Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0035412 (rhabdomyosarcoma)
6,156 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Moloney murine sarcoma virus (M-MSV) induces rapidly growing tumours in adult mice of most conventional strains. Rats are less susceptible to M-MSV oncogenesis, but the few rhabdomyosarcomas that do develop after viral inoculation of newborn animals closely resemble conventional malignancies: they develop after a long latency, grow progressively, and metastasize to regional lymph nodes and lungs. Southern blot analysis with a v-mos-specific probe of M-MSV-induced tumours in both species demonstrated an oligo-, monoclonal pattern of exogenous v-mos integration only in the rat system, while mouse tumours were not clonal in origin. Furthermore, the same type of analysis of lymph node and lung metastases showed that cell clones already present in the primary rat lesion colonized secondary sites during tumour progression. Apparently, Moloney murine leukemia virus (M-MuLV) was not involved in rhabdomyosarcoma pathogenesis since M-MuLV-specific DNA sequences could not be demonstrated in three of the six rat tumours. Finally, in all mouse tumours, unintegrated linear M-MSV proviruses could be readily detected.
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PMID:Tumours induced by Moloney murine sarcoma virus are clonal in rats, not clonal in mice. 173 35

Malignant tumors that arise in the perinephric space often present a diagnostic dilemma. These retroperitoneal tumors may resemble renal carcinomas, extrahepatic lymphoma, metastatic disease, or tumors arising in other retroperitoneal organs. We present a case of a patient with a primary retroperitoneal rhabdomyosarcoma who had an extensive diagnostic workup prior to surgical intervention that was thought to be consistent with an aggressive renal cell carcinoma.
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PMID:Imaging of retroperitoneal rhabdomyosarcoma mimicking hypernephroma. 174 78

At necropsy, a 7-year-old Holstein cow, clinically diagnosed via rectal palpation as having malignant abdominal neoplasia was found to have many metastatic tumors of various sizes in the abdominal and thoracic cavities and in the liver, lung, kidney, adrenal, uterus, and lymph nodes. These tumors were examined by histologic and immunohistochemical methods using anti-human myoglobin, anti-bovine myoglobin, and anti-desmin sera. Tumors were diagnosed as undifferentiated alveolar rhabdomyosarcomas. The tumors in the abdominal and thoracic cavities differed histologically from the metastases in organs. The former tumors consisted of only undifferentiated cells, most of which did not stain positively for desmin or myoglobin. The metastatic tumors contained a few rhabdomyoblastic cells that stained positively for desmin and myoglobin. Tumors tissues from the cow were transplanted and propagated through six passages in athymic nude mice. After one passage, the transplanted tumor histologically resembled those from the abdominal serosa and consisted of cells with scanty cytoplasm with an alveolar arrangement. Cells from this tumor stained positively for desmin and negatively for myoglobin. After two passages through nude mice, tumor cells were of two distinct histologic types: those cells with scanty cytoplasm and elongated cells with plentiful eosinophilic cytoplasm. Both of these cells stained positively for both desmin and myoglobin. After six passages, cross striations were detected in neoplastic cells by electron microscopy. These findings illustrate that a highly undifferentiated bovine rhabdomyosarcoma, in which most of the cells in the original tumor lacked desmin and myoglobin, became better differentiated and stained positively for desmin and myoglobin after serial transplantation in nude mice.
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PMID:Bovine undifferentiated alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma and its differentiation in xenotransplanted tumors. 175 Jan 69

Adjuvant therapy is currently established in the treatment of osteosarcoma, Ewing's sarcoma and rhabdomyosarcoma. Of the 12 reported randomized studies of adjuvant chemotherapy for soft tissue sarcoma, only 2 show a significant overall survival advantage for chemotherapy (the most important endpoint). In three randomized trials, the survival of the observation arm exceeds that of the chemotherapy arm. In two additional studies, subset analyses currently indicate a significant DFS advantage for adjuvant chemotherapy in extremity lesions, but no significant improvement in survival. Although initial NCI reports showed significantly prolonged survival for the subset of chemotherapy-treated extremity primaries, survival on longer follow-up is no longer significantly different. In the subset analysis of retroperitoneal sarcomas in the same NCI study, the survival of the control group is superior to the treatment group. Doxorubicin associated cardiotoxicity has occurred in about 10% of treated patients, occasionally contributing to treatment-related deaths. Based on these data, adjuvant chemotherapy should be considered investigational for adult soft-tissue sarcomas of any primary site. Future randomized trials should include patients at high risk for metastases (large, high-grade lesions) with a reasonable likelihood of local control by radical resection, or resection with uninvolved margins and subsequent radiotherapy. Low-grade sarcomas are currently cured by surgical resection in 80% of cases, and thus should not be included in adjuvant trials.
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PMID:Adjuvant therapy for sarcomas. 177 77

