 evaluable patients with recurrent osteosarcoma were treated with ifosfamide, 1.8 g/m2 daily for 5 consecutive days. Courses were repeated every 4 weeks. Additional mesna (2-mercaptoethane sulfonate) was given to prevent urotoxicity. All patients had measurable lung deposits and all but one had been pretreated with various cytotoxic agents. Six patients (33%) showed therapeutic response, two complete and four partial, with a median duration of 5.5 months (range, 3-47+). Toxicity included myelosuppression, alopecia, nausea, and vomiting. No severe urotoxicity or central nervous system toxicity was observed. Thus, high-dose ifosfamide in combination with mesna seems to be a safe and effective agent for the chemotherapy of osteosarcoma.
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PMID:High-dose ifosfamide in advanced osteosarcoma. 385 82


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