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Query: UMLS:C0677930 (
primary tumor
)
20,210
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 64-yr-old female presented with severe osteoporosis and easy bruisability of over 2-yr duration. Biopsy of a neck mass revealed medullary carcinoma of the thyroid. Subsequently, lymphangitic pulmonary metastases were demonstrated which had been present radiographically for at least 4 yr. Basal serum calcitonin was markedly elevated and increased during
calcium
infusion. The diagnosis of ectopic ACTH syndrome was first entertained when hypokalemic alkalosis was observed during evaluation of her carcinoma. Elevated urinary 17-hydroxycorticosteroids, 17-ketosteroids, plasma cortisol, and immunoreactive plasma ACTH levels were documented. Adrenal steroidogenesis seemed to suppress on high dose dexamethasone. The
primary tumor
and its metastases contained high concentrations of immunoreactive ACTH and beta-melanocyte-stimulating hormone. Hepatic metastases contained extremely high concentrations of calcitonin. In contrast to the usual presentation of the ectopic ACTH syndrome as primarily hypokalemic alkalosis and glucose intolerance, patients with relatively benign and indolent ACTH-secreting tumors, such as certain cases of medullary carcinoma of the thyroid, may present with more typical signs and symptoms of Cushing's syndrome. The more pronounced cushingoid features in this latter group presumably reflects a more prolonged period of exposure to elevated glucocorticoid levels. Ten cases of ACTH-secreting medullary carcinoma of the thyroid from the literature are discussed. Extopic ACTH production by such tumors should be considered in the evaluation of patients with Cushing's syndrome or unexplained severe osteopenia.
...
PMID:ACTH-secreting medullary carcinoma of the thyroid presenting a severe idiopathic osteoporosis and senile purpura: report of a case and review of the literature. 23 64
Microscopic foci of multicentric cancer were detected in 121 of 904 breasts surgically removed for a clinically overt, invasive cancer. This incidence of 13.4% is regarded as a conservative estimate since examples of such lesions occurring in the same quadrant as the dominant mass, except in those instances in which the latter was present within the tail of the breast or beneath the nipple, were excluded from the analysis. Further, this data was obtained from only one randomly selected block of the quadrants, and in 41% of the cases only one or two were available for study. Multiple multicentric cancers were found in the same breast in two and three quadrants in 11.6% and 5.8% of the cases respectively. In 9.3% of the cases the multicentric cancers were designated as noninvasive (lobular in situ and/or intraductal) and in 4.1% invasive. An attempt to correlate the occurrence of multicentric cancers with a large number of pathologic and some clinical features disclosed a statistically significant association between multicentricity and grossly nonencapsulated dominant cancers with maximum diameters greater than 5 cm, the presence of a moderate or marked intraductal component and noninvasive cancer in its vicinity, and tumor involvement of the nipple. In addition, it was noted that there was a greater likelihood that the
primary tumor
was of the lobular invasive type and that the overlying skin was involved when the multicentric cancer was invasive rather than noninvasive. Lymphatic tumor emboli were observed in quadrants in 18 or 2.0% of the cases. Although the number of examples is small, nevertheless positive associations were noted with the occurrence of primary tumors that were in the left breast or beneath the nipple and were not grossly circumscribed, but exhibited a nuclear grade of 1, intralymphatic and blood vessel invasion,
calcium
, and involvement of the overlying skin as well as nipple. In addition, patients with such intralymphatic extension were more likely to have clinically detectable lymph nodes of which four or more contained metastases. The relationship of these findings to the rationale of such procedures as segmental resection in the surgical treatment of breast cancer is discussed.
...
PMID:Pathologic findings from the National Surgical Adjuvant Breast Project (protocol no. 4). I. Observations concerning the multicentricity of mammary cancer. 110 71
A fifty-three-year-old man with epidermoid carcinoma of the penis metastatic to the right inguinal lymph nodes and adjacent areas was found to have persistent hypercalcemia. Associated with this biochemical abnormality was an elevated parathormone activity in the absence of any bony metastases. Other than a transient response to furosemide-inducded diuresis he was refractory to treatment with oral inorganic phosphates and mithramycin. Ablation of the
primary tumor
did not affect his hypercalcemia. However, when therapy using external irradiation and parenteral bleomycin was directed to the metastases, his serum
calcium
stabilized and became normal and remained so until further progression of his humor. We postulate that the penile cancer metastases were elaborating parathyroid hormone-like substances responsible for the hypercalcemia and suppression of normal parathyroid activity.
...
