Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0042963 (vomiting)
31,883 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

One hundred eighteen patients with metastatic carcinoid tumor were randomized to treatment with streptozotocin combined with cyclophosphamide or with 5-fluorouracil (5-FU). Commonly experienced side effects were nausea, vomiting, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, and nephrotoxicity. Objective response rates among eligible and evaluable patients treated with the 5-FU combination was 14 of 42 (33%) and with the cyclophosphamide combination, 12 of 47 (26%). Among those patients with carcinoids primary to the small bowel the respective response rates were 44% and 37%. The overall response rates for patients with carcinoids of pulmonary or unknown origin were only 12% and 17%. There was no significant difference in patient survival between the two treatment arms. Among 11 patients who received crossover therapy with 5-FU alone there were two responders. There were no responders among eight patients treated with cyclophosphamide alone. Urinary 5HIAA excretion proved to be a useful biologic marker in these patients that correlated well with the observed measurements of tumor bulk. Median survival times from the diagnosis of unresectable malignant disease related to sites of origin of carcinoid tumor were the following: small bowel, 28.4 months; pancreas, 24.0 months; lung, 15.1 months; and unknown origin, 9.0 months. Metastatic carcinoid tumor is a malignant disease susceptible to chemotherapeutic approaches and continued investigation of the therapy of these neoplasms should be strongly encouraged.
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PMID:Combination chemotherapy trials in metastatic carcinoid tumor and the malignant carcinoid syndrome. 9 82

Seventy-two malignant and 19 benign tumors were seen at the Veterans Administration Hospital, Hines, Illinois, from 1950 to 1976. Of these, 44 malignant and 14 benign tumors were seen in the clinical setting--the remainder were found at autopsy. Carcinoid tumors were the most common malignant tumors, followed by adenocarcinoma, lymphoma and leiomyosarcoma. Patients with malignant tumors usually presented with abdominal pain, vomiting and weight loss. The most common clinical signs were anemia, abdominal tenderness and abdominal distention. The most useful diagnostic tests were upper GI series and plain x-ray of the abdomen. Twenty-one (50%) five year survivals and 14 (33%) ten year survivals were obtained with small bowel malignancies. The majority of the five and ten year survivals were patients who had carcinoid tumors and lymphoma. Various theories on the causation of small bowel malignancies are discussed.
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PMID:Primary tumors of the small intestine. 50 46

N-(Phosphonacetyl)-L-aspartic acid, an inhibitor of aspartate transcarbamylase, was administered to 25 patients with advanced cancer by 10-minute infusion daily x 5 consecutive days to determine the toxicity and to look for evidence of therapeutic effect. Planned dose escalations ranged from 100 to 1250 mg/m2 (daily dose). Nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea were the most frequent toxic effects, with three of six patients treated at a daily dose of 1250 mg/m2 having severe diarrhea. Other toxic effects were encountered rarely and were not dose-limiting; these included mild leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, rash, stomatitis, and increases in SGOT. One patient with a widely metastatic carcinoid of unknown origin had an objective response lasting 6 weeks.
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PMID:Phase I study of N-(phosphonacetyl)-L-aspartic acid (PALA). 52 23

The treatment of thirty-one malignant and eleven benign neoplasms of the small intestine is reported. The most common symptom was abdominal pain followed by vomiting, diarrhea, weight loss, constipation, and gastrointestinal bleeding. In four cases small bowel perforated. Intestinal obstruction occurred in 31 per cent of patients. Preoperative diagnosis was made in 19 per cent of patients. All eleven patients with benign neoplasms were curatively treated by resection and primary anastomosis. Eighteen of the thirty-one patients with malignant tumors had curative resection, five had palliative resection, and eight had laparotomy and biopsy only. The most common benign tumor was leiomyoma. The most common malignant tumor was lymphoma (67 per cent) followed by adenocarcinoma (16 per cent), carcinoid (10 per cent), and leiomyosarcoma (3 per cent). Twenty-four patients were available for follow up; thirteen remain alive and eleven died, seven within one year and four within two years.
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PMID:Primary neoplasms of the small bowel. 66 96

Forty Japanese patients with primary malignant tumors of the small intestine were reviewed. Adenocarcinoma was the most common tumor type comprising 19 patients (47%), followed by malignant lymphoma, 11 (30%), leiomyosarcoma, 8 (20%) and carcinoid tumor, 1 (3%). Adenocarcinomas and leiomyosarcomas were primarily located in the duodenum or jejunum, whereas lymphomas were more common in the jejunum or ileum. Abdominal pain (65%) and nausea or vomiting (35%) were the most common symptoms with these tumors. Barium contrast studies were able to detect 83% of these tumors. Our results also suggest that computed tomography and ultrasonography are not reliable for diagnosing jejunal tumors while superior mesenteric angiography is effective for diagnosing ileal tumors. The duodenal and ileal tumors tended to metastasize to lymph nodes while jejunal ones tended to penetrate the serosa or to disseminate into the peritoneal cavity. The percentage of tumors potentially cured by surgery and the 5 year survival rates of the leiomyosarcomas (75% and 57%, respectively) were higher than those of adenocarcinomas (42% and 10%, respectively) and lymphomas (42% and 32%, respectively).
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PMID:Primary malignant tumors of the small intestine: analysis of 40 Japanese patients. 161 34

