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Query: UMLS:C0403608 (ureter)
9,655 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Herein we report a case of malignant primary tumor of the ureter that had been seen and treated in the Department of Urology of Hospital Docente Clinico Quirurgico "10 de Octubre", in Havana, Cuba. The incidence, possible etiology, classification, forms of presentation, diagnosis, treatment and prognosis of this disease entity are discussed. The national and the world literature are reviewed.
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PMID:[Primary malignant tumor of the ureter. Presentation of a case]. 151 Apr 83

Retrospective study on the frequency of associated bladder cancer and the influence on the prognosis was carried out in 170 cases of renal pelvic and ureteral cancer. The number of cases of associated bladder cancer coexistent with renal pelvic and ureteral cancer was 31 (18.2%), and the number of subsequent cases 3 (19.4%). The frequency of occurrence of the primary tumor site was 27.2% in the renal pelvis, 45.6% in the ureter and 58.3% in both renal pelvis and ureter. Multiple tumors occurring in the renal pelvis and ureter occupy a high percentage. As for the degree of differentiation, many cases were subsequent to G1. As for the stage, a few cases with bladder cancer were subsequent to T4, but there was no definite tendency in the occurrence of bladder cancer. The prognosis of renal pelvic and ureteral cancer: the 10-year survival rate was 93.3% for G1, 66.6% for G2 and 12.4% for G3. As can be seen, there was good correlation with the pathological gradings. It must be remembered, however, that 5-year survival rates in cases of associated bladder cancer of coexistent type, in cases of subsequent type and in cases without associated bladder cancer were 56.2%, 72.7% and 64.8%, respectively: there was no significant difference. Bladder cancer associated with renal pelvic and ureteral cancer makes the therapy troublesome, but no influence on the prognosis was observed. Therapy in conformity with the pathological grading and stage is regarded as particularly important in cases of associated bladder cancer.
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PMID:[A clinical study of associated bladder cancer in patients with renal pelvic and ureteral cancer]. 176 66

The authors review primary and secondary neoplastic lesions of the ureter. Primary ureteral tumors are rare, although when they occur, they usually consist of transitional cell carcinoma. The most frequent symptoms are hematuria, frequency, dysuria, and pain. Secondary ureteral neoplasms are caused by direct extension from an adjacent extraureteral primary tumor or from a site of bulky metastasis and, rarely, by metastasis from a distant primary tumor. The most useful diagnostic modalities are retrograde pyelography for direct visualization of ureteral involvement--particularly in the presence of high-grade obstruction--and computed tomography for evaluation of extraureteral extent of tumors and the presence of lymphadenopathy and distant metastases.
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PMID:Ureteral neoplasms. 218 98

This study was undertaken to review the long-term results of multivisceral resection of locally advanced colorectal carcinoma. Between 1964 and 1980, 1042 patients underwent exploratory surgery for colorectal cancer. Of these, 58 patients (5.5%) underwent curative multivisceral resection for suspected contiguous invasion by the primary tumor. Follow-up was complete for all patients. The primary tumors were located in the rectum (38 patients), sigmoid (9 patients), left colon (6 patients), and right colon (5 patients). En bloc resection of other viscera included uterus, adnexa, bladder, vagina, small intestine, abdominal wall, liver, stomach, kidney, and ureter. The operative morbidity and mortality rates were 31% and 1.7%, respectively. Resection margins were free of tumor in 54 patients. In the four patients with tumor-positive resection margins, recurrence of disease was evident between 8 and 22 weeks after surgery (mean survival time, 8.2 months). Carcinomatous invasion of the resected contiguous organ was confirmed in 49 patients (84%). The mean survival time for patients without lymph node metastases was 100.7 months, but it was only 16.2 months (p less than 0.01) for patients with lymph node metastases. Actuarial 5-year disease-free survival rate for patients without lymph node metastases was 76% (36 of 47 patients). None of the patients (0 of 11) with lymph node metastases survived for 5 years. Three of 36 of the 5-year survivors experienced recurrence of disease before the seventh postoperative year; no cancer-related deaths occurred between 7 and 25 years. These data suggest that survival in locally advanced colorectal carcinoma is more dependent on lymph node status than on the extent of local invasion. Effective disease control associated with survival in the long term can be achieved by multivisceral resection.
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PMID:Long-term results of surgical resection of locally advanced colorectal carcinoma. 221 91

