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Query: UMLS:C0029463 (
osteosarcoma
)
16,637
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 19-year-old woman with a diagnosis of
osteosarcoma
was initially treated with amputation of her right leg and adjuvant adriamycin. She developed pulmonary metastases 18 months following diagnosis. She was then given cis-dichlorodiammineplatinum(II) (
DDP
) at a dose of 100 mg/m2 iv approximately every 4 weeks as the sole drug. Following the fifth dose of
DDP
, she complained of numbness and tingling in her hands and leg. A distal sensory loss extending to both elbows and her remaining knee was found on examination. Nerve conduction tests were compatible with peripheral neuropathy of the "glove and stocking" type.
DDP
was withheld and her sensory loss improved over the next 2 months, but became worse after another course of
DDP
was administered. The temporal relationship between the findings and the administration of
DDP
implicates this drug as the causative agent in the peripheral neuropathy.
...
PMID:Peripheral neuropathy as a complication of cis-dichlorodiammineplatinum(II) treatment: a case report. 20 27
Cis-dichlorodiammine platinum (II) (
DDP
) is the salt of a heavy metal with a wide spectrum of antineoplastic activity. Its toxicity is multisystem and similar to that of other heavy metals, including lead and thallium. A young man being treated with primary adjuvant Adriamycin and
DDP
for
osteogenic sarcoma
is described who developed a gingival line which temporally was related to
DDP
administration. Although not chemically or histologically analyzed, we believe this to be a new finding related to
DDP
which corresponds to the lead line of plumbism and other heavy metal intoxication.
...
PMID:The gingival platinum line: a new finding following cis-dichlorodiammine platinum (II) treatment. 29 74
Eight patients with advanced metastatic osteogenic sarcoma were treated with cis-dichlorodiammineplatinum(II) (
DDP
). Prior to
DDP
, seven patients had amputations and all had received adjuvant adriamycin (ADR) therapy. In addition, prior to
DDP
, six patients had received high-dose methotrexate. There was one complete response (pulmonary metastases) and four partial responses (three metastases in the lungs and one in the bone). One additional patient, with local recurrence of
osteogenic sarcoma
of the mandible following initial resection and adjuvant ADR, was retreated with surgery and
DDP
and is disease-free for greater than 3 years. The cumulative dose ranged from 300 to 660 mg/m2. Toxicity included irreversible kidney damage in two patients, transient severe hematologic suppression in two patients, and nausea and vomiting in all patients.
DDP
is a new effective agent in the treatment of
osteogenic sarcoma
.
...
PMID:cis-Dichlorodiammineplatinum (II) in advanced osteogenic sarcoma. 34 12
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
Osteosarcoma
includes several distinct varieties. It is therefore essential to rely upon a very specialized pathologist. It is necessary to stage the tumor and to histologically define the oncologic quality of the surgical removal (surgical margins). The limb salvage surgery in
osteosarcoma
involves several areas of risk: the biopsy, the extension of the tumor in the marrow spaces and canal, the impingement or plugging of the vessels by the tumor, the invasion of the joint tissues, the contamination of the joint space and/or soft tissue compartments. The reconstruction after bone segmental resection involves many problems, including long-lasting prostheses, bone bank, microsurgical techniques--the preoperative chemotherapy dramatically reduced the need for amputation, in favour of conservative surgery. A good response to chemotherapy (almost total necrosis of the tumor), is the most important factor correlated with a favorable prognosis. The more recent protocols aim to increase the tumor response and the survival rate through a very intense primary chemotherapy, using Adriamycin, high-dose Methotrexate,
Cisplatin
and Ifosfamide.
...
PMID:[Osteosarcoma]. 141 68
Sixteen dogs, given adjuvant cisplatin chemotherapy after amputation for
osteogenic sarcoma
of the appendicular skeleton, had a median survival time of 413 days. Ten dogs (62%) were alive 1 year after amputation. Dogs were given cisplatin at a dosage of 50 mg/m2 of body surface every 4 weeks for a total of 6 cisplatin treatments, or until metastatic disease was detected.
Cisplatin
chemotherapy was well-tolerated by most dogs, with only 1 dog developing serious gastrointestinal toxicosis, requiring hospitalization. Results of this study support other investigators' findings that when a cisplatin chemotherapy-based protocol is administered, survival times after amputation can be prolonged for dogs with
osteogenic sarcoma
.
...
