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)

Between 1960 and 1985, 31 patients presented to Institut Curie with isolated axillary lymphadenopathy, of probable metastatic origin from the breast, but without clinical or radiological evidence of a breast tumor and no other primary tumor. The mean age was 54.6 years (range 39-79 years). Histological diagnosis was obtained by axillary surgery (22 cases), drill biopsy (6 cases), and cytology (3 cases). All slides were reviewed for the present study. Treatment consisted of axillary surgery followed by radiotherapy in 22 patients, radiotherapy followed by axillary surgery in 6 patients, radiotherapy followed by modified radical mastectomy in one patient, and radiotherapy alone in 2 patients. Systemic adjuvant treatment was given to 11/31 patients. The median follow-up was 9 years (range 2-26 years). Eight recurrences have appeared. Four patients recurred in the breast only (mean time to relapse: 112 months, range 63-162 months). The four other patients recurred both in breast and/or axilla (mean time to relapse: 23 months, range 7-46 months). Nine patients have developed distant metastases, of whom three also had locoregional recurrence. Among the 11 patients who had had systemic treatment, 5/11 had recurrence or metastases. The overall 5 and 10 year actuarial survival rates were 76 and 71%, respectively. The metastasis-free 5 and 10 year actuarial survival rates were 73 and 71%, respectively. Axillary metastases without clinical or radiological evidence of a primary breast tumor represents a discrete clinical entity, the prognosis of which appears to be better than that of clinical invasive breast cancer with associated lymph node involvement.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Presentation of axillary lymphadenopathy without detectable breast primary (T0 N1b breast cancer): experience at Institut Curie. 255 5

Nonregional lymph node dissemination must be classified as distant metastasis but axillary and mediastinal metastases can be part of a regional dissemination of the disease. Metastases to lymph nodes of the upper mediastinum are very common among patients with subglottic, hypopharynx and thyroid carcinomas. Axillary metastases are found at autopsy in 2-9% of the patients who died of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) and are frequently associated with skin implantation in aggressive recurrent head and neck carcinomas. The possible explanations for this location of metastasis were retrograde dissemination due to lymph system blockage, further tumor dissemination after a parastomal recurrence, hematogenous dissemination, and metastasis from a second primary tumor. Patients with distant metastasis have been considered incurable and only palliative treatment was instituted. Treatment planning for cases with axillary metastasis must take in consideration the likelihood of other regional recurrences and/or distant metastasis. Also, the presence of a second primary tumor must be ruled out. Whenever axilla is the only site of cancer recurrence, a standard axillary dissection must be considered. Upper mediastinal metastases from subglottic and hypopharyngeal cancer are managed by paratracheal and mediastinal dissection through the neck and postoperative radiotherapy.
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PMID:Noncervical lymph node metastasis from head and neck cancer. 1140 23