Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0476089 (endometrial cancer)
11,379 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

An international study of misinformation about the pill conducted by FHI surveyed 8 countries and found that women everywhere believed the pill dangerous to their health, while remaining ignorant of its benefits and actual complications. The study queried middle class urban women from Thailand, Sri Lanka, Senegal, Nigeria, Egypt, Mexico, Costa Rica and Chile. Some of the findings cited were: significant numbers of women believed pills cause uterine cancer; that pills increase risk of sterility; and that pills cause birth defects. Few women were aware of the reality of risk of cardiovascular disease, particularly for smokers. The pill's non-contraceptive health benefits, such as protecting against ovarian and endometrial cancer, pelvic inflammatory disease, sterility, venereal disease and anemia, were virtually unknown. In the different countries surveyed, from 26 to 60% of women who have tried the pill stopped taking it because they were worried about its safety. Fear of side effects is a major reason why many women do not try the pill. These misconceptions persist because of ignorance and fear, since cancer, rather than lack of it, makes news headlines.
...
PMID:World pill poll reveals false fears. 1228 Dec 70

Numerous non-contraceptive benefits of combined oral contraceptive (OC) use have been identified. The risk of endometrial cancer is reduced by 20% after 1 year of use, 50% after 4 years of use, and 71% after 12 years of use compared with the risk among non-users and this protective effect persists up to 15 years after OC discontinuation. There is a 30% overall reduction in ovarian cancer risk (50% after 5 years of OC use) and the protective effect lasts at least 10 years after ending pill use. For cervical cancer, OC use is associated with a slight increase in risk, although other causative factors may be implicated. The risk of follicular ovarian cysts is reduced by about 50%, while that of cysts from the corpus luteum declines by as much as 80%. Combined OCs also reduce the risk of fibrocystic breast disease and fibroadenomas by about 25%. Both low- and high-dose OCs reduce pelvic inflammatory disease by up to 50% and, if OC users do develop this infection, it is generally less severe than in non-users. Also recorded has been a 90% reduction in risk of ectopic pregnancy. Since OCs shorten the menstrual period and amount of blood loss, they protect against iron-deficiency anemia. Finally, OC users have a 60% reduced risk of dysmenorrhea.
...
PMID:Non-contraceptive benefits of oral contraceptives. 1229

This article offers substantial information on combined oral contraceptives (COCs). It is noted that such pills contain two hormones, an estrogen and a progestin. COCs prevent ovulation and make the lining of the uterus thinner, when correctly and consistently used, with a reported failure rate of 1/1000 women. An important benefit of COC use is that it decreases a woman's risk of ovarian cancer, endometrial cancer, benign breast masses, and ovarian cysts. Other advantages include a decrease in menstrual cramps and pain, reduction of menstrual blood loss and a woman's risk for anemia, and fertility control. Some of the disadvantages of COC use include side effects and lack of protection against HIV virus. In the US, these pills are available from doctors, nurse practitioners, nurse-midwives, health departments, and family planning clinics.
...
PMID:Choices: "the pill" combined oral contraceptive. 1229 82

Oral contraceptive (OC) labeling disclosure of possible benefits from use of the products, was recommended by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's (FDA) Fertility and Maternal Health Drugs Advisory Committee at its February 11 meeting. Committee member Howard Orr, Centers for Disease Control, noting the emphasis on cautionary and warning statements contained in current OC labeling maintained: "Women should make informed decisions and this is the other half. The package insert must include the benefits information." The recommendation by the committee represents a shift in the approach to what constitutes proper labeling for OC products. Since first approved, the drugs have never carried a discussion of benefits on their labels. "A number of additional benefits from OCs--other than contraception--have emerged from the large number of studies recorded in the literature on OC use," Ron Nelson, White Memorial Medical Center, stated. "Studies cited a more regular and lighter menstrual flow, resulting in less blood loss and lower iron deficiency and anemia in contraceptive pill users, and dysmenorrhea and premenstrual tension have been sifnificantly reduced." "Ovarian cysts and pelvic inflammatory disease occurred less frequently in pill users than in controls," Nelson continued, "and the incidence of fibrocystic disease of the breast were less. There are some instances where OCs may incur protection against the development of ovarian cancer, endometrial cancer, and rheumatoid arthritis." Orr added: "I think there are 2 good studies that show almost a total elimination of ectopic pregnancy with women who took the pill. Given that now there's an epidemic of the disease going around, I think it's worth adding." The committee was asked by FDA last November to recommend changes in the current physician and patient OC labeling. FDA's Solomon Sobel, MD, Endocrine and Metabolic Drugs Division, told the committee that an agency subcommittee would review the recommendations, present them to the committee in May for final comment, then publish them in the Federal Register.
...
PMID:Oral contraceptive labeling disclosure of possible benefits. 1231 62

