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Query: UMLS:C0677930 (
primary tumor
)
20,210
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In 1983 we initiated a prospective nonrandomized study of the value of preoperative chemotherapy in previously untreated patients with stages III and IV squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck. In 1983 and 1984, 50 patients were entered in the study. Prior to therapy all patients were evaluated by a representative from the Medical Oncology, Radiation Therapy, and Head and Neck Surgery Divisions, University of Utah School of Medicine,
Salt
Lake City. In addition to the standard preoperative evaluation, pretreatment computed tomographic scans were performed on all patients. Follow-up computed tomographic scans were performed after the second cycle of chemotherapy and at the completion of treatment. Initial therapy in all patients consisted of induction chemotherapy with cisplatin (day 1, 100 mg/m2) and fluorouracil (days 1 through 5, 1000 mg/m2). Several factors were examined for their utility in predicting response to therapy and survival. Factors evaluated included: (1) extent and timing of chemotherapeutic response; (2) computed tomographic quantitated
primary tumor
size; (3) size of computed tomographic quantitated regional (neck) metastases; (4) performance status; (5) cancer stage; (6) total lymphocyte count; and (7) serum liver function tests. The factor found to be most useful in predicting improved survival was the extent of response to chemotherapy. The remaining factors, performance status, regional lymph node status, serum gamma-glutamyltransferase levels, and cancer stage, were also found to correlate with length of survival but were much less important than the response to chemotherapy.
...
PMID:Prognostic indicators in head and neck cancer patients receiving combined therapy. 257 81
Between 1981 and 1985, 44 patients with advanced metastatic carcinoma of the liver were treated with deep microwave hyperthermia (HT) in five medical centers in the US. This HT was given with a BSD-1000 Annular Phased Array (BSD Medical Corporation,
Salt
Lake City, Utah). Of the 44 patients treated, 18 (41%) were in poor general condition and scored less than 60 on the Karnofsky scale. In 50% upper abdominal pain was a major presenting symptom. Prior chemotherapy (CT) had been given in 12 (27%) patients, while 10 (23%) had received prior radiotherapy (RT). Colon (73%) was the most frequent site of the
primary tumor
, and adenocarcinoma (79%) was the most frequent histological diagnosis. A total of 150 HT treatments were given, with an average of 3.4. HT alone was administered to 12 (27%), HT-RT to 15 (34%), HT-CT to 13 (30%) and HT-RT-CT to four (9%). Therapeutic temperature was reached in 28 (64%) patients. The majority (66%) tolerated treatment well. Due to the poor general condition of over one-third of the patients, prior therapy in 50% and the presence of advanced tumor in all, it is not surprising to see a response rate of only 36%. The response rate was 53% among patients receiving RT in addition to HT and 46% in patients who had therapeutic temperature. Survival ranged from less than 1 to 63 months, with an average of 11 months. Relief of pain was observed in 8 of 22 patients who presented with this symptom. HT can be safely delivered to patients with metastatic tumor to the liver.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Deep microwave hyperthermia for metastatic tumors of the liver. 337 58
The response of androgen-sensitive Noble (Nb) rat prostatic adenocarcinoma [2Pr-121D (1)] to varying doses (50 approximately 1,000 micrograms/kg body weight) of diethylstilbestrol (DES) was investigated and characterized with respect to cytosol and nuclear androgen binding profiles, histology and pattern of relapse. Inhibition of tumor growth was closely related to the dose of DES. Treatment at all but the lowest dose (50 micrograms/kg) initially caused tumor regression, whereas serum testosterone concentrations in all groups, including that receiving the lowest dose, were decreased to castrate levels. Histologically, while extensive cellular destruction was clearly evident at higher doses of DES, some active tumor cells appeared to survive. Tumors eventually relapsed when higher doses of DES were stopped or with the continued administration of low doses. The cytosol dihydrotestosterone (DHT) receptor in this tumor line, as determined by sucrose density gradient, dextran charcoal and Sephadex column methods, was negative. Nuclear binding, however, was positive.
Salt
-extractable and salt-resistant fractions of nuclei derived from the untreated
primary tumor
and relapsed tumor following DES treatment contained high affinity androgen receptor. Comparison of binding constants revealed no significant differences. Our findings, based on the Nb rat prostatic tumor model, indicate that DES acts not only by eliminating circulating testosterone, but also by a direct cytotoxic effect on malignant cells. The results also suggest the lack of an apparent relationship between the loss of hormone responsiveness associated with recurrence of prostatic tumor growth and nuclear androgen binding parameters.
...
PMID:Growth inhibition by diethylstilbestrol and relapse of the Noble rat prostatic tumor. 337 90
Intraperitoneal saline-injected MR imaging through an implanted catheter-port system (saline-MRI) was conducted in 7 patients with ovarian tumor after surgical removal of the
primary tumor
. Two types of T2 weighted coronal images of the abdomen were obtained after saline injection through the implanted catheter-port system. One uses long TE (about 1000 msec) with fat-saturation and thick slices (100 mm thickness) to depict the injected saline alone. The other uses medium TE (about 100 msec) without fat-saturation and thin slices (10 mm thickness) to depict both intraperitoneal saline and abdominal structures.
Saline
sequentially fills the Douglas pouch, paracolic gutter, Morison's pouch and subphrenic space in most patients. The relation between injected saline and abdominal structures was seen well on T2-weighted images using medium TE. Adhesions of the peritoneum were well demonstrated. In one patient, a catheter perforation to the bowel loop was diagnosed, because the small bowel loop was immediately filled with injected saline.
Saline
-MRI can be used to depict intraperitoneal drug distribution during intraperitoneal chemotherapy and can diagnose complications related to intraperitoneal chemotherapy.
...
PMID:[Assessment of intraperitoneal drug distribution during intraperitoneal chemotherapy using saline-injected MR imaging through an implanted catheter-port system]. 1172 82