Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0035412 (
rhabdomyosarcoma
)
6,156
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Soft tissue sarcomas in infants and children differ from those in adults in clinical presentation, histology, and response to therapy. For
rhabdomyosarcoma
, the most common sarcoma in children, each primary site has special characteristics that affect both treatment programs and survival rates. Some results are so good, from the standpoint of survival data, that studies are now in progress to evaluate means of reducing treatment morbidity. Other ongoing studies focus on improved protocols for metastatic or recurrent
rhabdomyosarcoma
. Results thus far in the
IRS
trials have proven the value of cooperative clinical trials in the management of patients with this disease.
...
PMID:Soft tissue sarcomas. 268 45
One hundred medical records of children with
rhabdomyosarcoma
were reviewed independently by ten European and American specialists primarily concerned with pediatric cancer patients. Each specialist assessed the stage of disease using a pre-treatment staging system (International Society of Pediatric Oncology-Union Internationale Contre le Cancer TNM [SIOP-UICC TNM] and a post-surgical staging system (Inter-group
Rhabdomyosarcoma
[
IRS
] grouping system). These two prognostic systems are based on different criteria, and there is no simple correspondence between them. The reliability of the two systems, based on patients' characteristics extracted from medical records, was similar and satisfactory (Kappa index: 0.78 and 0.82 with the TNM system and with the
IRS
system, respectively). Nevertheless, the
IRS
grouping system, which considers a primary method of treatment: Surgery, is dependent upon the surgeon, the institution, and the current concept of treatment. We believe that the TNM system provides the best description of extent of disease and should be used for determining therapeutic options and comparing therapeutic results.
...
PMID:An attempt to use a common staging system in rhabdomyosarcoma: a report of an international workshop initiated by the International Society of Pediatric Oncology (SIOP). 274 93
Rhabdomyosarcoma
, the most common soft tissue sarcoma of childhood, involves the temporal bone in approximately 7% of reported cases. Until recently, the outcome of this disease was always fatal. The recent Intergroup
Rhabdomyosarcoma
Study Group (
IRS
-I) reported on the efficacy of multimodality therapy consisting of multiagent chemotherapy, radiation, and surgical resection when indicated. Twelve patients with
rhabdomyosarcoma
involving the temporal bone were treated between 1966 and 1988. Three patients were treated according to the
IRS
-I protocols and the remaining nine patients received various combinations of treatment modalities. Ten patients succumbed to their disease, most with distant metastases or intracranial extension. Two patients are alive; one at 5 1/2 years and one at 19 years. It is apparent that, although survival for
rhabdomyosarcoma
in general has improved with the use of
IRS
-I protocols, prognosis remains poor for disease involving the temporal bone and other parameningeal sites.
...
PMID:Rhabdomyosarcoma of the ear and temporal bone. 281 61
Preliminary analyses of treatment results and prognostic factors from the first Intergroup
Rhabdomyosarcoma
Study (
IRS
I) suggested that alveolar histology and extremity site were among factors associated with an adverse outcome in clinical group I patients whose tumors had been completely resected. A high incidence of alveolar histology among the extremity tumors compounded the problem. These findings prompted an amendment to
IRS
II shortly after the study opened. Therapy for patients with alveolar extremity tumors in groups I and II was changed to more intensive repetitive pulse vincristine, dactinomycin, and cyclophosphamide (VAC) for 2 years. The outcome of 44 patients who received intensive therapy on
IRS
II is compared with a control series of 30 patients who were treated on
IRS
I. The control patients received standard VAC therapy for 2 years or VA for 1 year. Half of group I control patients received local radiotherapy, whereas none was given to group I intensive therapy patients. In both studies group II patients received radiotherapy to the primary tumor site and to identified positive regional lymph nodes. Compared with the control group, patients given more intensive therapy had a longer disease-free survival (DFS) (69% v 43% at 3 years), but this was of marginal significance (P = .06). The overall survival difference (77% v 57% at 3 years) was not significant (P = .23). Despite the limited statistical evidence, there is some indication that intensive therapy improved the prognosis of children with localized alveolar
rhabdomyosarcoma
(RMS).
