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)

Cancer-associated retinopathy (CAR) is a rare paraneoplastic syndrome. In this survey we report about two further patients with CAR, who were referred to the University Eye Hospital of Tuebingen within a few months. The most common primary tumor associated with CAR is small cell carcinoma of the lung. Case reports about rhabdomyosarcoma, carcinoma of the endometrium, prostate and mamma were also described. The exact pathogenesis of CAR is still unknown. Specific autoantibodies were found against the photoreceptor protein recovering (23-kd retinal CAR antigen). However, this reaction is not present in all patients, and probably other antigens are also involved. Most of the patients experience symptoms of CAR before the primary tumor is detected. Besides glare sensitivity and flashing lights, a rapidly progressive, often asymmetric visual loss may occur. Although paracentral and mid-peripheral scotomas can be found frequently, visual field defects are often quite heterogeneous. Typically, the responses in the electroretinogram (ERG) are markedly reduced, but normal ERGs were also described. The fundus picture in CAR shows sheathing of the retinal vessels, narrowing of the arterioles and clumbing of the retinal pigment epithelium. The prognosis is poor. Frequently there is progression to bilateral loss of vision within a few months. Treatment of the primary tumor does not seem to alter the ocular prognosis. Systemic corticosteroids may be helpful in some patients. Nevertheless, no proven therapeutic regimen is currently available.
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PMID:[Carcinoma-associated retinopathy: a review with clinical examples]. 1070 38

Ectomesenchymomas (EM) are rare malignant neoplasms usually consisting of rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) with a neural component. Only 21 cases have been previously reported. Here we extend the clinicopathologic spectrum of EM by describing our findings in 15 cases. Only 5 patients were infants; 10 were < or =3 years old and 5 were > or =6 years old. No male predilection was observed; 7 were female. The originating institutional diagnoses were; RMS (12), undifferentiated sarcoma (1), or EM (2), suggesting underdiagnosis of this entity. The primary tumor sites included external genital (5), pelvis/abdomen (6), head and neck (3), and extremity (1). The size of the primary neoplasm was usually > or =5 cm at diagnosis but dissemination only occurred in a minority. Local infiltration was not uncommon. These neoplasms were typically multilobate, thinly encapsulated, hemorrhagic, and necrotic. Light microscopic features were highly variable, but embryonal RMS with scattered or clustered ganglion cells, often in lacunae, was characteristic. In some cases, primitive neuroblastic or neuroectodermal areas were found and/or a component of alveolar RMS was seen. Focal anaplasia was occasionally observed. Mitotic activity appears higher than previously appreciated and some necrosis was invariably present. Electron microscopy was performed in 11 cases, which confirmed skeletal muscle +/- neural differentiation. Cytogenetic studies performed in five cases revealed no specific abnormality. Monoclonal neuron-specific enolase was the best marker of ganglion cells and primitive neural elements. MIC-2 (CD99) membrane expression was not definitively present in any of the six cases examined. A number of the above parameters appear to be of some prognostic significance, but overall, these neoplasms appear to have a similar outcome as would be predicted for their RMS element alone (exclusive of any neural component), with respect to the RMS subtype, age of the patient, and anatomic location of the neoplasm.
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PMID:Clinicopathologic study of ectomesenchymomas from Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Study Groups III and IV. 1074 19

We report a case of primary intraosseous pleiomorphic rhabdomyosarcoma located in the pelvis of a 21-year-old woman followed for 4 years. The lytic tumor involved the acetabulum and the isthma with moderate extension to soft tissue. First line chemotherapy was unable to arrest tumor progression. Hemipelvectomy with saddle prosthesis reconstruction was performed, but septic complications dictated a secondary inter-ilio-abdominal amputation. Recurrence-free remission was achieved for 4 years, suggesting this was indeed a primary tumor. Primary intraosseous rhabdomyosarcomas are exceptional. Bone localizations generally suggest metastasis from a primary tumor often situated in an intraperitoneal localization. When search for a primary tumor is negative, intraosseous lesions can be considered as primary tumors warranting curative treatment. Radical surgical resection is recommended within the framework of a multidiscipinary management protocol associating radiotherapy and chemotherapy to improve prognosis.
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PMID:[Primary intraosseous rhabdomyosarcoma]. 1084 60

The past year has seen a greater understanding of the means by which the alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma gene fusions (PAX-FKHR) lead to the malignant phenotype. The treatment of the primary tumor in rhabdomyosarcoma has been reexamined, with the roles of surgery and radiation expanding in American studies and decreasing in European ones. "Megatherapy" approaches with stem cell or bone marrow autologous transplants still have not found a role in the treatment of metastatic rhabdomyosarcoma. Our understanding of the natural history of nonrhabdo soft tissue sarcomas in children has increased, and molecular diagnosis is becoming established. The role of chemotherapy in treatment remains controversial.
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PMID:Rhabdomyosarcoma and soft tissue sarcoma in childhood. 1088 19