The most important step in counseling patients about the use of oral contraceptives (OCs) is to uncover patient fears because patients will not use a product if they believe it is not good for them. Clinicians can ask patients what negative stories they have heard about OCs, and clinicians should also introduce such stories in the conversation. Clinicians can then provide accurate information about the risks of OCs and warn patients about the dangers of cigarette smoking. Then, clinicians should provide information on the health benefits of OC use. Some women can cite menstrual cycle benefits of OC use, but few US women know that OCs can protect against ovarian and endometrial cancer, anemia, ectopic pregnancy, pelvic inflammatory diseases, or benign breast disease. Health benefit counseling may improve patient continuation as well as compliance. Patients also need specific information on how to take the OC, what to do about a missed pill, how to handle common nuisance side effects, and who to call with questions. More frequent follow-up visits should be scheduled for teenagers.
...
PMID:Patient counseling: the key to improving success with OCs. 1231 67

Anemia is a common complication of cancer that has been associated with poor response to treatment and decreased survival in a number of malignancies. By chart review the effects of prognostic factors (e.g. age, body mass index, tumor stage) and hemoglobin levels, measured prior to and during adjuvant (724/996; 72.7%) and primary radiotherapy (185/996; 18.6%) in 996 endometrial cancer patients treated between 1986 and 1998 were investigated using Kaplan-Meier survival on disease-free and overall survival. Preoperative hemoglobin levels were of no prognostic value. Patients with normal hemoglobin had an improved survival during primary radiotherapy (p<0.05). Anemia and course of hemoglobin during adjuvant radiotherapy were significantly associated with poor survival in patients undergoing adjuvant radiotherapy (p=0.001). Cox regression analysis confirmed these findings for adjuvant treatment. Local recurrences were also less frequently observed in patients with normal hemoglobin levels (p=0.044). Hemoglobin levels prior to and during radiotherapy seem to be important with respect to treatment outcome for endometrial cancer. This finding supports the use of measures to maintain adequate hemoglobin levels (transfusions, erythropoietin) to improve local control and patient survival.
...
PMID:Hemoglobin levels during radiation therapy and their influence on local control and survival of patients with endometrial carcinoma. 1476 27

Oxygenation of tumor tissue has recently been assed an important prerequisite for the effectiveness of radiotherapy in cervical cancer. Hyperviscosity is a common phenomenon in malignancy and a cause of reduced oxygen transport capacity that would favour tissue hypoxia. Hemorheological variables were serially tested preoperatively, during four cycles of fractionated adjuvant IR(192) HDR after loading radiation (HDR-AL) of the vaginal vault (weekly intervals), and 6 months postoperatively in patients with cervical (n=12) and endometrial cancer (n=26). Women who were scheduled for benign tumor surgery served as controls (n=29). Preoperatively, in cervical and endometrial cancer patients, mean plasma viscosity (PV: 1.31+/-0.1 mPa s; p<0.05; 1.35+/-0.13 mPa s; p<0.001) and fibrinogen levels (383+/-46 mg/dL; p<0.05; 379+/-117 mg/dL; p<0.05) were higher as compared to the controls (1.25+/-0.07 mPa s; 314+/-89 mg/dL). Red blood cell aggregation at low shear and stasis (RBC agg.: 15.7+/-5.6; p<0.05; 29.6+/-9.1; p<0.05) was higher in endometrial cancer patients as compared to the controls (13.7+/-3.4; 25.3+/-5.6). Postoperatively PV decreased in endometrial cancer patients and transiently increased in cervical cancer patients. After the third session of irradiation in both cancer groups, PV regained and at the 6-month checkup, levels were higher as compared to the values before surgery. Postoperatively fibrinogen levels increased and remained higher throughout HDR-AL and 6 months postoperatively. After surgery and during irradiation, anemia persisted in both cancer groups while hematocrit recovered after 6 months in endometrial cancer patients. Thrombosis was diagnosed in three patients postoperatively (7.9 %) but in none during HDR-AL. While a temporary reduction of hyperviscosity is found postoperatively and during HDR-AL in uterine cancer patients, 6 months after surgery RBC aggregation, PV, and hematocrit returned to the pretreatment range.
...
PMID:Monitoring of rheologic variables during postoperative high-dose brachytherapy for uterine cancer. 1524 81