We reviewed 21 patients more than 16 years old who were seen with a diagnosis of paratesticular sarcoma from 1958 to 1987. Of the patients 14 presented with primary disease and 7 with recurrent disease. The survival of the primarily treated patients was 58% at 5 years, calculated by the product limit method. Of the 14 patients with primary disease 13 had grade 3/4 or 4/4 sarcoma and 13 of 14 underwent initial radical orchiectomy. In addition, 6 of the 14 patients underwent an adjuvant operation or radiotherapy to the groin, or groin and scrotum, and none had local relapse. Some patients also had chemotherapy. Three patients underwent adjuvant retroperitoneal node dissection and 2 had microscopically positive nodes. All 3 patients remain without relapse. Six patients had relapse: 2 locally, 2 in the retroperitoneal nodes and 2 with distant metastases. Only 1 patient (with scrotal recurrence) was salvaged. Of the 7 patients referred with recurrent disease none was salvaged. In this series there is a 2 of 14 (14%) risk of local failure and a 4 of 14 (28%) risk of retroperitoneal relapse after radical orchiectomy. Since salvage has not proved successful, patients with rhabdomyosarcoma, intermediate or high grade malignant fibrous histiocytoma, or fibrosarcoma should be considered for adjuvant retroperitoneal node dissection. All patients should undergo adjuvant dissection or irradiation of the ipsilateral pelvic and groin nodes, and scrotum.
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PMID:Adult paratesticular sarcomas: a review of 21 cases. 190 46

We present 2 cases in whom repetitive rapid ventricular tachycardia (VT) was the initial manifestation of metastatic cardiac disease. In one patient, repetitive VT appeared during chemotherapy for stage IV paratesticular rhabdomyosarcoma which led to the diagnosis of cardiac metastases. In the other, it led to the diagnosis of malignant pericardial effusion 17 years after successful therapy for a breast carcinoma. In conclusion, in patients with present or past history of malignancy, the appearance of life-threatening VT should raise the suspicion of cardiac metastases.
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PMID:Life-threatening ventricular tachycardia as the presenting symptom of metastatic cardiac disease. 191 76

We studied the human embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma cell line RD and 8 derivatives obtained in our laboratory either by cell cloning or by culturing in vitro cells from tumors or secondaries grown in nude mice. The expression of desmin and of the embryonic isoform of myosin and the formation of multinuclear myotube-like structures were studied as specific markers of myogenic differentiation. During continuous growth, each derivative contained a proportion (ranging from 5 to 80% among derivatives) of desmin-positive cells and a small number of myosin-positive or multinuclear elements. Cells from continuous cultures were injected intravenously in nude mice, producing lung and kidney/adrenal nodules. No correlation was found between the proportion of cells expressing desmin and metastatic capacity. When cultures were grown in differentiation medium (Dulbecco's minimal essential medium + 2% horse serum) some derivatives (designated type A) showed a strong increase in the proportion of myosin-positive cells, while others (type B) showed no increase. In vitro differentiation significantly reduced the metastatic ability of type A cells, while no modification was observed in type B after growth in differentiation medium. The proliferative ability of type A and type B cells grown in differentiation medium did not correlate with the proportion of myosin-positive cells, and extensive formation of multinuclear myotubes was never observed. It was concluded that reduction of experimental metastatic ability was mediated by events related to late, though not necessarily terminal, differentiation of rhabdomyosarcoma cells.
Invasion Metastasis 1991
PMID:Reduced metastatic ability of in vitro differentiated human rhabdomyosarcoma cells. 191 85

