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Query: UMLS:C0278488 (
metastatic breast cancer
)
7,812
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Forty-four patients with
metastatic breast cancer
were treated with monthly courses of cyclophosphamide, methotrexate and 5-fluorouracil. Complete remission was achieved in five of the 44 patients (11.4%), partial remission in 17 (38.7%) and stabilization in 19 (43.2%). Progression of the disease was seen in three patients (6.7%). Forty patients are still alive and continue to receive chemotherapy. The main side effects were leukopenia, thrombocytopenia,
weakness
, nausea and vomiting; all were mild and transient, and were treated symptomatically.
...
PMID:Cyclic combination chemotherapy for metastatic breast cancer. 88 10
Aminoglutethimide (AG) was administered as palliative therapy in 112 patients with
metastatic breast cancer
. In 36 patients, the dose level was 1000 mg/day; 76 patients received a dose level of 500 mg/day. Patients with brain or liver metastasis were excluded, as were patients with tumors determined to be negative for estrogen receptors. Objective regression was observed in 35 (31%) patients, with the duration of response ranging from 4 to 36 + months (mean, 12 months; median, 10 months). Response was observed in 11 of 31 (35%) patients with soft tissue metastasis; 16/59 (27%) patients with osseous metastasis; and 8 of 22 (36%) having visceral metastasis. In 93 patients with positive estrogen receptor (ER), 33 responded (35%), whereas in 19 patients with unknown ER status, two responded (11%). Response to previous treatment with tamoxifen (TAM) had occurred in 31 patients; of these, response to AG was noted in 11 (35%). Of 24 patients failing to respond to prior treatment with tamoxifen, four (17%) responded to subsequent therapy with AG. Thirteen patients had previously received combination chemotherapy, and response to AG was noted in two (15%). The side effects observed in this study included skin rash in ten patients, fever in eight, somnolence in three,
weakness
and dizziness in one, headache in one, insomnia in one, dyspnea in one, and ataxia in one. Treatment had to be discontinued in eight patients, due to the severity of the side effects. As expected, patients receiving AG at the lower dose level of 500 mg/day experienced fewer and less severe side effects than those treated with the higher dose. The response rate in the 1000 mg/day group was 10/36 (28%) and in the 500 mg/day group, it was 25/76 (33%). The lower dosage was better tolerated without apparent compromise in therapeutic efficacy.
...
PMID:Aminoglutethimide in patients with metastatic breast cancer. 246 35
A 39-year-old white woman with
breast cancer, metastatic
to her skeleton, developed low back and left lower extremity pain and lower extremity
weakness
. A bone scan evidenced increased radioisotope activity in her lumbar spine and a computed tomography (CT) scan showed a lesion of the L4 vertebra. Because of myelographic findings of a extradural defect at the L4-5 disc space and the possibility of a herniated disc causing the patient's pain and neurologic deficit in her lower extremities, the patient underwent surgery and a large herniated L4-5 disc was removed. As a consequence, the patient experienced relief of the lower extremity pain and return of strength in her lower extremities. She died a considerable time later from refractory hypercalcemia.
...
PMID:Breast cancer with osseous metastasis and herniated lumbar disc. A cautionary tale. 299 46
Seventy-three patients with
metastatic breast cancer
, whose disease progressed on hormonal therapy with tamoxifen or aminoglutethimide, were treated with megestrol acetate, 160 mg/day. No complete responses were observed. Partial response was achieved in 3 patients (4%), for a median of 9 months (range 5-13). Thirty-five patients (48%) remained stable, for a median of 8 months (3-26). The remaining 35 patients (48%) had clear progression of their metastatic disease on therapy. Response to megestrol acetate was achieved in patients with metastases in bone and pleura only. There was no correlation between response to megestrol acetate and response to prior chemotherapy, prior tamoxifen therapy, previous treatment with aminoglutethimide, or hormone receptor status. The actuarial 24-month survival for all patients was 37%. The main side effects of megestrol acetate included weight gain (20% or over), pruritus, elevation of blood pressure,
weakness
, and vaginal bleeding; they were only occasionally observed. The objective improvement observed during this trial is disappointing; the only reasons to justify the use of megestrol acetate as second- or third-line hormonal therapy in patients with
metastatic breast cancer
, would be the relatively long duration of disease stabilization in a large proportion of patients, and the low toxicity observed with the drug.
