Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (seizures)
80,221 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In an attempt to improve local control and survival over those achieved with brain implant alone, a Phase I/II study of interstitial thermoradiotherapy was undertaken for recurrent malignant gliomas and recurrent solitary brain metastases. Between June 1987 and September 1990, 49 tumors in 48 patients were treated with thermoradiotherapy, including 26 glioblastoma multiforme (GM), 16 anaplastic astrocytomas (AA), 4 adenocarcinomas, and 3 melanomas. Patient age ranged from 18 to 71 years and Karnofsky Performance Status from 40 to 90. Stereotactically implanted catheters were used for both hyperthermia and brachytherapy. Hyperthermia was administered immediately before and after brachytherapy, heating as much of the tumor as possible to 42.5 degrees C for 30 min using helical coil microwave antennas. High-activity iodine-125 sources delivered tumor doses of 32.6 to 63.3 Gy. Complications included reversible neurologic changes in 13 patients, 9 seizures, 4 infections, 1 deep venous thrombosis with pulmonary embolus, and 1 scalp burn. Eighteen patients underwent reoperation for tumor and/or necrosis. Follow-up ranged from 9 to 166+ weeks. The median follow-up for living patients with GM and AA was 37 weeks and 92 weeks, respectively. Actuarial median survival was 47 weeks for patients with GM. For patients with AA, actuarial survival was 65% at 18 months and median survival has not yet been reached. Multivariate analysis showed a strong correlation between freedom from local tumor progression and "T90" temperature or minimum tumor temperature. Interstitial brain thermoradiotherapy is now being evaluated in a randomized Phase II trial for previously untreated GM.
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PMID:Thermoradiotherapy of recurrent malignant brain tumors. 131 81

A 13-year retrospective review of 17 patients with gangliogliomas treated at the University of Iowa was conducted to investigate the association between tumor location, extent of resection, pathological findings, and patient prognosis. Thirteen were in the cerebral hemispheres and 4 in the midline. The mean ages at diagnosis and symptom onset were 16 and 8.8 years, respectively. The most common presenting symptom was seizures (11 patients); focal neurological deficit was seen in 5 patients and headache in 1. Patients with hemispheric tumors had an older age at time of diagnosis and a longer duration of symptoms. Pathologically, they had more microcalcifications, lymphocytic infiltration, microcystic degeneration, and eosinophilic bodies. Cerebral hemispheric tumors were more amenable to total resection than midline neoplasms, 77% versus 25%, respectively. In the patients with hemispheric tumors, 10 patients were tumor-free after total resection. Two of the 3 patients with partial resection had stable residual tumors. The third died of tumor progression. In the 4 patients with midline neoplasms, one was tumor-free after total resection. The other 3 had subtotal resection and radiation therapy. Two died within 2 years; the third is still alive with progressive tumor. Five of 9 patients who had seizure disorders and who underwent total tumor removal were seizure-free postoperatively. The other 4 patients and the 2 with partial surgical resection continued to have seizures.
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PMID:Ganglioglioma: 13 years of experience. 151 23

Of 29 consecutive children treated for malignant primary tumors of the central nervous system (CNS) at this institution, postoperative examination showed radiographic or cytologic evidence of neuraxis dissemination in 10 (34%). Given the historically poor results in disseminated CNS tumors treated with surgery and radiation therapy alone, these ten patients were treated prospectively with an investigational Phase II protocol consisting of preirradiation cisplatin (90 mg/m2 on day 1) and etoposide (150 mg/m2 on days 3 and 4). The diagnoses included medulloblastoma (n = 4), malignant glioma (n = 3), cerebral primitive neuroectodermal tumor (n = 1), pineoblastoma (n = 1), and mixed glioma of the brainstem (n = 1). Postoperative neuraxis scanning with computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging, or spinal myelography showed measurable intracranial or spinal metastases in all children. The cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) cytologic examination was positive for tumor cells in five. The best responses, based on serial imaging of neuraxis metastases, included two complete responses, four partial responses, and three stable disease states. One patient had progressive disease at the primary site despite stable disease in the spine; progressive neuraxis disease was documented in only one patient during chemotherapy. Clearance of tumor cells from the CSF was documented in three patients. The adverse effects of chemotherapy, consisting of transient myelosuppression and mild ototoxicity, were minimal. Reversible neurologic deterioration occurred in two patients; one patient became acutely quadriplegic after a prolonged convulsive seizure without radiographic evidence of tumor progression.
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PMID:Neuraxis dissemination in pediatric brain tumors. Response to preirradiation chemotherapy. 173 73

