Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0242379 (lung cancer)
71,905 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A study of 115 lung cancer patients has shown that indications to the use of multi-modality gammascintigraphy or its separate variants are as follows: the presence of the clinical manifestations of distant metastases, data on a considerable local dissemination of a primary tumor to the lungs, poor differentiation by the histological structure.
...
PMID:[Use of radionuclide diagnostic methods in the detection of distant metastases of lung cancer]. 669 39

The authors provide their data on the combined treatment of 50 lung cancer patients aged 40 to 70 using irregular postoperative irradiation. There were 47 men and 3 women; 5 patients had Stage I, 33 Stage II, and 12 Stage III. Histologically, 80% had squamous cell carcinoma of various degree of differentiation, 20% had differentiated bronchogenic adenocarcinoma. Central cancer was found in 26, peripheral in 24 patients. Postoperative irradiation of the mediastinal lymph nodes and primary tumor bed was given in case of an uneventful postoperative course 3-4 weeks after surgical intervention. gamma-Beam therapy was performed under the conditions of a static regimen using a lead perforated filter C-2; the average single focal dose was 3 Gy, with the daily irradiation rhythm, the summary focal dose was 36 Gy. Radiation therapy was adequately tolerated by the patients, no radiation complications were observed. The duration of life was: 1 year 90%, over 1 year 88.9%, over 2 years 64.9% and over 3 years 50%. In the course of 2-3 years recurrences were detected in 3 patients.
...
PMID:[Fractionated postoperative irradiation in combined therapy of lung cancer]. 670 Mar 94

During the first 10 years of the Mayo Lung Project, 68 roentgenographically inapparent ("occult") lung cancers were localized and apparently completely resected. A pathologic classification was developed based on depth of tumor infiltration. The five categories were (1) in situ carcinoma confined to surface epithelium or ducts of mucous glands or acini (23 cancers), (2) intramucosal invasion not greater than 0.1 cm from mucosal surface (12 cancers), (3) invasion to bronchial cartilages (11 cancers), (4) invasion to full thickness of bronchial wall (10 cancers), and (5) extrabronchial invasion (12 cancers). Multicentricity of lung cancer was studied in 54 patients, none of whom had a history of cancer of the respiratory tract, and all of whom had had "complete" surgical resection of the initial occult lung cancer (or cancers). Neoplasms that were initially multicentric occurred in 4 patients, and a subsequent primary lung cancer developed in 11. The rate of detection of second primary lesions was 42 per 1,000 person-years of observation. A high incidence of unresectable cancers and a low survival rate were noted among patients who had a subsequent primary tumor. These findings were primarily attributable to invasiveness of the subsequent primary cancer or to respiratory insufficiency that resulted from obstructive lung disease or previous pulmonary resection. Because of the high risk of development of a second primary cancer after initial surgical resection, it is important to treat the initial occult cancer as conservatively as possible consistent with "cure."
...
PMID:Roentgenographically occult lung cancer: pathologic findings and frequency of multicentricity during a 10-year period. 673 13

Thirty-five patients underwent surgical resection of brain metastases from non-oat-cell lung cancer between 1978 and 1981. Twenty-nine patients received postoperative radiation therapy to the brain. Twenty-three patients were male and 12 were female. Intracranial metastases occurred as the initial symptom of malignancy in 14 patients, and at varying periods following treatment of the primary tumor in 21 patients. The primary tumor and involved nodes were treated by definitive surgery in 18 patients, palliative resection and interstitial radiation in 10 patients, and by radiation therapy or chemotherapy alone in seven patients. The overall median survival time was 14 months. Favorable prognostic variables included: 1) absence of local or systemic disease at time of craniotomy (median 23 months survival time); 2) aggressive treatment of the primary tumor (median 18 months survival time); and 3) metachronous onset of brain metastases (median 15 months survival time). These survival data represent a considerable improvement over the historical 6 months median period of survival in such patients.
...
PMID:Surgical treatment of brain metastases from lung cancer. 683 13

The charts of 106 patients with metastasis from an unknown primary cancer were reviewed to formulate a more appropriate investigative strategy than is presently employed. The spinal column was the most common site for initial presentation of metastatic disease (26.5 percent). The primary tumor was identified before death in 31.3 percent of patients and after death in 6.6 percent. Lung cancer was found in 40 percent of patients with identified primary tumors. Diagnostic studies directed at specific symptoms had a significantly greater yield. Electroencephalograms, gallium scans, thyroid scans, and mammograms were not useful as screening studies. Conversely, bone scans were positive in 46.5 percent of asymptomatic patients and in 88 percent of symptomatic patients. Chest roentgenograms were suggestive of malignant tumors in 43.6 percent of patients. Results of liver scans were predictable on the basis of changes in the alkaline phosphatase level and clinical liver examination. History and physical examination should clearly document the stage of disease, evaluate possible primary sites, and rule out impending acute complications. Chest roentgenograms and bone scans should be obtained early and open biopsy of accessible lesions scheduled promptly. Efforts should be directed at ruling out the more treatable malignant tumors. Further work-up is then indicated only by the development of specific symptomatology. Since median patient survival after initial presentation is only 6.6 months, prolonged hospitalization for numerous nonproductive diagnostic tests seems inappropriate.
...
PMID:Metastatic malignant disease of unknown origin. 683 85