...
PMID:Megestrol acetate in advanced breast carcinoma after failure to tamoxifen and/or aminoglutethimide. 819 8
Spinal cord compression (SCC) is a relatively uncommon but frequently disabling complication of
metastatic breast cancer
. We have conducted this retrospective study of 70 patients with SCC secondary to breast cancer with the aims of determining risk factors for its development and predictors of outcome. Median age at diagnosis of breast cancer was 51 years with median time to SCC 42 months. All patients had radiological evidence of bone metastases at the time of SCC, and only five were not known to have bone metastases prior to SCC. The most frequent symptom of SCC was motor
weakness
(96%) followed by pain (94%), sensory disturbance (79%) and sphincter disturbance (61%). Ninety-one percent of patients had at least one symptom for more than a week. Radiotherapy (RT) was given as primary treatment in 43 cases, whilst 21 had decompressive surgery and seven of these went onto have postoperative radiotherapy. Six patients were deemed too unwell for either modality. Following treatment, 96% of those who were ambulant before therapy maintained the ability to walk. In those unable to walk, 45% regained ambulation, with RT and surgery being equally effective. Median survival following SCC was 4 months, with no significant difference between those treated by RT or surgery. The most important predictor of survival was ability to walk after treatment, followed by time from diagnosis of breast cancer to SCC. We conclude that the majority of patients have warning symptoms of SCC and that nearly all will have evidence of spinal bone metastases before compression occurs. The results suggest that earlier diagnosis and intervention could improve outcome. There was no evidence of benefit from surgery over radiotherapy as primary treatment, survival in both treatment groups being poor.
...
PMID:Spinal cord compression in breast cancer: a review of 70 cases. 821 11
Many patients diagnosed with breast cancer will develop metastases and these have diverse presentations. We have reviewed 100 consecutive patients who have died with
metastatic breast cancer
, to determine the frequency, sites and mode of presentation of recurrent disease. The commonest site of failure was loco-regional (n = 61), this usually presented with a mass, but a minority of patients also complained of pain. Bone metastases developed in 60 patients and produced bone pain, pathological fracture (n = 6) or cord compression (n = 5). Pulmonary metastases producing shortness of breath were diagnosed in 34 patients and were asymptomatic in a further 10. Intra-abdominal metastases were found at some time in 23 patients, most commonly in the liver (n = 20) and the majority complained of epigastric pain (n = 17). Brain metastases occurred in 23 patients and produced a wide range of symptoms including those of a space-occupying lesion (n = 10), cranial nerve palsy (n = 7), diabetes insipidus (n = 3), focal limb
weakness
(n = 2) and meningitis (n = 1). Three patients had choroid metastases producing reduced visual acuity. Recurrent breast carcinoma can present in a variety of ways, therefore any new symptom or sign should be considered to represent recurrence until proved otherwise.
...
PMID:Patterns of clinical metastasis in breast cancer: an analysis of 100 patients. 863 4
This study was aimed at investigating the toxicity and activity of the combination epirubicin and vinorelbine in chemotherapy-naive patients with
metastatic breast cancer
. Fifty-one patients with measurable or evaluable
metastatic breast cancer
entered the study. The regimen consisted of epirubicin 90 mg/m2 as a slow i.v. infusion on day 1, followed by vinorelbine 25 mg/m2 by 30-minute intravenous infusion on days 1 and 8; the courses were repeated every 21 days for a maximum of 8 cycles. All the patients were assessable for toxicity and 47 were evaluable for response according to the World Health Organization (WHO) criteria. Objective responses were observed in 33 out of 47 evaluable patients (70.2%; 95% C.I. 55.1%-82.6%) with 4 complete (8.5%) and 29 partial responses (61.7%); 11 patients had stable disease (23.4%) and 3 patients progressed while on treatment. The median time to progression was 10 months (range 1-21) and the median overall survival was 23 months (range 2 - 32+). Neutropenia was the most frequent toxicity: a grade 4 neutropenia (WHO) was reported in 70% of 252 courses with a median duration of 3 days (range 1-6). Seventeen episodes of febrile neutropenia were observed but only 1 patient required hospital admission. Other hematologic toxicities were negligible. One patient experienced a paralytic ileus requiring hospitalization; no peripheral neuropathy such as muscle
weakness
or paresthesia was observed. No treatment-related cardiotoxicity was reported. The encouraging response rate achieved with epirubicin/vinorelbine, the easily manageable toxicities of the combination, and its feasibility in an outpatient setting make this combination worthy of further comparative trials with standard regimens.
