Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0153690 (bone metastases)
6,382 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Lung cancer during pregnancy is rare, although the number of case reports has been increasing in recent years. Herein, we describe two cases of lung carcinoma complicating pregnancy with different presentations and outcomes, and review the relevant literature. The first case involved a 31-year-old patient with squamous cell carcinoma with multiple bone metastases. The initial symptoms were productive cough and dyspnea on exertion during the second trimester of pregnancy, to which the patient paid little attention. Chemoradiation was started 1 month postpartum, soon after the diagnosis was made, but with little response. She died at home several days after palliative radiotherapy. The second case involved a 34-year-old patient with poorly differentiated lung carcinoma with brain metastasis. Left hemiparesis had developed initially during the third trimester. She underwent excision of the metastatic brain tumor and received radiotherapy to the left lung tumor and brain. The patient is still alive after a follow-up period of more than 1 year. Delayed diagnosis may be the main problem in the management of lung cancer during pregnancy, because of misinterpretation of common respiratory symptoms and physicians' reluctance to use radiologic imaging studies owing to concerns over the safety of the fetus. Thus, we suggest chest radiographs with abdominal lead shielding for pregnant patients with protracted cough and hemoptysis. Treatment of unresectable lung cancer during pregnancy generally consisted of radiation therapy with or without chemotherapy in previous reports, but the optimal therapy is still unknown, owing to inadequate case numbers and insufficient follow-up data.
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PMID:Lung cancer in pregnancy: report of two cases. 974 70

We report a rare case of basaloid squamous cell carcinoma of the lung in a young Japanese woman. An 18-year-old woman presented with productive cough. Chest radiogram and computed tomography (CT) revealed a tumor in the left hilum accompanied by partial atelectasis of the left upper lobe and pleural effusion. Transbronchial fine-needle aspiration cytology supported a tentative diagnosis of primary squamous-cell carcinoma of the lung. The clinical stage was T4N2M1, with multiple bone metastases. Despite a transient response to chemotherapy consisting of carboplatin and paclitaxel, the patient died because of tumor progression 2 months after the start of the chemotherapy. Necropsy established the diagnosis of basaloid squamous-cell carcinoma of the lung. Immunohistochemical studies of the necropsy specimen indicated that the tumor was positive for keratin, vimentin, and S100, and negative for chromogranin A, cytokeratin CAM5.2, and bcl-2. Besides the rarity of the disease itself, the present case seemed to have additional uniqueness in that the patient was 18 years old and female. This is the youngest patient with a case of basaloid squamous cell carcinoma of the lung ever reported.
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PMID:Basaloid squamous-cell carcinoma of the lung in a young woman. 1650 33