...
PMID:Results of intensive therapy in children with localized alveolar extremity rhabdomyosarcoma: a report from the Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Study. 291 35
From 1972 to 1984, 47 children and adolescents with primary tumors of the female genital tract were treated with eight different Intergroup
Rhabdomyosarcoma
Study (
IRS
I-II) protocols. These included patients with vaginal (28), uterine (ten), or vulval (nine)
rhabdomyosarcoma
or undifferentiated sarcomas. The mean age of patients with primary vaginal tumors was younger than 2 years. All were of the embryonal histologic subtype. The majority of these patients were treated with initial chemotherapy (vincristine, dactinomycin, +/- cyclophosphamide, +/- Adriamycin [(ADR) doxorubicin]) followed by delayed hysterectomy and/or partial vaginectomy. Among 26 patients with localized vaginal tumors, there have been six relapses resulting in one tumor-related death and one therapy-related death. The five patients with nonfatal relapse have been disease-free for from 2.5 to 6.5 years (mean, 4.4 years) since salvage therapy was commenced. The 19 patients without relapse have been continuously disease-free for 1.5 to 12 years (mean, 5.34 years: median, 6 years). No patient that received ADR initially relapsed. Ten patients, with a mean age greater than 13 years, had primary uterine sarcomas and were treated by the same chemotherapy regimens. Six with polypoid localized lesions, removed before chemotherapy, have remained disease-free for 2.5 to 6.5 years. Four, with more extensive local lesions or disseminated disease, treated with chemotherapy only, died 2 to 11 months from diagnosis. Nine patients with rhabdomyosarcomas of the vulva (age, 1-19 years) were managed by the same chemotherapy regimens +/- radiotherapy. Resection was carried out initially or after chemotherapy. Eight of these have been disease-free from 4 to 10 years (mean, 6.4 years); and one is alive with probable disease at 2.5 years.
...
PMID:Clinical staging and treatment results in rhabdomyosarcoma of the female genital tract among children and adolescents. 328 45
The outlook for children with
rhabdomyosarcoma
has change significantly in these last years. With an adeguate combined modality therapy more than 50% of these children may be cured. The results of the
IRS
-I indicate that the 3 year relapse-free survival rates are 85% for patients in group I 70% for those in group II, 45% for those in group III and 15% for those in group IV. In addition to the clinical group other significant prognostic factors are histologic cell type (alveolar, unfavorable) and primary site (disease in extremities and in retroperitoneal area, unfavorable). The chemiotherapy must be used in all patients for 12-24 months. The effective drugs are VCR, ACT-D, CTX, ADR combined in different schedules. It has been demonstrated that the effective doses of radiotherapy range from 4000 to 5000 rad and that radiotherapy may be omitted in patients in group I. Now a less aggressive surgical procedures may be employed, and patients with primary tumor in the orbit or in the pelvic organs may be cured saving the eye, or the bladder, the vagina and the uterus.
...
PMID:[Rhabdomyosarcoma: therapeutic results and prospectives]. 654 8
Sixty-four children with primary
rhabdomyosarcoma
of the bladder or prostate were enrolled in the
IRS
during the initial five years (October 1972-November 1977). Observation of these patients for from 2 1/2-8 years forms the basis of this report. The chemotherapy-radiotherapy regimens employed (
IRS
) for each Clinical Group were: (1) Group I (completely excised tumor), sequential actinomycin-D (ACD), vincristine (VCN), and cyclophosphamide (CYP), i.e., standard (VAC), with or without radiotherapy (RT); (2) Group II (resected local disease with node involvement, "microscopic" residual, or local extension), RT plus sequential ACD and VCN, or RT plus standard VAC; (3) Group III, (gross residual disease); and (4) Group IV (dissemination), RT and either pulse VAC or pulse VAC plus Adriamycin (ADR). Pulse VAC consisted of VCN (day 1), plus daily intravenous ACD and CYP (days 1-5). Relapse rates were: Group I, 0/8; Group II, 6/23; and the mortality in Group III, 6/23; and in Group IV, 7/10. Among patients with bladder tumors, the rate of relapse was 2/11 following pelvic exenteration (anterior, 10; total 1); 5/12 following partial cystectomy or gross tumor excision; and 3/5 following a primary chemotherapy-radiotherapy (PCR) regimen. In patients with prostatic tumors (Groups I-III), relapse occurred in 0/14 patients treated initially by pelvic exenteration (anterior, 12; total, 2); and in 2/11 patients treated by a PCR regimen.
