Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0149925 (small cell lung cancer)
6,491 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In order to clarify the pathogenesis of paraneoplastic syndrome, immunohistochemical studies were performed in a patient with subacute sensory neuropathy secondary to a small cell lung cancer. The case was a 73-year-old ex-farmer, whose chief complaints were pins and needles sensation of distal limbs and gait difficulty. After 6 weeks prodromata of pain in the upper limbs and numbness in all the limbs, he became unable to stand up without assistance. Neurological examinations on admission revealed marked sensory disturbances with glove and stocking type hypalgesia to pin prick and the loss of position and vibration senses in the distal extremities. His deep tendon reflexes also decreased in all the limbs. A chest X-ray showed a mass in the left upper lung field. A transbronchial lung biopsy of the mass revealed a small cell carcinoma. He was treated with anti-cancer drugs and radiation but he died of pneumonia after 8 months illness. Autopsy revealed a marked demyelination of the entire posterior column of the spinal cord. Dorsal root ganglia were infiltrated by lymphocytes with significant neuronal loss. Immunohistochemically, most of the infiltrated cells around the neurons were classified as CD8+ with fewer CD4+ lymphocytes. No B-lymphocytes were detected in the ganglia. The HLA-ABC and HLA-DR positive cells were found only among the satellite cells, not in the neurons. The serum and CSF from the patient were immunohistologically reacted with the nuclei and cytoplasm of all neurons of human as well as of rats, indicating the presence of anti-Hu type antineuronal antibody in the patient's CSF as well as serum.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Immunohistochemical studies of paraneoplastic subacute sensory neuropathy--an analysis of antineuronal antibody and infiltrated lymphocytes]. 132 6

A 15-year experience with paraneoplastic sensory neuronopathy at the Mayo Clinic is reviewed. Of 26 patients with paraneoplastic sensory neuropathy, 19 had small cell lung cancer, 4 had breast cancer, and 3 had other neoplasms. There was a striking predominance of females (20:6). Neuropathic symptoms (pain, paresthesia, sensory loss) were asymmetric at onset, with a predilection for the upper limbs; in three patients, symptoms were confined to the arms. Electrophysiologic testing revealed absent sensory responses and normal or minimally altered motor responses. Slightly more than half the patients had associated autonomic, cerebellar, or cerebral abnormalities. In some patients, treatment of the neoplasm seemed to halt progression of the neuronopathy, but none had neurologic improvement and most continued to worsen, even when the oncologic response was good. Distinguishing between paraneoplastic and nonparaneoplastic sensory neuronopathies can be difficult, but prominent neuropathic pain, neurologic dysfunction involving more than the peripheral sensory system, or an increased cerebrospinal fluid protein value should prompt a careful search for a cancer.
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PMID:The distinctive clinical features of paraneoplastic sensory neuronopathy. 139 44

The Sickness Impact Profile (SIP) and the Hospital Anxiety and Depression scale (HAD) were used for assessment of physical and psychosocial functioning and emotional distress in patients with small cell lung cancer (SCLC) receiving chemotherapy. Treatment schedules extended over 12 months. Before treatment sixty-two patients, 36-80 years of age, completed the questionnaires and a selection of lung cancer symptom items. Approximately 50% of the patients reported clinically significant physical dysfunction, while emotional distress was reported by 25% and social restraints by 40%. Self-reported overall dysfunction, as assessed by SIP total index, was clinically significant in 60% of the patients. SIP physical and total indices were strongly related to WHO performance status (grade 0-4). The assessment was subsequently repeated every third month during the treatment period. Overall tumour response rate was 82%. The changes of physical and psychosocial functioning, as assessed by SIP, were significantly related to tumour response, although a persistent substantial overall dysfunction was shown among 50% of the responders after 3 months and among c. 40% after 6 months. In addition to tumour response, pain and appetite changes correlated with the change of overall SIP in multivariate analysis, implying the importance of pain control and appetite stimulating measures for patients with advanced cancer. Anxiety and depression, as measured by HAD, were reduced in 21 patients who completed 12 months chemotherapy, but only anxiety co-varied with tumour response. The results lend support to the use of the generic SIP and HAD as outcome measures in clinical research with SCLC patients receiving chemotherapy.
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PMID:Quality of life during chemotherapy for small cell lung cancer. I. An evaluation with generic health measures. 166 74