A phase II trial of chemotherapy in carcinoid and islet cell pancreatic tumours has been conducted with the FAP protocol: 5-fluorouracil 400 mg/m2 per day (5-FU) for 3 days, 50 mg/m2 doxorubicin on day 2, and 90 mg/m2 cisplatin on day 2, repeated every 4 weeks. 24 patients, 20 non-pretreated and 4 pretreated, were included. For non-pretreated patients we observed 1 complete response and 2 partial responses. The response rate was 15% (95% confidence interval 0-31%). No response was observed in the pretreated patients. The toxicity was mainly digestive and haematological with 7 patients experiencing vomiting grade 3 and 3 patients with leucopenia grade 3. We conclude that the FAP protocol is of poor efficiency in endocrine tumours.
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PMID:Metastatic carcinoid and islet cell tumours of the pancreas: a phase II trial of the efficacy of combination chemotherapy with 5-fluorouracil, doxorubicin and cisplatin. 166 Feb 91

Forty-five patients with metastatic neuroendocrine tumors were treated with a regimen of etoposide 130 mg/m2/d for 3 days plus cisplatin 45 mg/m2/d on days 2 and 3. Both drugs were given by continuous intravenous infusion. Among 27 patients with well-differentiated carcinoid tumors or islet cell carcinomas, only two partial objective tumor regressions were observed (7%). Among 18 patients prospectively classified as having anaplastic neuroendocrine carcinomas, however, there were nine partial regressions and three complete regressions, an overall regression rate of 67%. For anaplastic disease, the median duration of regression was 8 months (range to 21 months). Tumor response was unrelated to primary site, endocrine hyperfunction, or prior therapy experience. The median survival of all patients with anaplastic tumors was 19 months; this seemed favorable when considering the small experiences with these rare tumors reported in the literature. Toxicity, which was severe for most patients, consisted primarily of vomiting, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, anemia, alopecia, and neuropathy. The anaplastic neuroendocrine tumor is strongly responsive to therapy with combined etoposide and cisplatin. Patients with undifferentiated carcinomas, originating in typical neuroendocrine tumor sites (small and large bowel, pancreas, and stomach) or of unknown origin, who have consistent histologic findings by light microscopy should be evaluated for this possibility with appropriate immune staining or electron microscopy.
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PMID:Treatment of neuroendocrine carcinomas with combined etoposide and cisplatin. Evidence of major therapeutic activity in the anaplastic variants of these neoplasms. 171 61

Twenty patients with histologically verified carcinoid liver metastases underwent a total of 24 liver artery embolizations by means of interventional radiologic techniques. There were no deaths. The postembolization syndrome, consisting of fever, abdominal pain, nausea, and vomiting, occurred in all the patients. Severe complications were rare, the most serious being multiple hepatic abscesses with septicemia in one patient, septicemia in another, and mild acute pancreatitis in a third. All these three patients recovered without any sequels from the embolization, and none required surgical intervention. The hepatic abscesses were drained percutaneously, guided by ultrasound. Hepatic artery embolization seems justified in patients with disabling symptoms from the carcinoid syndrome, as long as alternative therapy with the same benefit but fewer complications is not available.
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PMID:Side effects and complications after hepatic artery embolization in the carcinoid syndrome. 187 48

We describe the case of a patient suffering from relapsing abdominal pain and vomiting over 4 years, in whom various radiological and endoscopic examinations remained normal. CT scan and MRI eventually showed a mesenteric mass corresponding to metastasis of an ileal carcinoid; this tumor was diagnosed only at laparotomy as well as his mesenteric and hepatic metastases. The different localization and clinical manifestations of carcinoid tumours as well as the difficulties of radiological diagnosis of tumours of the small bowel are mentioned; the diagnostic value of sonography. CT-scan and MRI in the diagnosis of hepatic metastasis is discussed.
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PMID:[A difficult diagnosis]. 200 76

Carcinoid of the small intestine, usually found in the terminal ileum, presents a diagnostic challenge when the classic clinical and laboratory findings are absent. The commonest symptom, marked abdominal pain due to intussusception, may arouse suspicion of carcinoid. The precise preoperative diagnosis in the absence of the classic syndrome is impossible and the only way to diagnose it is by colonoscopic biopsy of the terminal ileum. The case described illustrates such a preoperative diagnosis in a 59-year-old woman with severe abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting and weight loss. X-ray studies aroused suspicion of tumor intussusception as the cause of the intestinal obstruction. Colonoscopic biopsy revealed the presence of a carcinoid tumor. However, there had been no symptoms of the carcinoid syndrome, nor was there increased urinary 5-hydroxy indoleacetic acid. On operation the tumor was found to be disseminated and unresectable, so surgical intervention was limited to palliative ileo-transversostomy.
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PMID:[Preoperative diagnosis of carcinoid of the terminal ileum in the absence of carcinoid syndrome]. 247 74


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