Eight patients with breast metastases from primary tumors other than breast carcinoma were studied: 3 malignant melanomas, 2 rhabdomyosarcomas, 1 malignant mesothelioma, 1 appendiceal carcinoid, and 1 epidermoid cervical carcinoma. All had mammographic, histopathologic, and immunohistochemical examinations. The main problem was differential diagnosis from primary breast carcinoma. History of extramammary primary tumor was helpful but breast metastasis was the first clinical feature in 2 cases. Patients had noticed palpable, round, rapid growth masses which were mammographically benign. Pathologic diagnosis was difficult and immunohistochemical studies necessary, whenever the proliferation had histologic features of primary breast carcinoma or when no primary tumor was known. However, some histologic features were of value for diagnosis of metastasis: atypical histologic features for a primary breast carcinoma, a well-circumscribed tumor with multiple satellite foci, the absence of an intraductal component, and the presence of many lymphatic emboli. In adults, the most frequent types of tumors metastasizing in the breast are malignant melanoma and neuroendocrine-like tumors, especially small cell carcinoma and carcinoid. In children, rhabdomyosarcoma is the most common. Accurate diagnosis of breast metastasis is important to avoid unnecessary mastectomy and to implement an appropriate systemic therapy.
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PMID:Metastases to the breast: differential diagnosis from primary breast carcinoma. 192 96

Proteins able to bind the iduronate containing glycosaminoglycans: heparin, heparan sulfate and dermatan sulfate, were detected in strongly (RMS 0) and weakly (RMS 8) metastatic rat rhabdomyosarcoma cell lines. The 35S-methionine-labeled proteins solubilized from the cell membranes were chromatographed on Heparin-Ultrogel affinity column. The main retained protein migrated with an apparent molecular size of 19 kDa on polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis from both cell lines. The 19 kDa protein exhibited a higher affinity for iduronate containing glycosaminoglycans than for the glucuronate containing chondroitin sulfates. It was immunologically distinct from acid and basic fibroblast growth factors. The membranes of the RMS 8 cells contained about a two times higher amount of labeled 19 kDa protein than the membranes of the RMS 0 cells. The decreased amount of the labeled heparin-binding proteins in the highly metastatic cell line is in agreement with the previously evidenced decreased receptor-mediated binding of the iduronate containing glycosaminoglycans by these cells.
Invasion Metastasis 1991
PMID:Heparin-binding sites of rat rhabdomyosarcoma cells with low and high metastatic capacity. 193 76

344 previously untreated patients, under 19 years of age, with soft tissue sarcoma (STS) entered the first German STS Study, CWS-81. 218 of them with chemosensitive STS (Group A: rhabdomyosarcoma [RMS], synovial sarcoma, extraosseous Ewing's sarcoma, undifferentiated sarcoma and malignant peripheral neuroectodermal tumor) were evaluable for this analysis after a minimum potential follow-up of 6 years. A staging system based on the extent of disease, defined post-surgically, was used. The chemotherapy for stages I-III (VACA cycle) consisted of vincristine, dactinomycin, cyclophosphamide and doxorubicin. Patients with metastatic disease as well as stage III patients who failed to respond to VACA, were given ifosfamide instead of cyclophosphamide. The definitive local tumor control procedure for patients in stages II-III depended upon the tumor status at second-look surgery after 16 weeks of chemotherapy (no irradiation, 40Gy or 50Gy). The DFS rate after 5 years for group A was 57 +/- 4% and for patients with non-metastatic tumors (Stages I-III), 69 +/- 4%. There was no difference in prognosis between stages I and II (DFS rate 88 +/- 5% and 88 +/- 6% respectively). The DFS rate for stage III was 54 +/- 5% and for stage IV, 11 +/- 5%. Lack of local tumor control was the main cause of therapy failure: 10% of patients with localized disease never achieved CR, 18% relapsed locally. The most important prognostic factors were tumor size (p = .0002) and the degree of tumor regression after primary chemotherapy (p = .02).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Treatment of soft tissue sarcomas in childhood and adolescence: results of the CWS-81 multicenter therapy study]. 194 28


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