Fifty-three patients who were taking part in a randomized trial of chemotherapy in small cell lung cancer (SCLC) were entered into a study of quality of life measurement using a daily diary card. Patients received either four or eight cycles of initial chemotherapy and daily records were scored, using a four point scale of nausea, sickness, appetite, sleep, mood, pain, activity and general well being. Two hundred and fifty-six of a possible 379 cards were returned (68% compliance). The first 31 patients took part in an assessment of the diary card where comparison was made with nurse ratings using the card, the EORTC questionnaire and the Spitzer quality of life index. These comparisons showed appropriate convergent and divergent validity and demonstrated the sensitivity of the diary card to short term changes compared with the other measures. In the randomized trial the diary card demonstrated a worsening of sickness and related variables as treatment continued. This spilled over into mood and general well being although physical variables of pain, sleep and activity were largely unaffected. Prophylactic cranial irradiation was associated with a transient increase in sickness and vomiting. The study shows that the diary card is an instrument sensitive to short term changes in quality of life and thus especially useful for comparing effects during the period of treatment.
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PMID:Quality of life during chemotherapy for small cell lung cancer: assessment and use of a daily diary card in a randomized trial. 216 92

The incidence and prognosis of patients with bone metastasis in primary advanced lung cancer were studied retrospectively. Between Jan. 1980 and Dec. 1985, 289 cases entered various kinds of chemotherapy protocol studies. Patients with bone metastasis of non-small cell lung cancer (NSC) comprised 44% (86/192), and those with small cell lung cancer (SC) comprised 43% (42/97). Histologically, 48% of adenocarcinoma, 50% of large cell carcinoma and 31% of squamous cell carcinoma showed bone metastasis. 8 percent of NSC bone meta (+) cases had an initial symptom of bone metastasis. Bone scan and bone X-ray were complementary and useful for diagnosis of bone metastasis, and sequential examinations tended to reduce the incidence of false-positive cases. Vertebral column, rib, pelvis and femur were the most common sites. Over 70% of the bone metastasis were in multiple skeletal systems, and 90% showed multiple-site involvement for both NSC and SC. Radiation therapy effectively reduced severe pain but paralysis was hard to control. In very few cases surgical treatment was indicated because of multiple bone metastasis, and systemic dissemination. Bone scan in 12% of SC patients showed apparent improvement with systemic chemotherapy. Among the M1 group of adenocarcinoma, median survival was 9 months in bone (+) cases, 11 months in bone (-) cases, 2 year survival was 8%, and 24%, and 3-year survival 2% and 22%, respectively. Among the bone(+) group and bone(-) group in ED cases of SC, median survival was 10 months vs. 11 months, and 2-year survival rates were both 13%. 22 percent (8/36) of squamous cell carcinomas without bone metastasis showed hypercalcemia (5.5 mEq/l). In patients with advanced lung cancer the major goal of treatment is recovery of the performance status of the patient and the relief of pain. In the case of SC, intensive systemic chemotherapy should be conducted as an adjuvant to local therapy.
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PMID:[Recent status of the diagnosis and treatment of bone metastasis in patients with advanced lung cancer]. 303 14

In the first study of combined chemotherapy and radiation therapy for small cell lung cancer by the Southwest Oncology Group, 17 patients survived more than five years after treatment was initiated (4.6 percent). Late relapse, or a second primary malignancy three to six years after diagnosis, accounted for death in five of these patients. Late recurrences involved the chest, bone, and liver; none occurred in the central nervous system. Disease-free survival continues in 10 patients (6 percent of those with limited disease and 1 percent of those with extensive-stage diseases) at a minimal follow-up in excess of six years. One definite case of chronic treatment-related toxicity occurred: congestive cardiomyopathy after 450 mg/m2 of doxorubicin, successfully managed with digitalis and diuretics. One severe neurologic problem (orthostatic hypotension with preterminal dementia) and two less severe neurologic complications (occasional falling episodes without documented cause and cerebrovascular accident) may be treatment-related. Progressive pulmonary disability, post-herpetic pain syndromes, organic brain syndrome, and hematologic abnormalities have not been observed to date. Nitrosourea administration and/or co-administration of a nitrosourea or methotrexate during the induction phase of treatment with radiotherapy to the brain may account for the higher incidence of complications observed by others in long-term survivors.
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PMID:Long-term survival and toxicity in small cell lung cancer. Southwest Oncology Group study. 608 60

We report a case of small cell lung cancer in a 17 year-old man. He was admitted to our unit suffering from a two month history of pain left shoulder. Chest X-rays showed a large round mass in the left upper lobe. The chest CT scan revealed a tumor with evidence of first left rib involvement. Histological examination, after surgical biopsy revealed small cell carcinoma, confirmed by two independent pathological physicians. Small cell lung carcinoma is very rare in the under 20 year age group and we compare this case with other types of lung cancer in young patients described in the literature.
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PMID:[Small cell bronchial cancer in a 17-year-old young man]. 783 15

