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Query: UMLS:C0178874 (
tumor progression
)
40,807
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In a prospective, nonrandomized study 43 patients with inoperable oesophageal carcinoma were treated with a combined therapy of external and intracavitary irradiation according to the Heidelberg protocol adjusted to tumor stage, general condition and age. The proportion of external beam to afterloading doses was 2/3:1/3. The reference doses were between 50 and 75 Gy. Intracavitary radiotherapy was carried out with a
HDR
-afterloading device in single doses of 5 Gy. In a median follow-up of 23 months 46% had a complete remission and 42% had a partial remission. Within ten months 17 patients (39.5%) showed local
tumor progression
or recurrence. Presently the estimated median survival time of the whole collective is eleven months. The median survival was significantly influenced by achievement of complete remission (17.7 months in comparison to 8.7 months by missing complete remission). After completion of therapy 90% had sufficient oral nutrition. During long-term follow-up in 44% of the cases repeated measures had to be taken to eliminate initial or recurrent dysphagia. Almost all postradiogenic stenoses were caused by
tumor progression
. Radiogenic side-effects caused by
HDR
-afterloading boosts, exceeding the acceptance, were not found. The combined therapy reduces the period of hospitalisation and has the same palliative effects as an exclusively external radiotherapy.
...
PMID:[The percutaneous-endocavitary irradiation of esophageal carcinomas]. 137 68
Pelvic side wall recurrences of gynecological malignancies subsequent to primary or adjuvant radiation therapy have a bad prognosis, although in almost half of the cases, distant metastases are not present at the time of diagnosis of the local
tumor progression
. A radical operative resection of the pelvic wall recurrence is rarely possible and a second conventional percutaneous or intracavitary irradiation with a tumoricidal dose is no longer feasible, because of the limited radiation tolerance of the surrounding pelvic tissue. The different forms of chemotherapy applied at present are not curative. Based on considerations of tumor and radiation biology, we propose a new experimental treatment mode after subtotal tumor resection. Intraoperatively, guiding tubes for afterloading
HDR
brachytherapy are fixed equidistantly on the tumor bed resp. residual tumor at the pelvic side wall. Coverage of this area by a rectus abdominis muscle flap or de-epithelialized myocutaneous flap improves fixation and creates a protective distance between radiosensitive pelvic structures and the radioactive source inserted postoperatively. In addition, improved vascularization by the flap might reduce the potential of hypoxia induced radioresistance of the residual tumor. Under these circumstances it appears possible, to deliver a second tumoricidal radiation dose of a small volume to a precisely defined area of the pelvic side wall.
...
PMID:[A new experimental method for the treatment of pelvic wall recurrencies of gynecological malignancies]. 253 Nov 3
Intraoperative radiotherapy (IORT) is a new concept in the treatment of recurrent and primary advanced colorectal tumors. Between October 1994 and December 1997 27 patients (primary tumor: 8, first recurrent tumor: 12, second recurrent tumor: 7) received IORT (32 applications). Chemotherapy and percutaneous radiotherapy had already been given to all patients with advanced and recurrent colorectal tumors. The intraoperative irradiation was performed through
HDR
iridium afterloading. A flexible flab--individually adapted to the "tumor bed"--was used as applicator. The contact dose ranged from 10 to 15 Gy. The mean operation time (rectum resection: 5, rectum amputation: 14, debulking: 8) increased by 30 min on average. Eight patients had postoperative complications: perianal wound infections (3), sacrovesical fistulas (3), leakage of anastomosis (1) and neural ureter dysfunction (1). To date--on average 17.1 months (range: 3-33) after operation--13 patients are free of tumor recurrence or show stable disease. Ten patients--all of them had macroscopic residual tumor--have local
tumor progression
combined with good quality of life. Only 4 patients died (acute kidney failure, stroke, marasmus, systemic progression). The afterloading flab technique represents a technically simple, minimally harmful procedure in the therapy of colorectal tumor. Even when IORT with electrons is not feasible or the patients have already been irradiated, a higher radiation dose is possible. Given the demonstrated rate of local tumor recurrence, the afterloading flab technique seems to be a valuable treatment alternative to extended, high-risk resections. Long-term follow-ups will be necessary.
...
PMID:[In Process Citation] 1006 22
Multiple myeloma (MM) is a genetically complex disease. The past few years have seen an evolution in cancer research with the emergence of next-generation sequencing (NGS), enabling high throughput sequencing of tumors-including whole exome, whole genome, RNA, and single-cell sequencing as well as genome-wide association study (GWAS). A few inherited variants have been described, counting for some cases of familial disease. Hierarchically, primary events in MM can be divided into hyperdiploid (
HDR
) and nonhyperdiploid subtypes. HRD tumors are characterized by trisomy of chromosomes 3, 5, 7, 9, 11, 15, 19, and/or 21. Non-HRD tumors harbor IGH translocations, mainly t(4;14), t(6;14), t(11;14), t(14;16), and t(14;20). Secondary events participate to the
tumor progression
and consist in secondary translocation involving MYC, copy number variations (CNV) and somatic mutations (such as mutations in KRAS, NRAS, BRAF, P53). Moreover, the dissection of clonal heterogeneity helps to understand the evolution of the disease. The following review provides a comprehensive review of the genomic landscape in MM.
...
PMID:Genomic Aberrations in Multiple Myeloma. 2769 56