Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0086543 (cataract)
29,165 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Ten patients with large melanomas and one patient with recurrent retinoblastoma were treated with combined localized current field (LCF) hyperthermia and iodine 125 irradiation delivered by episcleral plaque. Tumors were heated to 43 degrees to 45 degrees C for 28 to 45 minutes. Localized current field hyperthermia when combined with irradiation appeared to induce rapid tumor necrosis. One eye enucleated 17 hours after treatment showed only focal necrosis of the melanoma, while another eye demonstrated extensive necrosis 60 hours after treatment. In all remaining eyes, tumor regression occurred within the first month of treatment. Complications included cataract formation in six eyes, hemorrhagic retinal detachment in five eyes, and phthisis in two eyes. Complications from combined therapy of large intraocular tumors in this series appeared to result from the rapid necrosis of the tumor and secondary intraocular inflammation. Intraocular temperature dosimetry measurements demonstrated a temperature gradient of not more than -0.23 degrees C/mm-1 per axial millimeter from the episcleral plaque surface to the apex of the tumor. The authors believe that LCF hyperthermia could be a suitable means of application of hyperthermia in patients with intraocular tumors if further modifications were performed to reduce ocular complications.
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PMID:Combined localized current field hyperthermia and irradiation for intraocular tumors. 177 18

Thirty-three infants ( < 1 year at diagnosis) were treated for retinoblastoma with primary irradiation at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital (SJCRH) between 1963 and June 1992. Staging of the 44 treated eyes was as follows: Reese-Ellsworth (R-E) Groups I (n = 20), Group II (n = 9), Group III (n = 6), Group IV (n = 2), Group V (n = 7). Irradiation was delivered using either a single anterior field (31 eyes) or lens-sparing techniques (13 eyes). Total doses ranged from 21-45 Gy (median = 36 Gy) in fractions of 150-180 cGy (n = 34) or > 180 cGy (n = 10). One child died of metastatic disease at 42 months. Three patients have developed second malignant neoplasms; two have succumbed at 88 and 125 months post-RB diagnosis; the remaining patients are alive at 6-259 months postdiagnosis (median follow-up = 127 months). Local control with irradiation alone and supplemented cryotherapy given within 2 months (n = 2) was maintained in 29 eyes, with no statistical difference seen for total doses < or = 36 Gy (21/8 eyes) vs. > 36 Gy (8/16). Of 15 eyes that required salvage therapy, tumor control has been maintained in 13. Enucleation was required for four patients, two with recurrent retinoblastoma and one with a phthisical eye. Cataract formation was documented in 23 eyes (87.5%) treated with lens-sparing techniques developed cataract. At last follow-up, 23 of 30 patients tested (77%) had visual acuity of 20/100 or better. This experience confirms early observations in that doses > or = 36 Gy do not appear to improve local control with irradiation alone in infants ( < 365 days) with retinoblastoma.
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PMID:Treatment outcome and dose-response relationship in infants younger than 1 year treated for retinoblastoma with primary irradiation. 861 62