PMID:Metastatic carcinoma of penis complicated by hypercalcemia. 112 68
With better methods of diagnosis, patients will be identified earlier in the course of their disease and will often have atypical and borderline manifestations of the syndrome. Serum gastrin measurements with
calcium
and especially with secretin challenge will be the most important method of diagnosis. Any patient with acid hypersecretion who has a high serum gastrin level that does higher on secretin infusion should be considered to have the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. A firm diagnosis of the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome should be made, if at all possible, prior to operation. At operation, a thorough search of the pancreas, duodenum, stomach, greater and lesser omentum and liver should be made for primary and secondary gastrinomas. If the preoperative data firmly establish the diagnosis of the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome, a total gastrectomy should be carried out even if no
primary tumor
is found. Similarly, a total gastrectomy should be done even if there are massive hepatic metastases. If total gastrectomy is not performed, the patient is apt to die of complications of acid hypersecretion. The only possible exceptions to the rule of always performing a total gastrectomy are in asymptomatic patients with easily excisable tumors or patients with tumors of the duodenum that are easily excisable, providing that in both instances after the excision of the tumor the output of gastric acid as measured at operation is immediately halted. All possible metastatic tumor tissue should be removed. The more tumor tissue removed, the longer the patient will survive. Metastases should be treated aggressively. They do not disappear after total gastrectomy in our experience, and they may kill patients. Patients should be followed after operation with serial measurements of serum gastrin concentrations and by hepatic scintillation scans and hepatic angiography. If hepatic metastases develop, intrahepatic artery infusions of 5-fluorouracil may slow tumor growth.
...
PMID:Natural history and experience with diagnosis and treatment of the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. 114 7
Paraneoplastic neurological syndromes are mostly associated with small cell lung cancer. Lambert-Eaton myasthenic syndrome appears to be caused by anti-presynaptic calcium channel antibodies.
Calcium
channels are also present in the cell membrane of small cell lung cancer, which may trigger the formation of anti-calcium channel antibodies. It is the most convincing argument in support of the auto-immune paraneoplastic theory, which refers to cross-antigenicity. Serum of patients with small cell carcinoma and cancer-associated retinopathy contains immunoglobulins against several antigens in the retinal and tumor cells. Patients with chronic intestinal pseudoobstruction (gastrointestinal neuropathy) associated with small cell lung cancer displayed circulating IgG antibodies reactive with neurons of myenteric plexus (anti-enteric neuronal antibodies). On the other hand, high levels of anti-neuronal antibodies (anti-Hu) have been found in the serum and cerebrospinal fluid of patients suffering from subacute encephalomyelitis (limbic encephalitis, cerebellar degeneration, sensory neuronopathy) associated with small cell lung cancer. The pathogenic role of the anti-neuronal antibody is not well established. Nevertheless, the finding of high titer antineuronal antibody in patients with a suggestive clinical syndrome is of great interest since it confirms the paraneoplastic syndrome and suggests the location of the
primary tumor
when the cancer is unknown.
...
PMID:[Autoimmunity and cancer: paraneoplastic neurological syndromes associated with small cell cancer]. 133 87
Evaluation of the patient with metastasis of unknown origin should be structured to quickly identify treatable tumors or the need for palliation while avoiding prolonged hospital stays and testing that will result in neither improved treatment nor better prognosis. The evaluation should be symptom-directed and pathologically oriented. It is the responsibility of the family physician in caring for a patient with MUO to ensure that communication is facilitated between surgeon, oncologist, pathologist, and patient. The physical examination should include thyroid, breasts, pelvic, and rectal examinations. General lab analyses should include fecal occult blood testing, complete blood count, urinalysis, serum
calcium
, and liver function studies. Men should have assays for prostate-specific antigen and serum prostatic acid phosphatase. Women should undergo mammography and pelvic ultrasound. Undifferentiated carcinoma is likely to originate from either small cell bronchogenic, lymphoma, or germ cell, and thus, serum should be assayed for HCG and AFP. Further radiologic studies, in the absence of specific symptoms, should be limited to chest radiographs and abdominal CT. Contrast studies should be included only if there is organ dysfunction. Biopsy of the malignant tissue should be done early, and studies should include histochemistry, immunohistology, and electron microscopy. Tissues from female patients should be studied for estrogen and progesterone receptors. When a biopsy is planned, advance communication between the family physician or surgeon and the pathologist greatly increases the chance of identifying a primary site. It is important that the surgeon obtain sufficient material to enable study, not only by standard histologic techniques, but also by electron microscopy, special stains, estrogen receptor activity, hormonal markers, and tumor markers. Treatment of patients for whom a
primary tumor
remains undiscovered must include toxic therapies only for those with good functional status who are likely to respond. Therapy must be pursued for palliation of symptoms when they develop. As physicians, we must control the urge to do something at those times when doing nothing is more appropriate. We must provide continuous support for both the patient and family, protecting to the best of our ability their quality of life. A physician should never convey the impression that it is "not cost-effective" to look for the source of a patient's malignancy. It can be emphasized that further search for a
primary tumor
carries both medical risk and expense, yet is unlikely to locate the
primary tumor
or improve the response to therapy or the quality of life.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Metastasis of unknown origin. 146 85
Renal carcinoma cells removed surgically from two patients (one
primary tumor
and one bone metastasis) were maintained in short-term culture. Media conditioned by these cells contained
calcium
oxalate monohydrate crystal growth inhibitor, a glycoprotein named nephrocalcin (NC). NC was also detected in both cell lines by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay using anti-NC antibody raised in rabbits. The glycoprotein was purified from the culture medium and found to have an amino acid composition similar to that of normal human urinary NC. However, NC from the renal carcinoma cells, isolated in multiple forms by DEAE-cellulose column chromatography, contained larger amounts of carbohydrate residues than normal NC. Purified NCs showed a dissociation constant of 10(-6) to 10(-8) M toward
calcium
oxalate monohydrate crystal. Three renal carcinoma cell lines maintained in long-term culture failed to produce NC. Our study demonstrates that NC is produced by renal cell carcinoma cells (in vitro) from primary and metastatic tumors. Preliminary data suggest that urinary levels of NC corresponded with disease progression in patients with metastatic disease, suggesting that NC may be useful clinically as a tumor marker.
