Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0677930 (primary tumor)
20,210 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Primary brain tumors invade and metastasize within the central nervous system (CNS), but rarely extraaxially. A model explaining this behavior is presented. In non-CNS tumors metastases occur since subpopulations of cells capable of invasion and metastases are selected by the tissular environment, and in particular by the connective stroma, which opposes invasion. The CNS lacks a connective stroma, therefore a primary tumor can grow easily in it, but subpopulations capable of metastasization are not selected. Implications of the explanation are: 1) metastasization is largely based on the ability to invade the connective stroma, 2) paradoxically, a less favourable host tissue environment can result in a more aggressive tumoral behavior.
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PMID:An explanation for the rarity of extraaxial metastases in brain tumors. 143 99

Three children with malignant primary CNS tumors treated with craniospinal radiotherapy developed intraparenchymal hemorrhages a median of 5 years following therapy in sites distant from the primary tumor. Radical surgical procedures disclosed fresh and old hematoma, gliosis, and necrosis in all 3 patients and an aggregation of abnormal microscopic blood vessels in two. No tumor was found. All 3 patients remain in long-term (greater than 10 years) continuous remission.
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PMID:Brain and spinal cord hemorrhage in long-term survivors of malignant pediatric brain tumors: a possible late effect of therapy. 198 81

We conducted a population-based case-control study with 338 patients, less than 15 years of age, diagnosed with a primary tumor of the central nervous system from January 1968 through December 1977 in 53 New York State counties. The study also included 676 controls selected from the birth certificate files of the New York State Department of Health. We collected information on neurofibromatosis and congenital anomalies in study subjects, their siblings and parents by telephone interview with the mother of each case and control. We obtained supplemental information on neurofibromatosis in the patients and their families from hospital medical records. This study confirmed the strong association of neurofibromatosis with risk of CNS tumors. Thirteen cases and no controls had neurofibromatosis. Two fathers and 3 mothers of cases had neurofibromatosis. Five cases had siblings with neurofibromatosis. None of the first-degree relatives of controls had neurofibromatosis. We observed a relative risk of 4.49 for history of seizures. Seizures are often among the presenting symptoms for CNS tumors. We observed no difference between cases and controls in the occurrence of congenital anomalies. There was a nonsignificant excess of congenital anomalies among siblings of cases compared with controls. This decreased to 1.13 when adjusted for number of siblings.
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PMID:Neurofibromatosis and other disorders among children with CNS tumors and their families. 249 66

This study compares the CT characteristics in a consecutive sample of supratentorial metastases (n = 31) with primary tumors of the same location (n = 49) in childhood. Postcontrast CT was performed in all but one of the metastases cases. In all but one of these children the location and type of primary tumor was known at time of occurrence of cerebral metastasis. Primary CNS tumors (n = 12) had a higher incidense of supratentorial metastatic spread than tumor originating elsewhere. Three children had diffuse subarachnoid seeding, while 28 had solid tumors (21 solitary, 7 multiple). The predilection location for the solid metastases was the gray-white matter junction (n = 12). The following CT findings were significantly less frequent in metastases than in primary tumors (P less than 0.05): Midline location, calcification and cyst formation. On the other hand bleeding, pronounced contrast enhancement and location in the gray-white matter junction were more frequent in the metastatic group (P less than 0.05).
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PMID:Computed tomography in intracranial, supratentorial metastases in children. 271 99

Glioblastoma multiforme is a rapidly growing anaplastic primary tumor of the central nervous system. It is frequently associated with neurofibromatosis or other hamartomatous syndromes, and in such kindreds may be found in several generations. We describe a highly inbred family in which glioblastoma multiforme presents in males only as an isolated central nervous system neoplasm on the right side, without evidence of other underlying genetic disease. It is speculated that in this family the tumor develops as the consequence of an autosomal recessive or an X-linked recessive mutation. In addition, the gene for cystic fibrosis segregates in this family and an undefined autosomal recessive malformation syndrome was detected.
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PMID:Familial glioblastoma multiforme without neurofibromatosis. 299 72

Cytogenetic patterns from primary short-term culture of breast cancer, renal carcinoma, and tumors of the central nervous system are presented to illustrate the range of karyotypic diversity of human solid tumors as well as their biologic differences in culture systems that support their growth. These studies have illustrated several major issues. 1) Results vary with the tissue of origin: primary cultures from breast are almost uniformly diploid, while renal tumors are near-diploid, mosaic, and show clonal aberrations; and CNS tumors are heterogeneous: some diploid, some near-diploid and some highly aneuploid. 2) Results after short-term culture are selective, representing subpopulations from the heterogeneous cells that are detected on direct analysis of fresh tumors by cytogenetics or flow cytometry (FCM). It is not yet clear whether prognosis depends on the dominant population of the primary tumor or alternatively should be influenced by detection of small aneuploid subpopulations. 3) Evidence from all three tumor types supports the interpretation that cytogenetically normal diploid cells constitute part of some tumor populations, and may be better adapted to routine growth in culture than aneuploid subpopulations from the same primary tumors. These cells may also compose a major portion of the viable population of tumors in vivo and, therefore, could represent a useful model for studies of tumorigenesis and therapeutic regimens.
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PMID:Cytogenetic diversity in primary human tumors. 328 59