...
PMID:Bladder and prostatic tumors in the intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma study (IRS-I): results of therapy. 674 75
Disease-free survival data were obtained on 30 children with soft-tissue sarcoma of the trunk. The children were clinically grouped and treated in accord with the
IRS
protocol (Cancer 1977; 40:2015) from November 1972 through December 1976. Histologically, 40% of the tumors were alveolar
rhabdomyosarcoma
(RMS), 20% were embryonal RMS, 20% were extraosseous Ewing's sarcoma, 17% were undifferentiated sarcoma, and 3% were pleomorphic RMS. In 13 patients with primary tumors of the chest wall, the male-to-female (M:F) ratio was 3:11, and the median age was 12.5 yr. Five of the ten patients (50%) with localized tumor (Groups I-III) were disease-free at a median of 4.7 yrs. after diagnosis; two died of locally recurrent tumor, two died of metastases to lungs or bones, and 1 died of intracranial hemorrhage. None of the four with chest wall tumors and distant metastases (Group IV) survived. In ten patients with localized paraspinal primary tumors, the M:F ratio was 8:2, and the median age was 3.5 yrs. None had metastases. Seven of ten (70%) were disease-free at a median of 4.7 yrs. after diagnosis. Two died after regional recurrence developed (one retroperitoneal, one meningeal), and one died of lung metastases. In six patients with primary tumors of the abdominal wall, the M:F ratio was 3:3 and the median age was 9.5 yrs. Three of five with localized tumor (Groups I-III) were disease-free at a median of 5 yr. after diagnosis; one died after regional recurrence, and one died from accidental trauma. The one Group IV patient died of tumor. Overall, 15 of 30 patients (50%) are alive and free of recurrent disease at a median of 5+ yr. after initiation of treatment. The authors conclude that prognosis is most favorable for patients with paraspinal tumors, least favorable for those with chest wall tumors, and intermediate in patients with abdominal wall tumors. Prognostic differences appeared to be influenced by extent of disease at diagnosis and histologic subtype of the sarcoma.
...
PMID:Soft-tissue sarcoma of the trunk in childhood. Results of the intergroup rhabdomyosarcoma study. 707 79
Between 1970 and 1993, five children with paratesticular
rhabdomyosarcoma
(PR) and age ranging from 3 to 10 years were treated by our group. Following radical orchidectomy and clinical staging, 4 were rates as Group I-
IRS
(completely resected local disease) and 1 in Group IV-
IRS
(distant metastasis). All patients in Group I underwent intensive chemotherapy with vincristine, actynomicin D and cyclophosphamide (VAC) for 18 months, while no case of retroperitoneal lymphadenectomy was performed. Currently, all patients are disease free with a mean follow-up of 8 years and 5 months. The single patient included in Group IV received radiotherapy (800 rads in abdominal field) and chemotherapy with VAC + prednisone (PDR), and retroperitoneal lymphadenectomy of residual masses was performed. The patient developed liver metastasis and died 20 months later. The purpose of this paper is to convey the reader our experience in the treatment of PR in children, making a special reference to the excellent prognosis when the disease is limited to the scrotum and recommending in such cases the use of intensive chemotherapy with VAC after performing radical orchidectomy.
...
PMID:[Paratesticular rhabdomyosarcoma in children. Is retroperitoneal lymphadenectomy necessary in disease limited to the scrotum?]. 799 9
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
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
Next >>