...
PMID:Epirubicin/vinorelbine as first line therapy in metastatic breast cancer. 969 95
We report a case of breast cancer with spinal and vertebral lesions. A 49-year-old premenopausal woman with a left breast tumor was admitted to our hospital for acute
weakness
of the lower limbs and dysuria. She could neither stand nor walk. The tumor in the left breast was 5.0 cm in diameter with skin ulcer, and it was diagnosed as breast cancer. Magnetic resonance (MR) image showed multiple vertebral and spinal metastases from breast cancer. Chemotherapy, consisting of cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin and 5-fluorouracil (CAF) was initiated. Her symptoms dramatically changed for the better. She became able to walk and urinate. We performed palliative mastectomy after 3 cycles of CAF therapy. Histopathological findings of breast tumor showed scirrhous carcinoma. Although the estrogen and progesterone receptor status of primary tumor was negative, chemo-endocrine therapy, consisting of medroxyprogesterone acetate (MPA) and doxifluridine (5'-DFUR) was given as daily therapy, and vertebral and spinal lesions were reduced. Her condition has remained stable for 4 years. For patients with
metastatic breast cancer
, complete remission is uncommon, and disease stabilization is a reasonable goal of successful therapy. In this respect, therapy with CAF, followed by MPA and 5'-DFUR, was successful in the patient.
...
PMID:[Successful combination therapy with 5'-DFUR and MPA for breast cancer with spinal and vertebral metastases]. 1562 61
A 62-year-old woman presented with diplopia caused by bilateral sixth cranial nerve palsies. Two weeks later, she had bulbar
weakness
and ataxia. Brain magnetic resonance imaging showed non-specific abnormalities and spinal fluid was acellular but contained an elevated protein and oligoclonal bands. A paraneoplastic screen showed anti-Hu antibodies. Her clinical condition improved with immunoglobulin and systemic corticosteroid treatment. Breast cancer was diagnosed 21 months later by mammography but there were no metastases detected. Four and half years after the onset of her diplopia, she died of diffuse
metastatic breast cancer
. This is the first reported case of anti-Hu paraneoplastic brain stem encephalitis presenting with sixth cranial nerve palsies.
...
PMID:Anti-hu paraneoplastic syndrome presenting as bilateral sixth cranial nerve palsies. 1593 31
Trastuzumab is a recombinant humanised monoclonal antibody specific for the growth factor receptor p185(HER2) (HER2) which is overexpressed in 25 to 30% of breast cancer tumours. The drug inhibits the growth of human breast cancer cells overexpressing HER2 in vitro and in vivo. It shows additive antitumour activity in vitro and in vivo when administered with paclitaxel, doxorubicin, various cytokines or tamoxifen. In patients with
metastatic breast cancer
whose tumours overexpressed HER2, trastuzumab (4 mg/kg loading dose then 2 mg/kg/week by intravenous infusion) produced objective responses in 21% of 213 patients. A further 7% of patients had minor responses and 30% had stable disease. Combination therapy with trastuzumab and either paclitaxel or doxorubicin (or epirubicin) plus cyclophosphamide produced a higher response rate (49%), longer median time to disease progression (7.6 months), a higher one-year survival rate (78%) and significantly increased median overall survival (25.4 months) than antineoplastic agents alone (response rate 32%, time to disease progression 4.6 months, one-year survival rate 67% and overall survival 20.3 months) in a phase III study in 469 patients. Trastuzumab is generally well tolerated. Chills, fever, nausea, vomiting,
weakness
and headache were among the most common adverse events in clinical trials and occurred in 40 to 50% of patients during the first infusion of the drug. Cardiac dysfunction was the most serious adverse event reported and was more common in patients receiving trastuzumab plus antineoplastic therapy than in those receiving trastuzumab alone.
...
PMID:Trastuzumab. 1803 Nov 72
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