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)

The Wilms' tumor (Wistar-Furth, Columbia University) animal model kills the host in a predictable period of time, associated with widespread metastases (lungs, liver, spleen) regardless of the route of tumor transplantation. Actinomycin D in single or multiple doses has previously been shown to increase survival, reduce the primary tumor weight, as well as the number of metastases in this experimental model. The model thus has close similarity to man. The present report describes a remarkable effect of adriamycin in this animal system. The beneficial results are, however, limited by severe dose-related toxicity. Nevertheless, faced with recurrent or metastatic lesions following prior current conventional clinical therapy, based on the present experimental results, we believe adriamycin treatment should be given serious clinical consideration.
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PMID:Beneficial effects of adriamycin on Wistar-Furth Wilms' tumor. 16 76

In the period January 1974-August 1981, 16 previously untreated cases of Ewing's Sarcoma have been diagnosed at the Giannina Gaslini Children's Hospital Genova. Eight were male, eight female. Median age at diagnosis was 11 years. Two patients presented with a unique metastatic lesion, in the right lung and in an illiac lymph node, respectively. Fourteen patients have been initially treated with local radiotherapy (dosages ranging form 4,800 to 6,600 rads) in association with antiblastic polichemotherapy utilizing 4 drugs (Adriamycin, Actinomycin D, Vincristine, Cyclophosphamide). The Rosen et al.'s T-2 protocol was adopted, modifying the initial phase in order to give more weight to Adriamycin and reduce the toxic effects related to radio-chemotherapy combination. Two patients bearing a costal primary were immediately treated with a more complex and aggressive chemotherapy (T-6 Protocol), followed by local irradiation (in one case preceded by surgical ablation) and then chemotherapy again (T-2 protocol, second phase) for 10 months. Treatment determined a fast subjective relief in the 13 symptomatic patients. All 16 cases achieved a status of complete remission. Four of them subsequently relapsed: locally in two, in distant sites in the remaining 2. All 4 died 12-27 months form diagnosis. Twelve patients are presently alive without evidence of disease at 3-92 months (median 37 months) following diagnosis. Treatment has caused early and delayed toxicity in all cases. However, the entity of these complications varied considerably from one patient to an other. Age at diagnosis and site of primary tumor were the factors most relevant in this respect.
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PMID:[Ewing's sarcoma. Results of treatment in 16 consecutive cases]. 717 Jan 99

Thirty-seven patients with Ewing sarcoma were treated in the First National Chilean Trial for Ewing's Sarcoma (1986-1991), which comprised the St. Jude Ewing's 78 Study. All patients received cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and Dactinomycin for a total treatment period of about 10 months, and all prescribed therapy was administered. Local therapy consisted of irradiation (RT) to the primary tumor, complete surgical resection, or a combination of both surgery and RT. Twenty-nine of these patients had localized tumors, 24% had pelvic primary tumors, 21 were males, and 20 were greater than 10 years of age at diagnosis. Twenty-one patients had tumors that were greater than 8 cm in largest diameter. Fourteen of the 29 patients with localized disease remain disease free at 23 to 91 months from diagnosis. Fourteen patients have died of-tumor-related complications and 1 of a secondary malignancy. Relapse was local only in 4, metastatic in 9, and local plus metastatic in 1. Only 1 of the 8 patients with metastatic disease at presentation remains disease free. Toxicity consisted primarily of myelosuppression and mucositis. We conclude that this form of relative intense multimodal therapy for children/adolescents with localized Ewing sarcoma is curative in about half of affected children as in the original St. Jude study, and that it can be safely given in a developing country, provided that careful attention to supportive care and treatment planning is given. Although these results represent improvement in outcome for our patients, more effective therapy is needed for children with Ewing sarcoma, especially those with metastatic disease at presentation.
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PMID:Multimodal therapy for children and adolescents with Ewing sarcoma: results of the First National Chilean Trial (1986-1991). 921 43