Between June 1987 and June 1989, 29 recurrent malignant gliomas or recurrent solitary brain metastases in 28 patients were treated in a Phase I study of interstitial irradiation and hyperthermia. Patient age ranged from 18 to 65 years, and the Karnofsky Performance Status scores ranged from 40 to 90%. There were 13 glioblastomas, 10 anaplastic astrocytomas, 3 melanomas, and 3 adenocarcinomas. Catheters were implanted stereotactically after computed tomography-based preplanning. Hyperthermia was administered before and after brachytherapy, using one to six 2450- or 915-MHz helical coil microwave antennas and one to three multisensor fiberoptic thermometry probes. The goal was to heat as much of the tumor as possible to 42.5 degrees C for 30 minutes. Within 30 minutes after the first hyperthermia treatment, implant catheters were afterloaded with high-activity iodine-125 seeds delivering tumor doses of 32.6 to 61.0 Gy. Most patients had no sensation of heating. Complications included seizures in 5 patients, reversible neurological changes in 9 patients, a scalp burn in 1, and infections in 3. Of 28 evaluable 2-month follow-up scans, 11 showed definite improvement in the radiological appearance of the tumor, 4 were slightly improved, 7 were stable, and 6 showed tumor progression. Ten patients underwent reoperation for persistent tumor and/or necrosis. Eleven of 28 patients are alive 40 to 97 weeks after treatment. Thirteen patients died of a brain tumor, 2 died of extracranial melanoma metastases, 1 died of new brain melanoma metastases, and 1 died of a pulmonary embolus. The median survival was 55 weeks overall. Median survival has not yet been reached for the anaplastic astrocytoma subgroup. We conclude that interstitial brain hyperthermia using helical coil microwave antennas is technically feasible. The level of toxicity is acceptable, and the computed tomographic response rate is encouraging.
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PMID:Interstitial irradiation and hyperthermia for the treatment of recurrent malignant brain tumors. 199 88

A patient with glioblastoma multiforme developed hyponatremia. This was accompanied by decreased mental awareness and seizures following cis-dichlorodiammine platinum II (DDP) chemotherapy. Treatment with hypertonic saline, furosemide diuresis, and fluid restriction promptly restored the serum sodium and neurologic status to normal. Hyponatremia did not recur despite subsequent tumor progression and increased intracranial pressure. The clinical picture suggested a drug-induced syndrome of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone. Hyponatremia should be considered when seizures or mental changes occur in patients treated with DDP.
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PMID:Cis-dichlorodiammineplatinum II-induced syndrome of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone. 282 77

Intracarotid BCNU (100 mg/m2) and cisplatin (60 mg/m2) were administered to 36 patients with malignant brain tumors recurrent or progressive after cranial irradiation. Courses of therapy were repeated at 4-6 week intervals. Of 23 evaluable patients with recurrent glioma, 9 (39%) had tumor regression by CT scan and 3 had stable disease. The median time to tumor progression for responding patients was 37 weeks. For all patients with primary tumors it was 14 weeks. Six of 9 patients with no prior chemotherapy had a response and 1 had stable disease. Of 14 patients who had received prior chemotherapy, 3 had a response and 2 had stable disease. Survival ranged from 9 weeks to 95+ weeks (median 34 weeks) from start of therapy. Six of 23 patients with primary tumors are alive 1 year or more following therapy. Four of 11 patients with brain metastases had a response and 2 had stable disease. Major neurologic toxicity of intracarotid BCNU and cisplatin appeared cumulative and consisted of reversible hemiparesis in 3% of 118 courses, TIA in 1%, expressive aphasia in 9%, lethargy in 3%, seizures in 12%, and reversible confusion in 1%. Retinal toxicity consisted of mild blurring of vision in 4 patients and ipsilateral blindness in 5 patients. Three of 22 patients who had received supraophthalmic infusion later developed evidence of leukoencephalopathy. Intracarotid BCNU and cisplatin appears to have modest increase in activity over intracarotid cisplatin alone (Cancer 54:794, 1984), however, neurologic and retinal toxicity may also be increased.
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PMID:Phase II trial of intracarotid BCNU and cisplatin in primary malignant brain tumors. 370 37

Thirty-five patients with malignant brain tumors (23 with primary brain tumors and 12 with brain metastases) progressing after cranial irradiation +/- chemotherapy received cisplatin, 60 to 120 mg/m2, into the internal carotid artery by a transfemoral approach. Courses of therapy were repeated every 4 weeks. Therapeutic evaluation was performed monthly using the CT scan of the brain and clinical neurologic examination. Thirty patients were evaluable for response. Of 20 evaluable patients with primary malignant brain tumors, 6 responded to therapy and 5 had stable disease. The median time to tumor progression for responding patients was 33 weeks, for stable patients 16 weeks, and 13 weeks for all patients. Five of 10 evaluable patients with brain metastases responded to intracarotid cisplatin, and 2 patients had stable disease. The estimated median time to progression for responding patients was 30+ weeks and 12+ weeks for patients with stable disease. Side effects included seizures in 5 courses, mental agitation and motor restlessness in 1, and transient hemiparesis in 7. One patient may have had a drug-related death, and one patient appeared to develop encephalopathy after treatment. Five patients had clinical deterioration in vision; in two patients it was bilateral. Intracarotid cisplatin has definite activity in patients with malignant primary brain tumors and in patients with brain metastases. The recommended starting dose for intracarotid cisplatin is 60 to 75 mg/m2. At this dose level side effects are uncommon, but includes the risk of neurologic and retinal toxicity.
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PMID:Intracarotid infusion of cis-diamminedichloroplatinum in the treatment of recurrent malignant brain tumors. 633 26