Although leptomeningeal spread (LMS) of primary CNS tumors in children has been well documented in the literature, it has rarely been reported in children with low-grade gliomas. Between 1975 and 1985, 6 of 162 children (3.7%) with low-grade gliomas treated at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia had LMS. LMS was present at diagnosis of the original tumor in one patient, was the first sign of relapse in one patient, occurred simultaneously with local relapse in two patients, and after local relapse in two patients. Pathology of the original tumor was low-grade astrocytoma in five and low-grade oligodendroglioma in one. Primary tumor site was cervical cord in three, chiasm in one, frontal lobe in one, and cerebellum in one. All of the children with LMS had undergone surgical treatment at the time of diagnosis of the primary tumor; four had total resections at some point in their course. Three of the six patients died; three are still alive after treatment with radiation therapy and/or chemotherapy. The longest survival to date has been 3 1/2 years after diagnosis of LMS. We compared clinical characteristics of these six patients with 131 children with low-grade tumors without dissemination treated at our institution during the same time period. LMS, although relatively infrequent, does occur in children with low-grade gliomas, especially spinal cord tumors. LMS may occur at any time during illness and diagnosis may be difficult unless LMS is suspected. Treatment, at times, results in clinical improvement and considerable disease control.
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PMID:Leptomeningeal dissemination of low-grade gliomas in childhood. 335 11

We studied a 4-year-old boy with symptoms and signs of a posterior fossa tumor. CT showed two separate intracranial tumors: a fourth ventricle choroid plexus papilloma and a frontal subependymal giant-cell astrocytoma. This case emphasizes that, even in the absence of special genetic predisposition to CNS tumors, two separate intracranial masses may not represent CSF metastasis of a single primary tumor.
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PMID:Two primary brain tumors in one child. 394 85

MRI provides additional information about tumor location, extent, and margins. MRI was used in 158 patients with CNS tumors for treatment planning from 1985-89 and they were studied in a prospective manner. The most common site was cerebrum (73 pts), then extradural spinal axis (21 pts) posterior fossa (17 pts), brain stem (14 pts) and pituitary (13 pts), etc. The most common histological primary tumor was glioblastoma multiform (25 pts), then low grade astrocytoma (22 pts), anaplastic astrocytoma (14 pts), pituitary tumor (13 pts), medulloblastoma (9 pts), ependymoma (7 pts), and germ cell tumors (6 pts). Twenty-nine patients had metastasis to the brain. A majority of the patients with CNS tumors had the studies using Gadolinium-DTPA. Of the patients with CNS tumors, 120 (76%) had better information based on the MRI, which improved the treatment planning (using the three dimensional images) and field arrangement. In 89 patients (56%) the MRI was very decisive in the treatment volume and field arrangement. In 31 patients (20%) the MRI was beneficial and confirmed the treatment plan. MRI provides important additional information for radiation therapy planning.
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PMID:Use of magnetic resonance imaging in central nervous system tumors. 773 Jul 30

Paraffin-embedded specimens from 21 patients (mean age 49 years) with malignant melanocytic tumors of the central nervous system were studied. Extraneuronal primary tumors were situated at the trunk (38%), the lower (14%) or upper extremity (10%), and the head/neck region (5%). In 33% no extraneural primary tumor could be detected. The tumor location was frontal (19%), occipital (19%), parietal, spinal, multifocally (14%, respectively), or temporal (5%). Four subtypes were distinguished according to the predominant histological cell type: pleomorphic, epithelioid, spindle- and mixed-cell tumors. 29% contained no melanin, most of them belonging to the epithelioid subtype. The morphology and immunohistochemical reactivity for different antibodies (KL-1, EMA, VIM, HMB-45, NKI-C3, S-100, and MIB-1/Ki-67) were assessed. Positive staining was demonstrated for HMB-45 (in 86% of cases), NKI-C3 (100%), S-100 (95%), vimentin (75%), and KL-1 (33%). No expression of the cytokeratin EMA could be detected. The mean proliferation index measured by MIB-1 immunoreactivity was 21%. The 4 histological subtypes were found to express different antigen patterns. In the analysis of CNS tumors of unknown origin, the panel of antibodies used for diagnosis should include HMB-45 as the most specific marker for malignant melanoma.
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PMID:Malignant melanoma in the CNS, subtyping and immunocytochemistry. 940 2


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