Involvement of the ureter from metastatic renal cell carcinoma is doubtlessly uncommon. Five cases of ureteric secondaries are studied herein. All were ipsilateral and synchronous with the appearance of the primary tumor except for one that was diagnosed 5 years following nephrectomy. The most consistent clinical feature was that of hematuria which presented in all cases. Urography (IVP) and retrograde ureteropyelography (RUP) proved to be fundamental in the morphologic diagnosis of these lesions. Treatment was always by surgery. The foregoing was combined with immunotherapy (BCG) in one case and palliative external radiotherapy in another case. In all cases, tumor stage and grade were T3-T4 and G2-G3, respectively, and all but one patient presented extrarenal venous spread (3 cases V2 and 1 case V1). The regional lymph nodes were positive in all 5 cases. In 2 cases, the histopathologic examination revealed concomitant metastasis to the ipsilateral adrenal. Because prognosis is poor, the therapeutic alternatives and the possible indication of prophylactic nephroureterectomy in certain cases are discussed.
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PMID:[Ureteral metastasis of carcinoma of the kidney]. 236 56

Combination chemotherapy with methotrexate, vinblastine, adriamycin and cisplatin (M-VAC regimen) was administered to 12 patients with advanced epithelial cancer of the urinary tract in a clinical trial undertaken to assess clinical efficacy of this multiagent therapy. This series comprised 11 males and 1 female ranging in age from 46 to 76 years (mean age: 63), with performance status (PS) being rated 0 in 2, 1 in 5, 2 in 2, 3 in 2 and 4 in 1 of these 12 patients. The site of primary lesion was bladder in 8, renal pelvis in 3 and ureter in 1. Histologically, these tumors were all identified as transitional cell carcinoma (grade 3) with the exception of 1 mixed type (transitional cell carcinoma plus squamous carcinoma). Nine of the patients had already their primary tumor resected surgically while the remaining 3 had undergone only biopsy. The site of metastasis was lung in 7, bone in 4 and lymph nodes in 3. In consideration of the patients' general condition, the dosages of the chemotherapeutic agents were set at 80% of those recommended by Sternberg. Of the 9 patients with primary tumor resected, 1 died of chemotherapy; of the remaining 9 patients, the M-VAC regimen brought about CR in 1 and PR in 4, hence with a response rate of 62.5%. The 4 patients showing PR underwent surgical resection of residual tumor and 2 of them achieved CR and have been free of a recurrence during a 33- or 29-month period of the chemotherapeutic regimen.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Clinical evaluation of M-VAC chemotherapy (methotrexate, vinblastine, adriamycin and cisplatin) for advanced urothelial cancer]. 265 69

A prospective study comprised operative specimens from 11 patients with transitional cell carcinoma of the renal pelvis or ureter. DNA analysis of the primary tumor and of multiple biopsy specimens from preselected sites of the surrounding urothelium was performed with flow cytometry. All Grade 3 tumors and 50% of the Grade 2 tumors were aneuploid, and the remainder were Grade 2 and diploid. All invasive tumors were aneuploid. Carcinoma in situ was found in some of the preselected biopsy specimens, all of which were aneuploid, from two patients. Close correlation thus was observed between aneuploidy and tumor invasiveness, whereas diploidy was seen only in noninvasive tumors with lower malignancy grade. Aneuploidy was also associated with increased risk of carcinoma in situ. The study indicated that DNA analysis may be useful for defining the malignant potential of urothelial tumors of the upper urinary tract more fully than conventional grading and staging permit.
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PMID:Flow DNA analysis in the characterization of carcinoma of the renal pelvis and ureter. 280 3