Alternatively to the usual evaluation summary, a characteristic of small cell lung cancer, is the probability of significant diffuse metastases; the prognosis is directly linked to the extent of these metastases. Moreover, the assessment of the initial extension becomes heavier and more costly as investigations continue and each new technology appears. In order to evaluate the contribution of each examination, a classification has been established as a function of the time-scale to obtain the results, of the technology involved, or whether the investigation is painful or not and any likelihood of iatrogenic side-effects. An assessment in three stages is proposed to achieve the most effective and cheapest diagnosis possible. In relation to the usual technique of assessment this sequential approach allows for a 27% reduction in the time-scale for the diagnosis of diffuse disease, 51.3% in terms of technical involvement, 46.3% in terms of pain and discomfort and 53.9% in terms of iatrogenic potential. At the same time a reduction in cost of 47.5% is observed.
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PMID:[Clinical and economic evaluation of the initial assessment of small cell cancer of the lung. Alternatives to classic evaluation. LGTO. The Lyon Group of Thoracic Oncology]. 825 31

Six patients (2.7%) developed meningeal carcinomatosis among 207 patients with small cell lung cancer (SCLC) receiving intensive combination chemotherapy. The cumulative probability of developing meningeal carcinomatosis was 2.7% at 3 years and 7.8% at 5 years after diagnosis of SCLC. Pain in legs, gait disturbance, headache, nausea and vomiting were the characteristic symptoms at the onset of meningeal carcinomatosis. Although cytological examination of cerebro-spinal fluid (CSF) was essential for the diagnosis of meningeal carcinomatosis, elevated protein, LDH, CEA and/or NSE concentration and decreased glucose concentration in CSF were also helpful for the diagnosis. For treatment of meningeal carcinomatosis, all patients received intrathecal administration of methotrexate, cytosine arabinoside and/or prednisolone. Additionally, 3 patients received spinal irradiation, and one received cerebro-spinal irradiation. However, only 2 patients responded, and survival was brief ranging from 2 to 38 weeks. Development of meningeal carcinomatosis seems to be a rare event; however, it may be an obstacle to the prolongation of patient survival in the treatment of SCLC.
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PMID:[Meningeal carcinomatosis in patients with small cell lung cancer]. 839 Oct 93

This synthesis of the literature on radiotherapy for lung cancer is based on 80 scientific articles, including 2 meta-analyses, 29 randomized studies, 19 prospective studies, and 21 retrospective studies. These studies involve 28172 patients. Basic treatment for limited-stage small cell lung cancer (SCLC), is chemotherapy. Addition of radiotherapy to the primary tumor and mediastinum reduces local recurrence, prolongs long-term survival, and is often indicated. Current, and future, studies can be expected to show successive improvements in results for SCLC by optimizing the combination of radiotherapy and chemotherapy. Should these treatments be given simultaneously or sequentially, and in which order? Which fractionation is best? Probably, no change in resource requirements for radiotherapy will be necessary, with the possible exception of changes in fractionation. Surgery constitutes primary treatment for nonsmall cell lung cancer (NSCLC) stages I and II. Radiotherapy may provide an alternative for patients who are inoperable for medical reasons. The value of radiotherapy following radical surgery for NSCLC remains to be shown. It is not indicated based on current knowledge. For NSCLC stage III, radiotherapy shrinks tumors and prolongs survival at 2 and 3 years. Whether it influences long-term survival after 5 years has not been shown. Considering the side effects of treatment, one must question whether limited improvements in survival motivate routine radiotherapy in these patients. Earlier attempts to add chemotherapy to radiotherapy to improve treatment results of NSCLC have not yielded convincing results. Several studies are currently on-going. Prophylactic cranial irradiation (PCI) greatly reduces the risk for brain metastases from SCLC. However, it has little influence on survival. Many treatment centers give PCI to SCLC patients who have achieved complete remission. This practice may be questioned since PCI is associated with serious complications. PCI is not indicated in patients with NSCLC. In SCLC, where the disease is extensive, only palliative radiotherapy is appropriate. Radiotherapy is an important treatment alternative in special palliative situations involving severe cough, severe bleeding, pain, pulmonary obstructions, and vena cava superior syndrome. In these situations, good results may be achieved with few fractions.
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PMID:Lung cancer. 915 94


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