Needle core biopsies (NCB) are widely used in adults but are less often used for the evaluation of pediatric tumors. To determine the diagnostic utility of NCB for pediatric tumors, we performed a retrospective analysis. Fifty NCB of masses from 1992 to 1998, subsequent pathologic specimens, and medical records were reviewed. All patients were less than 21 years of age. Of the NCB 78% (39/50) were diagnostic of a neoplasm, 8% (4/50) were nondiagnostic in cases where a tumor was subsequently diagnosed, and 14% (7/50) revealed inflammatory or reactive lesions, with no subsequent diagnosis of a neoplasm according to medical record review. In cases in which a neoplasm was present, NCB was diagnostic in 91% (39/43). For cases in which there was a previous diagnosis of a tumor, 100% (9/9) of NCB were diagnostic of a recurrence or metastasis. In cases of NCB for primary tumor diagnosis, 88% (30/34) were diagnostic. The most common problems encountered were related to specimen adequacy, such as insufficient tissue, crush artifact, and tumor necrosis. Tumor diagnoses were as follows: primitive neuroectodermal tumor (PNET)/Ewing sarcoma (12), malignant lymphoma/Hodgkin's disease (8), rhabdomyosarcoma (4), germ cell tumor (3), Wilms' tumor (3), neuroblastoma (1), sarcoma, not otherwise specified (4), and other neoplasms (8). There were no complications of the procedure. NCB of pediatric tumors is an effective diagnostic tool and can be used to obtain diagnostic material quickly and safely. NCB was diagnostic in 90% of cases in this series. When NCB provide sufficient material for immunohistochemical, cytogenetic, flow cytometric, and other ancillary studies, the diagnostic efficacy is enhanced. The major limitations in this series were related to sampling problems and specimen adequacy for comprehensive pathologic evaluation.
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PMID:Pediatric core needle biopsy: strengths and limitations in evaluation of masses. 1120 Apr 90

This paper highlights the role of fine-needle aspiration cytology (FNAC) in 15 cases of metastatic soft-tissue sarcomas involving lymph nodes. Histopathology reports of the primary tumor were available in all cases. Histological diagnoses correlated well with the cytology reports. The most common type of sarcoma to involve the lymph node was embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma (6 cases), followed by synovial sarcoma (2 cases), leiomyosarcoma (2 cases), malignant fibrous histiocytoma (2 cases), fibrosarcoma (1 case), malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor (1 case), and rhabdomyosarcoma (1 case). FNAC was thus helpful in the early diagnosis, proper staging, and management. Importantly, it obviated a lymph node biopsy in the majority of cases.
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PMID:Fine-needle aspiration biopsy of metastatic soft-tissue sarcomas to lymph nodes. 1128 16

The incidence, distribution, time of appearance, and radiologic findings of bone metastases from soft tissue sarcomas, exclusive of lymphomas, were evaluated in 320 patients with soft tissue sarcomas. Thirty patients (9.4%) had evidence of 58 bone metastases. Five of 30 patients presented with metastases, and 25 of 30 patients developed metastases up to 66 months after presentation with a mean time interval of 21.3 months. The incidence of skeletal metastases differed among histologic subtypes of sarcomas; alveolar soft part sarcoma (5 of 8), dedifferentiated liposarcoma (2 of 4), angiosarcoma (2 of 4), and rhabdomyosarcoma (5 of 16) tended to show a higher incidence of bone metastases. The sarcomas metastasized to the regional bones close to the primary tumor in 16 (53%) of 30 patients and to the axial bones in 18 (60%). On conventional radiographs, the osseous metastases demonstrated predominantly osteolytic changes, and evidence of pathological fracture was observed in 31% of 58 metastases.
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PMID:Bone Metastases from Soft Tissue Sarcomas. 1138 35

Soft tissue sarcomas constitute a heterogeneous group of malignant tumors of mesenchymal origin, the classification of which may present a diagnostic challenge. We present here the cytological, histopathological, immunohistochemical, and cytogenetic findings of an unusual case of a highly aggressive sarcoma. Based on the morphology and the immunohistochemical profile, this primitive tumor and its metastases could not be conclusively classified as any of the defined subtypes of sarcomas, although the findings were suggestive of a variant of rhabdomyosarcoma. Cytogenetic characterization using G-banding, SKY, FISH, and CGH revealed almost identical chromosomal compositions of the primary tumor and the metastasis. The hypertetraploid karyotype was characterized by numerical imbalances as well as by an unbalanced translocation t(1;19)(q12;q13.2), which has not been previously reported.
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PMID:A highly aggressive primitive mesenchymal tumor with a translocation (1;19)(q12;q13.2). 1142 51

We present the case of a 12-year-old boy admitted with the diagnosis of acute leukemia, but found to have an infiltration of the marrow by an alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) as determined by the cytogenetic demonstration of a t(2;13)(q25;q14). A primary tumor could not be found. With this case as a basis, we have tabulated features of all similar cases in the literature and discuss the possible optimal approaches to establishing the correct diagnosis in such patients.
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PMID:Hematologic masquerade of rhabdomyosarcoma. 1155 37

A case of ovarian immature teratoma with rhabdomyosarcomatous recurrence in a 6-year-old girl is described. The primary tumor consisted of a dermoid cyst and a solid nodule composed of mature and immature mesenchymal tissue. The most immature mesenchymal cells showed no distinctive differentiation except for focal rhabdomyoblastic differentiation. The primary tumor was diagnosed as immature teratoma, grade 2, stage IIa. Despite left oophorectomy and excision of uterine serosal implants, chemotherapy, and radiation, four intrapelvic recurrences developed within 3 years. Although the primary tumor contained only a few rhabdomyoblasts, the recurrent tumors became increasingly rhabdomyosarcomatous. The patient died of systemic disease 3 years after presentation. This case and previous reports indicate that the prognosis of patients with ovarian immature teratoma with rhabdomyosarcomatous recurrence is poor and similar to that of primary ovarian rhabdomyosarcoma.
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PMID:Immature teratoma of the ovary with a minor rhabdomyosarcomatous component and fatal rhabdomyosarcomatous metastases: the first case in a child. 1178 30


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