Clinical and pathologic data of 54 patients with clinically localized transitional cell tumors of the upper urinary tract were reviewed to determine the significance of tumor grade and stage on patient survival. There were 43 tumors of the renal pelvis (one bilateral) and 11 tumors of the ureter. The primary tumor was staged by the new TNM classification into low stage (Ta: limited to mucosa; T1: lamina propria invasion) and high stage (T2: muscularis invasion; T3; invasion beyond the muscularis). Tumors were low stage (Ta/T1) in 28 cases (51.8%) and advanced (T2/T3) in 26 cases (48.2%). Twenty-five of 54 (46.3%) of the patients had low grade (Grades 1 and 2) and 29 of 54 (53.7%) had high grade (Grades 3 and 4) tumors. Median survival for all patients from date of diagnosis was 31 months, with a 5-year survival rate of 45.8%. Grade (low/high) matched stage (low/high) in 45 of 54 patients (83%). Median survival for patients with low grade tumors was 66.8 months compared to 14.1 months in patients with high grade tumors. Median survival for low stage tumors was 91.1 months and for high stage tumors was 12.9 months. These differences in survival related to both tumor stage (P = 0.001) and grade (P = 0.004) were statistically significant by log-rank test. Fourteen of the 54 patients (25.9%) developed local recurrence and 29 (53.7%) developed distant metastases. The lung was the most common site of metastasis. Eighteen patients (33.3%) had or developed transitional cell carcinoma of the bladder, which preceded the diagnosis of transitional cell carcinoma of the upper tract in seven cases and developed subsequently in 11 cases. Primary tumor stage by the new TNM classification is a better predictor of prognosis than tumor grade, although both variables are strongly predictive of patient course and survival. The advantages of the new TNM classification are discussed.
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PMID:Tumor grade and stage as prognostic variables in upper tract urothelial tumors. 316 13

Indirect mammo-lymphography with serial radiograms was made on rats bearing three established rat mammary carcinomas (SMT-2A, TMT-50, MT-W9B), with the water-soluble contrast medium, Iotasul. In the lymphogenously metastasizing SMT-2A, fine lymphatic sprouts from the tumor were seen converging into an afferent lymph vessel that was extending toward a metastatic regional lymph node, in 15-30 min. For 45 min, the dye remained localized in the primary tumor with no other vascular structures or viscera visible until it emerged in the urinary bladder, indicating that Iotasul was absorbed slowly into the systemic circulation via lymphatics and diluted beyond recognition by lymph and blood, and then reconcentrated in urine. In contrast, in the hematogenously metastasizing TMT-50, Iotasul was rapidly diffused into the blood stream, revealing the inferior caval vein within 5 min, and by 15 min the heart, aorta, common carotid arteries, kidney and ureter were all clearly revealed. In the non-metastasizing MT-W9B host, several small vascular markings around the tumor were seen by 10 min and the outline of kidneys and urinary bladder in 15 min, suggesting that the dye was also absorbed through blood capillaries but somewhat slowly. Thus, the differential vascular permeability in rat mammary tumors revealed by Iotasul has not only helped to distinguish lymphatics from blood vessels, but also to correlate it with their metastatic potential.
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PMID:Differential permeability of lymphatic and blood vessels in determining the route of metastasis as demonstrated by indirect lymphography. 335 12

Thirty-four cases of tumor of the renal pelvis or ureter or both have been treated in our department during the past decade. The primary tumor was in the renal pelvis in 11 cases, in the ureter in 21 cases and in the ureter and renal pelvis in 2 cases, a co-existent tumor in the bladder was found in 4 cases. Seventeen patients had a tumor on the right side and 17 on the left side. The most frequent symptom was gross hematuria (70.6%) and flank pain was the presenting symptom in 7 cases (20.6%). On the intravenous pyelography, a filling defect in the renal pelvis or ureter (41.2%) and nonvisualization (53.0%) were frequent findings. Twenty-nine cases had undergone total nephroureterectomy with resection of a bladder cuff, 3 had simple nephrectomy and 2 had open biopsy alone. Postoperative radiation therapy was done in 1 case, chemotherapy in 10 cases, and 6 cases of them were treated by CAP therapy (cis-dichlorodiamine platinum, doxorubicin and cyclophosphamide). Actual and relative 5-year survival rates were 53.8% and 63.5%, and no significant difference was found in survival rate between the patients with renal pelvic tumors and those with ureteral tumors.
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PMID:[A clinical study on 34 cases of urothelial cancer of upper urinary tract]. 344 24


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