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)

Undialyzed conditioned medium from several cell culture sources did not stimulate thymidine incorporation or cell overgrowth in quiescent, density-inhibited mouse embryo fibroblast cells. However, dialyzed conditioned medium (DCM) from clonal mouse mammary cell lines MCG-V14, MCG-T14, MCG-T10; HeLa cells; primary mouse adenocarcinoma cells; and BALB/c normal mouse mammary epithelial cells promoted growth in quiescent fibroblasts. The amount of growth-promoting activity produced per cell varied from 24% (HeLa) to 213% (MCG-V14) of the activity produced by primary tumor cells. The production of growth-promoting activity was not unique to tumor-derived cells or cells of high tumorigenicity. The amount of growth-promoting activity produced per cell in the active cultures was not correlated with any of the following: tumorigenicity, growth rat, cell density achieved at saturation, cell type, or species of cell origin. It is concluded that transformed and non-transformed cells of diverse origin, cell type, and tumorigenicity can produce growth factors in culture. The growth-promoting potential of the active media from primary tumor cultures accumulated with time of contact with cells and was too great to be accounted for entirely by the removal of low-molecular-weight inhibitors by dialysis. The results are consistent with the hypothesis that conditioned medium from the active cultures contained a dialyzable, growth-promoting activity. Different cell lines exhibited differential sensitivity to tumor cell DCM and fetal bovine serum. Furthermore, quiescent fibroblasts were stimulated by primary tumor cell DCM in the presence of saturating concentrations of fetal bovine serum. These observations support the notion that the active growth-promoting principle in primary tumor cell DCM may not be a serum factor(s).
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PMID:Stimulation of thymidine uptake and cell proliferation in mouse embryo fibroblasts by conditioned medium from mammary cells in culture. 100 Apr 99

Ten years' results of 56 patients with high grade osteogenic sarcoma are reported. Fifty-two patients had M0 disease. Immediately after open biopsy the patients were treated with chemotherapy using modified Rosen's protocols T4, T7 and T10. The primary tumor was adequately removed in most patients. Six children were treated with limb saving. The actuarial and disease-free survival was 80% after 1 year, and 73% to 8 years. Two patients died because of toxic side effects of chemotherapy, one of septicemia, the other of late cardiac failure secondary to doxorubicin.
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PMID:Ten years' experience in patients with osteogenic sarcoma in Finland. 169 Nov 10

Between April and September 1986, 60 patients with osteosarcoma have been treated according to the T10 protocol in the Pediatrics Department of the Gustave Roussy Institute in Villejuif, France. Limb sparing could be achieved in 49 patients and amputation was necessary in 11. The necrosis of the primary tumor was total or subtotal in 33 cases and incomplete in the 27 others. With a median follow-up of 28 months, the actuarial survival is 85% at 48 months and the actuarial disease-free survival is 58%; the disease-free survival of "good responders" is 75% and 32% for "bad responders".
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PMID:[Experience with protocol T10 in the pediatric service at the Gustave-Roussy Institute]. 245 56

Approximately 30-50% of patients with intracranial primitive neuroectodermal tumors (PNETs) of the central nervous system (CNS) develop spinal metastases. In contrast, primary spinal CNS-PNETs are extremely uncommon. The database and study records of the German/Austrian brain tumor trials HIT 91, HIT SKK 92, and HIT 2000 were retrospectively reviewed to describe clinical features, treatment modalities, and outcome of children with primary CNS-PNETs of the spinal cord who were registered as observational patients. Out of 1,248 patients with medulloblastomas or CNS-PNETs registered in the HIT database four patients (female, n = 3) with primary CNS-PNETs of the spinal cord were identified. Age at diagnosis was 10, 16, 23, and 174 months. Location of primary tumors was medulla oblongata-T3, C2-T1, T10-L2, T7-T10. Two patients had metastatic disease at diagnosis. Complete and incomplete resection was performed in one patient each, whereas two patients underwent a biopsy only. Two patients received chemotherapy only, in accordance with the HIT 91 trial (sandwich chemotherapy arm). They developed disease progression and died six months after diagnosis. One patient was given chemotherapy in accordance with the HIT 2000 trial followed by craniospinal radiotherapy and four courses of maintenance chemotherapy. The patient is in complete remission almost four years after diagnosis. The fourth patient developed disease progression while receiving induction chemotherapy. Hence, chemotherapy was switched to a modified Head Start protocol. After three cycles he underwent double autologous stem cell transplantation and craniospinal irradiation. Forty months after diagnosis the patient is alive and well, but surveillance MRIs still show nodular enhancing lesions in the area of the primary tumor and intracranial meningeal enhancement. Primary CNS-PNETs of the spinal cord probably require multimodal treatment including radiotherapy to achieve sustained tumor control.
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PMID:Primary central nervous system primitive neuroectodermal tumors (CNS-PNETs) of the spinal cord in children: four cases from the German HIT database with a critical review of the literature. 2118 Dec 35

We report a case of a 56-year-old male who presented with several month history of severe low back pain. Physical examination revealed generalized tenderness at his thoracolumbar spine without notable neuromuscular findings. Radiographs revealed a chronic compression fracture of T10 and T11 with anterior height loss. Subsequent magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated multiple lytic lesions in the thoracolumbar spine without canal compromise. During his hospital stay, he developed acute cord compression with loss of motor and sensory levels below T12 and an absence of sphincter tone. The patient was taken for emergent multilevel, posterior decompression and fusion with biopsy of the lesion. Microscopic examination of the tissue in addition to immunohistochemical analysis utilizing CD117-antibody/c-kit revealed gastrointestinal stromal tumor. Further workup revealed the primary tumor to be intra-abdominal and the patient was subsequently begun on adjuvant chemotherapy. Gastrointestinal stromal tumors should be considered in the workup of patients with bone metastasis with an unknown primary malignancy.
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PMID:Aggressive gastrointestinal stromal tumor with spinal metastases: a case report. 2593 23

A 48-year old male patient developed numbness in the lower half of the body 5 months after the curative operation of left renal cell carcinoma. Neurological examinations revealed the sensory disturbance below the T10 dermatome. A sagittal T2WI of the spinal MRI demonstrated a longitudinally extensive spinal cord lesion (LESCL) ranging from the C7 to L1 vertebral level. The neurological deficits rapidly deteriorated to paraplegia with bladder bowel disturbance. The high dose steroid pulse therapy showed temporary effect. The Gd enhanced T1WI of the spinal MRI taken on the 24th hospital day demonstrated a solitary intramedullary mass in the T8-9 level with ring enhancement, and a subsequent total resection of the tumor was performed. The histopathological studies of the tumor lead to the diagnosis of intramedullary spinal cord metastasis of the renal cell carcinoma. The post-operative T2WI of the spinal MRI revealed disappearance of the longitudinally extensive lesion. On the 112 hospital day, he was discharged with ambulatory aid. While solitary intramedullary spinal cord metastasis of renal cell carcinoma is quite rare, it should be suspected when the LESCL is revealed on a spinal MRI, even after the curative operation of the primary tumor.
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PMID:Metastatic renal cell carcinoma initially presented with a longitudinally extensive spinal cord lesion on MRI. 2709 2