Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0278488 (metastatic breast cancer)
7,812 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The dynamic evaluation of tumor markers is a promising area of investigation which is expected to provide clinical information when serial samples are available from the same patient. This is feasible in the post-operatory evaluation, during the follow-up after the treatment for to the primary tumor and in the monitoring of the treatment for metastatic disease. Variations among serial samples may be assessed using both empirical and mathematical approaches. Empirical approaches rely on overcoming a given percentage usually chosen on the base of arbitrary decisions. Mathematical approaches include the actual half-life, the doubling time, a dose/time regression analysis and the calculation of the critical difference. The two former are currently used in clinical practice whereas the two latter are still matter of investigation. As concerns the assessment of the radicality of the surgery for the primary tumor, the serum markers are used in germ cell tumors and in prostate cancer. The half-life of the markers is the decision criteria used in germ cell cancers, while in prostate cancer PSA is expected to be undetectable more than 30 days after the radical prostatectomy. Tumor markers are currently used during the follow-up of several malignancies after the treatment for primary tumor. Although several samples are available, decision criteria are still based on positive/negative cut-off values in several instances. Promising dynamic approaches are under investigation and are expected to lead to earlier and probably more accurate information concerning the disease progression. A critical point still under debate is the actual impact of tumor markers on patients' survival in malignancies incurable when metastatic, such as colorectal cancer and breast cancer. This matter urgently demands perspective clinical studies. Finally, the dynamic use of tumor markers is now commonly applied in the monitoring of the therapy for metastatic malignancies. In this clinical setting mathematical criteria are used for ovarian and and germ cell tumors with promising results. Nevertheless, the use of empirical criteria, namely the percentage of variation between two consecutive samples, is successfully used for the monitoring of the therapy of metastatic breast cancer. In conclusion, when several samples are available from an individual patient they may be evaluated according to dynamic criteria instead of referring to a conventional positive/negative cut-off point. Although mathematical decision criteria are expected to provide more reliable data, empirical approaches are used as well and provide useful information in decision making.
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PMID:Dynamic use of tumor markers, rationale-clinical applications and pitfalls. 869 56

Male breast cancer and prostate cancer are similar in many ways, including the potential role of steroid hormones in their pathogenesis. We describe a 90-year-old male patient, who came with synchronous male breast cancer and carcinoma of the prostate. The first presentation was spinal cord compression with multiple lytic lesions in the thoracic and lumbar vertebrae on computed tomography. Serum tumor marker tests revealed an elevated serum PSA level of 104 ng/dL (normal <4 ng/dL) and a low free PSA of 11.6%. A histological examination of a specimen from a lytic lesion of the spine was consistent with metastatic breast cancer and a needle biopsy of the prostate showed adenocarcinoma, Gleason score 3 + 4.
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PMID:Synchronous male breast cancer and carcinoma of prostate in 90-year-old male, presented with spinal cord compression and multiple spine lytic lesions. 1759 47

Metastatic castrate-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) refers to the disease state in which metastatic prostate cancer fails to respond to androgen deprivation therapy (ADT). This can be manifest as a rising PSA, increase in radiographically measurable disease, or progression of clinical disease. Roughly 90 % of men with metastatic prostate cancer have bone metastases, which is a predictor of both morbidity and mortality. Historically, treatment has been palliative, consisting of external beam radiation therapy (EBRT) and pharmacological analgesics for pain control and osteoclast inhibitors, such as bisphosphonates and denosumab to mitigate skeletal-related events. Older radiopharmaceuticals, such as Strontium-89 and Samarium-153, are Beta-emitting agents that were found to provide palliation but were without survival benefit and carried high risks of myelosuppression. Radium-223 is an Alpha-emitting radiopharmaceutical that has demonstrated a significant overall survival benefit in men with metastatic CRPC, delay to symptomatic skeletal events (SSEs), and improvement in pain control, with a favorable toxicity profile compared with placebo. Unlike EBRT, Radium-223 has systemic uptake, with the potential to address several bone metastases concurrently and provides overall survival benefit. It is a simple administration with minimal complexity and shielding requirements in experienced hands. EBRT appears to provide a more rapid and dramatic palliative benefit to any given lesion. Because Radium-223 has limited myelosuppression, the two can be thoughtfully integrated, along with multiple agents, for the treatment of men with CRPC with symptomatic bone metastases. Given its excellent safety profile, there is interest and anecdotal safety combining Radium-223 with therapies, such as abiraterone and enzalutamide. Formal recommendations regarding combination therapies will require clinical trials. The use of Alpha-emitting radiopharmaceuticals in castrate-sensitive disease, in metastatic asymptomatic CRPC, the categorical sequencing amongst other treatments for CRPC, as well as the application to other primary pathologies, such as metastatic breast cancer, is currently evolving.
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PMID:Integrating bone targeting radiopharmaceuticals into the management of patients with castrate-resistant prostate cancer with symptomatic bone metastases. 2577 71