...
PMID:Nephrocalcin: biosynthesis by human renal carcinoma cells in vitro and in vivo. 154 Sep 66
Examination of tumors usually shows them to consist of phenotypically and clonally heterogeneous cell subpopulations. On the other hand, previous studies from our laboratory have provided compelling evidence for the rapid evolution, or overgrowth, of single "dominant" clones during the course of
primary tumor
growth. Thus in one such study, syngeneic CBA mice were injected with a mixture of 50-100 different genetically tagged clones of a mouse mammary carcinoma called SP1. The vast majority of these clones were non-metastatic. The different clones were tagged by random integrations of foreign DNA using
calcium
phosphate-mediated transfection of the plasmid pSV2neo, the resultant primary tumors were found to consist of a single dominant clone, called B5, which was also shown to be metastatically competent. The detection of single dominant clones such as B5 in primary tumors can be reconciled with the concept of tumor cell heterogeneity if it could be shown that the dominant clone was in fact heterogeneous for other genetic or phenotypic markers, i.e., was homogeneous only for the plasmid-based genetic marker used for its detection. To study this question, we examined the karyotypes of several sublines of B5, two derived from a primary advanced tumor and one from a spontaneous lung metastasis. We indeed found evidence to support the existence of marked cellular heterogeneity within and between the three sublines examined. Thus, while all three retained common cytogenetic markers, each also expressed unique markers. Moreover, karyotypic heterogeneity within a given subline was observed. Thus the concept of clonal dominance of primary tumors by metastatically competent cell subpopulations is not incompatible with the concept of the cellular heterogeneity of tumors. The implications of the results are discussed.
...
PMID:Cytogenetic heterogeneity of genetically marked and metastatically competent "dominant" tumor cell clones. 188 47
A 73-year-old man was admitted to our hospital with chief complaint of macrohematuria. Computerized tomography revealed enlargement of right kidney, tumor thrombi and lymph nodal involvement. Distant metastases were found in liver, lung and pelvis. We performed conservative therapy including right renal embolization. However, serum
calcium
levels continued to increase. Patient died from renal failure and pneumonia after 2 months, and autopsy was performed. Histological examination revealed infiltrative transitional cell carcinoma of the right kidney. PTH like peptide was measured 1 ng/gram wet tissue from the
primary tumor
and 16.6 ng/gram wet tissue from the metastatic liver tumor.
...
PMID:[A case of infiltrative transitional cell carcinoma of the kidney with hypercalcemia]. 192 77
Hypercalcemia and leukocytosis may occur in conjunction as paraneoplastic syndromes associated with malignant disease. Here we describe a human squamous cell carcinoma of the maxilla that was associated with hypercalcemia and leukocytosis, and also cachexia. The
primary tumor
was surgically removed and established in permanent cell culture. When either primary tumors or cultured tumor cells were inoculated into nude mice, the nude mice developed the same paraneoplastic syndromes as those which occurred in the patient from whom the tumor was originally derived. The plasma
calcium
was increased two and one-half-fold and the WBC count 30-fold, and the body weight was decreased by 45% in tumor-bearing animals. Each of these paraneoplastic syndromes was alleviated by surgical excision of the tumor, indicating that the paraneoplastic syndromes were due to a factor or factors produced by the
primary tumor
. The development of each of these paraneoplastic syndromes in nude mice correlated positively with the other two syndromes. We examined the organs of tumor-bearing mice and found striking histopathologic abnormalities in the bones, spleen, and liver, but no infiltration with tumor cells. The bones showed marked evidence of osteoclastic bone resorption. This model of a human tumor associated with the hypercalcemia-leukocytosis paraneoplastic syndrome, together with cachexia, should make it possible to determine the mechanisms responsible for these paraneoplastic syndromes and their relationship to each other.
...
PMID:Occurrence of hypercalcemia and leukocytosis with cachexia in a human squamous cell carcinoma of the maxilla in athymic nude mice: a novel experimental model of three concomitant paraneoplastic syndromes. 199 18
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