Spirometry and regional pulmonary function studies using xenon 133 gas were performed in 251 patients who had primary lung cancer. Surgical resection was undertaken in 150 while the remainder were treated with nonsurgical modalities. Pulmonary function studies were repeated postoperatively in 54 patients. Regional ventilation and perfusion of the tumor-bearing lung were decreased in patients with larger primary tumors and in those with involvement of ipsilateral hilar lymph nodes. Reduced regional function was also directly related to the proximity of the primary tumor to the hilum. Significant hypoperfusion did not contraindicate operation in 14 patients; however, 13 of them required pneumonectomy. Estimated postoperative forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1.0), derived from preoperative spirometry and regional function of the tumor-bearing lung, correlated well with the measured postoperative values. These estimations were valuable in determining the extent of safe resection and correlated well with short-term survival. Long-term survival correlated better with the stage of disease.
...
PMID:Regional and overall pulmonary function changes in lung cancer. Correlations with tumor stage, extent of pulmonary resection, and patient survival. 686 54

A human lung tumor-associated antigen (LTA) previously purified from a primary lung tumor has been identified in the sera of lung cancer patients. Frequencies of LTA elevations in lung cancer were: adenocarcinoma, 60%; squamous cell carcinoma, 42%; large cell carcinoma, 17%; and small cell carcinoma, 19%; normals, 2%; benign lung disease, 0%; and non-lung malignancies, 13%. The antigen was also shown to be produced by seven of the eight human lung tumor cell lines that were examined. A preliminary small-scale purification was attempted on an extract from one of these lines, ChaGo, which yielded a smaller and more basic form of LTA but which possessed similar, if not identical, antigenic activities as primary tumor LTA.
...
PMID:LTA: a human lung tumor-associated antigen common to primary lung tumors and cultured lung tumor cell lines. 688 78

Ceruloplasmin was assayed as enzyme activity, as antigen, and as total copper in serum samples from 150 male lung cancer patients and comparable numbers of male controls. By all three assays, ceruloplasmin was significantly increased above the normal before treatment, and the degree of elevation was related to TNM stage [i.e., the International Union Against Cancer classification system based on extent of primary tumor (T), condition of lymph nodes (N), and absence of presence of metastases (M)]. Surgery had no immediate effects, but in patients who evidence of disease for longer periods, ceruloplasmin returned to nearly normal values. High levels of ceruloplasmin was elevated in 6 of 9 patients before tumor recurrence; 2 of 3 smokers (in the first panel of sera) with elevated ceruloplasmin levels subsequently developed lung cancer. The relative merits of the three assays were compared. Some sex- and age-related differences among normal controls were apparent. The results of pilot studies on men with gastrointestinal cancer and women with breast cancer are presented. It is concluded that only in limited situations will assays of ceruloplasmin aid in diagnosis, prognosis, and long-term monitoring of cancer patients.
...
PMID:Ceruloplasmin assays in diagnosis and treatment of human lung, breast, and gastrointestinal cancers. 694 65

The current enthusiasm for gallium (Ga) citrate as a tumor imaging agent reflects the need of clinical medicine for a good tumor imaging agent. To date, Ga-67 is probably the best tumor imaging agent available for clinical use. Initially, Ga-67 was investigated for its bone scanning potential. In this process, in 1969, Edwards and Hayes accidentally found that Ga-67 concentrated in soft tissue tumors, mainly lymphomas, in patients. Later studies reported the clinical experience with Ga-67 concentration in many different tumor types. Great variation was noted in the ability of different tumors to concentrate Ga-67. However, Ga-67 was most consistently and reliably taken up in lung tumors, with sensitivities of Ga imaging positivity in lung cancer ranging from 85 to 95%. Within the lung cancer group, squamous cell carcinoma consistently has been much more reliably positive than adenocarcinoma or alveolar cell carcinoma. Subsequent studies on Ga-67 led to the recognition of its preferential concentration in inflammatory lesions and abscess. These reports resulted in the clinical application of Ga-67 imaging as a diagnostic tool in the evaluation of patients with suspected abscesses. Mechanisms of Ga localization in tumor and inflammatory lesions are not currently well understood. Electron microscopic studies have revealed some information regarding the intracellular localization of Ga, but the mechanism by which it is taken up by the cell remains unproven, although several explanations have been suggested. The biodistribution of Ga-67 is responsible for the great difficulty experienced in interpreting Ga images of the abdomen, mainly because of the normal of the normal excretion in the bowel. Clinical studies have shown that the Ga scan can be used in the workup of patients with lung cancer as a sensitive tool in excluding the presence of mediastinal metastases. In some institutions, a negative Ga mediastinal scan in the presence of positive Ga uptake in the presumed primary tumor in patients with lung cancers has been used in lieu of a staging mediastinoscopy. Data regarding the thresholds of various factors which determine visibility of a lung tumor by Ga-67 imaging have been described in some detail. The factors include lesion size, depth in tissue, gallium concentration in tumor relative to background, type of film and instrumentation used, and count rates obtained. The data suggest the need for very high radiopharmaceutical concentrations in small tumors relative to background activity for identification of the tumor on an image.
...
PMID:Usefulness of gallium imaging in the evaluation of lung cancer. 700 81

One thousand-six-hundred and sixty cases of laryngeal cancer were diagnosed in Israel during the years 1960-1976. In 98 of these cases another primary cancer accompanied the laryngeal carcinoma. Patients whose second primary cancer was basal or squamous cell carcinoma of the skin were not included in this study. Therefore, the results reported here deal with 84 patients. The prevalence of multiple primary cancer in patients with laryngeal carcinoma was found to be 5%. Lung cancer is the other primary tumor accompanying laryngeal carcinoma most frequently (29% of the additional tumors) followed by colorectal and bladder cancers. Most of the additional tumors (83%) appeared in a metachronic form with an average time interval of six years. In most metachronic tumors laryngeal carcinoma appeared as the first tumor (86%). Eighty percent of the patients were dead by August 1978. The majority (74%) succumbed due to the additional tumor and only 4% died of laryngeal carcinoma.
...
PMID:Occurrence of additional primary neoplasms in patients with laryngeal carcinoma in Israel (1960-1976). 709 45


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>