Anthracyclines and platinum derivates are active drugs for advanced endometrial carcinoma (AEC), but new schedules with higher efficacy and better tolerability are needed. A phase II study was conducted to describe activity and tolerability of carboplatin (C)+pegylated liposomal doxorubicin (PLD) in patients with AEC. Patients with chemonaive AEC, PS < or = 2, aged < 75 years, with at least one measurable lesion were eligible. Treatment was C (area under curve 5)+PLD (40 mg m(-2)) on day 1 every 4 weeks, up to six cycles. Forty-two patients were needed in a single-stage design, with at least 13 objective responses to define the treatment active. Forty-two patients were enrolled. Median age was 64 years (31-74). A total of 64% of patients were recurrent while 36% were advanced. Three complete (7%) and 22 partial responses (52%) were observed, for an overall response rate of 59.5% (95% exact CI: 43.3-74.3). One death potentially related to treatment was recorded (death at home for unknown reasons after 6th cycle). Other relevant toxicities (% of patients) were grade 3/4 neutropaenia 33%/14%, febrile neutropaenia 5%, grade 3/4 thrombocytopaenia 17%/5%, grade 3/4 anaemia 31%/2%. Skin toxicity was mild: grade 1 14%, grade 2 10%, grade 3 5%. Hair loss: complete 5%, partial 12%. The combination of carboplatin and PLD shows good activity and favourable toxicity as first-line chemotherapy of patients with AEC, deserving further studies in this setting.
...
PMID:A multicentre phase II study of carboplatin plus pegylated liposomal doxorubicin as first-line chemotherapy for patients with advanced or recurrent endometrial carcinoma: the END-1 study of the MITO (Multicentre Italian Trials in Ovarian Cancer and Gynecologic Malignancies) group. 1748 28

Yawning, frequent in daily life, is accepted as a complex arousal reflex. Excessive yawning may be due to neurological, psychiatric, infectious, gastrointestinal or metabolic diseases. This reflex has also been associated with different selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors. We report a female patient, with excessive yawning, who was on selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor treatment with the diagnosis of generalised anxiety disorder. She was then found to have endometrial carcinoma. Her complaints of palpitation, shortness of breath and loss of energy might be explained by a psychiatric disease and/or anaemia. Previous anaemic periods and partial response of her psychiatric symptoms during last 3 years alerted us to think about an organic cause. Investigations for chronic disease anaemia resulted in diagnosis of endometrial carcinoma. This case is a good example showing misdiagnosis caused by medical stigmatisation.
...
PMID:Pathological yawning in a patient with anxiety and chronic disease anaemia. 1851 62

We studied the relation of medical conditions related to obesity and medications used for these conditions with endometrial cancer. We also investigated the association of other medical conditions and medications with risk. This U.S. population-based case-control study included 469 endometrial cancer cases and 467 controls. Information on putative risk factors for endometrial cancer was collected through personal interviews. We asked women about their medical history and medications used for six months or longer and the number of years each medication was taken. Risk was strongly associated with increasing obesity (P for trend < 0.001). Among the conditions related to obesity, and after adjustment for age, body mass index, and other risk factors and conditions, uterine fibroids were independently related to an increased cancer risk [adjusted odds ratio (OR), 1.8; 95% confidence interval (95% CI), 1.2-2.5]. Although hypertension was not significantly related to endometrial cancer after adjustment for age and body mass index, the use of thiazide diuretics was independently associated with increased risk (OR, 1.8; 95% CI, 1.1-3.0). Anemia was associated with decreased risk (OR, 0.6; 95% CI, 0.5-0.9). Use of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs was related to a decreased risk (OR, 0.7; 95% CI, 0.5-0.97). To our knowledge, the observation about thiazide diuretics is novel and requires confirmation in other studies and populations.
...
PMID:Risk of endometrial cancer in relation to medical conditions and medication use. 1938 93


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 Next >>