Gangliogliomas are generally low grade neoplasms composed of mixtures of neoplastic glial and neuronal elements whose origin and exact nature are still controversial. We studied a series of 60 intracranial gangliogliomas looking for coexistent cortical architectural abnormalities (cortical dysplasia, microdysgenesis) and to determine if tumor behavior correlates with MIB1 (marker of cellular proliferation) labeling. The patients included 34 males and 26 females who ranged in age from 6 months to 55 years (mean 20 years). Thirty-eight tumors (63%) were located in the temporal lobe and 6 (10%) in the frontal lobe. Fifty-four patients (90%) presented with seizures (most with intractable epilepsy) and the duration of seizures ranged from 1 to 38 years (mean 14 years). In all cases, the predominant glioma component resembled a low grade fibrillary astrocytoma. In 14 tumors (23%), an oligodendroglial component was present. In one case, the glial component resembled an anaplastic astrocytoma. The tumors were characterized variously by perivascular chronic inflammation (N = 45, 75%), vascular proliferation (N = 36, 60%), granular bodies (N = 54, 90%), binucleated neurons (N = 36, 60%), calcification (N = 28, 47%), and cystic degeneration (N = 26, 43%). Meningeal involvement by tumor was observed in five (8%) cases. In 38 patients, sufficient tissue was resected to evaluate for the presence of concomitant cortical architectural abnormalities. Cortical architectural abnormalities were identified near to but clearly separate from the tumor in 19 (50%) patients. Only four patients including the anaplastic tumor died with tumor progression. MIB1 indices (positive tumor cells/1,000 tumor cells counted) in 54 cases ranged from 0 to 10.2 (mean 1.1 +/- 1.0).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Cortical architectural abnormalities and MIB1 immunoreactivity in gangliogliomas: a study of 60 patients with intracranial tumors. 754 47

A phase I-II clinical trial was conducted to determine the maximum-tolerated dose (MTD) of oral cyclosporine (CsA) and vinblastine in patients with metastatic renal cell cancer (RCC) as well as to estimate the response rate. Sixteen patients received a 5 mg/kg oral loading dose of CsA followed by 3 days of CsA in 4 divided daily doses escalating from 10 mg/kg per day up to 17 mg/kg per day. Vinblastine (Vbl) was administered as an intravenous bolus on the morning of the 3rd day with dose escalation from 6 to 10 mg/m2. Cycles were repeated every 4 weeks until tumor progression. Forty-nine cycles of CsA with vinblastine were administered. The maximum tolerated dose of Vbl was 10 mg/m2, with neutropenia as the dose-limiting toxicity resulting in one death. CsA could not be escalated above 17 mg/kg per day because of nausea and vomiting. Other toxicities included constipation (100%), malaise (100%), temporary increase in pain (36%), and one seizure that may have been drug-related. There were no clinically significant changes in renal function or serum bilirubin. Mean peak whole-blood CsA level at the highest CsA dose level was 919 ng/ml (range: 414-1,827) with a trough prior to Vbl injection of 451 ng/ml (range: 128-1,229). There were no tumor responses. The combination of oral CsA and Vbl is not nephrotoxic but is poorly tolerated. In most patients optimal blood levels of CsA for reversal of MDR cannot be reliably achieved, and vinblastine dose intensity must be compromised because of the significant toxicity of this regimen.
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PMID:Phase I-II study of vinblastine and oral cyclosporin A in metastatic renal cell carcinoma. 774 14

Seventy-one patients with supratentorial mixed oligoastrocytomas underwent surgery only (5 patients) or surgery with postoperative radiation therapy (66 patients) between 1960 and 1982. The median survival for these 71 patients was 5.8 years and the 5-, 10-, and 15-year survival rates were 55, 29, and 17%, respectively--values significantly different from those of an age- and sex-matched normal reference population. Uni- and multivariate survival analyses were applied to 14 possible prognostic factors, including the following: patient factors--age, sex, and seizures; tumor factors--site, size, side, computed tomographic enhancement, and calcification; pathological factors--tumor grade and dominant cellular component; and treatment factors--extent of surgical resection, lobectomy, and radiation dose and field. Of these factors, tumor grade, as determined by the Kernohan method, was the most strongly associated with survival. The 60 patients with Grades 1 and 2 tumors had a median survival of approximately 6.3 years and 5- and 10-year survival rates of 58% and 32%, respectively, compared with 2.8 years (36 and 9%, respectively) for the 11 patients with Grades 3 and 4 tumors. Age < 37 years, gross total resection, partial brain radiation, and radiation dose > or = 5000 cGy were other factors significantly associated with improved survival in both uni- and multivariate models. Three of five patients not receiving postoperative radiation therapy experienced tumor recurrence and died. Seven of eight patients from whom tissue was obtained at the time of tumor progression demonstrated anaplastic transformation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Mixed oligoastrocytomas: a survival and prognostic factor analysis. 800 53


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