PMID:Osteogenic sarcoma and cisplatin chemotherapy in dogs: 16 cases (1986-1989). 174 12
Fundamental concepts of combination multi-drug chemotherapy have not been well recognized from the aspects of chemo-sensitivity test upon malignant tumors. A chemo-sensitivity test by in-vitro bioassay for Dunn
osteosarcoma
and NR fibrosarcoma was developed by us to study the simultaneous interactions between two anticancerous agents. 0.1 ml of cell suspension of either mouse sarcoma was immersed in 0.4 ml of RPMI 1640 cell culture medium containing an anticancerous agent such as Mitomycin (MC), Cyclophosphamide (CPM), Vincristine (VC), Bleomycin (BM), 5-FU, Adriamycin (ADM),
Cisplatin
(CDDP) or Methotrexate (MTX) in a test-tube, and incubated at 37 degrees C for 3 or 6 hours. Then, the sedimented cell suspension of 0.1 ml was inoculated subcutaneously in the dorsum of C3H mouse which provided 4 sites for 4 different sensitivity tests. In 3 weeks, sensitivities of the anticancerous agents were evaluated as positive sensitivity if no growth of the tumor was observed, or negative sensitivity if the growth of more than 10 mm in diameter was observed. Then, the determination of antitumorous effect on 2-drug combination out of the 8 anticancerous agents, were performed on each mouse sarcoma by the same method. In Dunn
osteosarcoma
or NR fibrosarcoma, the combination of 2 sensitivity-positive agents revealed no apparent synergistic effects. In any combinations of one sensitivity-positive agent with the other sensitivity-negative agent, except the combinations with CPM which possessed mighty antitumorous effect, apparent reduction of antitumorous effects was observed. The combination of 2 sensitivity-negative agents never produced any antitumorous effects.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Consideration of simultaneous combination chemotherapy--employing a sensitivity test in Dunn osteosarcoma and NR fibrosarcoma by intra-test tube contact of tumor cell suspension, and subcutaneous inoculation]. 207 88
Canine appendicular
osteosarcoma
is a highly malignant primary bone cancer that closely resembles the same disease in humans. Although amputation alone usually controls local disease, metastatic cancer is common and is the cause of death or euthanasia in 90% of dogs by 1 year.
Cisplatin
(+/- doxorubicin) chemotherapy appears to improve survival time in dogs; however, metastatic cancer remains a problem. Pulmonary metastasectomy may prolong survival in carefully selected dogs. Limb-sparing, although involved and potentially fraught with complications, can result in local disease control and a functional, pain-free limb in selected dogs without adversely affecting their survival. Studies are ongoing to improve local disease control with limb-sparing and improve disease-free survival in dogs with appendicular
osteosarcoma
. In conclusion, dogs with
osteosarcoma
were previously thought to have a hopeless prognosis, but the outlook is beginning to appear more optimistic. Limb-sparing in dogs is still evolving; however, it is possible in selected cases to optimize survival and preserve limb function.
...
PMID:Management of canine appendicular osteosarcoma. 219 34
In
osteosarcoma
, intraarterial (IA) administration of systemic treatment has been advocated to improve local tumor response preparing for, or even obviating, definitive surgery. Because data from the literature did not unequivocally support the local superiority of IA infusion, a comparative study was started in 1986. Preoperative chemotherapy consisted of 45 mg/m2 of doxorubicin on days 1 and 2; 12 g/m2 of high-dose methotrexate on days 15 and 22; and 3 g/m2 of ifosfamide on days 29, 30, 50, and 51 followed on days 31 and 52 by intravenous (IV) versus IA tourniquet infusion of cisplatin (
DDP
). A strict randomization of patients was not feasible. A balanced distribution of risk factors was strived for by stratifying and allocating the appropriate patients centrally. The infusion time was prolonged from 1 to 5 hours in the IV group, and the
DDP
dose was reduced from 150 to 120 mg/m2 in both arms when intolerable ototoxicity became apparent. A multivariate analysis was performed to exclude a bias on the response rates from risk factor distribution and from modifications of
DDP
infusion time and dosage. The overall fraction of histologic good responders (greater than 90% necrosis) was not found to be different after IA versus IV treatment (34/50 [68%] vs. 41/59 [69%]). Intraarterial instead of IV use of
DDP
within an aggressive systemic treatment does not seem to improve the local tumor response.
...
PMID:Effect of intraarterial versus intravenous cisplatin in addition to systemic doxorubicin, high-dose methotrexate, and ifosfamide on histologic tumor response in osteosarcoma (study COSS-86). 220 24
Eleven patients with primary
osteosarcoma
were treated by intra-arterial infusion of cisplatin.
Cisplatin
(50-100 mg/m2) was infused slowly into tumor feeding artery or proximal-to-the-lesion artery. An antidote, sodium thiosulfate, was also administered intravenously in 10 cases and angiotensin II was simultaneously used in 2 cases. Symptoms of heat sensation and local pain were decreased or disappeared in almost all cases and histopathologic changes were observed in 7 cases. No viable tumor cells were seen in 3 cases.
...
PMID:[A clinical study of intraarterial infusion therapy with CDDP for primary osteosarcoma]. 229 38
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