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Query: UMLS:C0684249 (lung carcinoma)
23,830 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

From 1984 to 1989, 20 of 142 patients with small cell carcinoma of the lung received surgery after intensive chemotherapy alone or chemotherapy combined with thoracic irradiation. All patients giving informed consent and having an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance status 0-1 were included in the present retrospective study. Ages ranged from 37-74 (median 58) years. All patients received 1-10 cycles of chemotherapy intravenously every three or four weeks (PVP: 80 mg cisplatin/m2, 100 mg etoposide/m2 x 3; CAV: 800 mg cyclophosphamide/m2, 50 mg doxorubicin/m2, 1.4 mg vincristine/m2, and other combinations) and were evaluated for surgery 1-27 months after the initial systemic chemotherapy. Clinically, two, three, eleven and for patients were diagnosed as having stages I, II, III and IV disease, respectively at the beginning of treatment. At the time of reevaluation after chemotherapy or chemotherapy plus chest radiotherapy there were one (5%) complete responder, 17 (85%) partial responders, and two (10%) with stable disease. Twenty patients underwent thoracotomy consisting of nine lobectomies and 11 pneumonectomies. Eighteen of the 20 had resectable lesions. According to postoperative pathological findings, there were six, one, seven and two patients with stages I, II, III and IV disease, respectively. In two patients no tumor was demonstrated pathologically. Small cell carcinoma was detected in 15 specimens and three had non-small cell carcinoma. Two of the 20 patients survived for more than five years. The median survival of the 20 patients was 22 months. It would appear that resection is applicable in only a selected subset of patients with small cell carcinoma of the lung.
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PMID:A retrospective analysis of patients receiving surgery after chemotherapy for small cell lung cancer. 164 33

From January 1980 to December 1989, 86 patients with limited small cell lung carcinoma (SCLC) were treated in our Institution. Sixty-eight of them were males, 18 females; mean age was 58 years (range: 40-74); Karnofsky index was 80 or higher. All patients received induction multiagent chemotherapy (CAV or CAVE), usually fractionated into 3/4 cycles. Radiotherapy was administered by means of a 10 MV Linear Accelerator, 2-3 Gy/day, 5 days/week. Radiation dose was 60 Gy for 39 patients, 50 Gy for 25 patients, and 30 Gy for 22 patients. Parallel opposed fields (AP and PA) were used for administering the 30-Gy dose, while higher doses were delivered by multiportal arrangement (3/4 fields). Overall survival (corrected Kaplan-Meier) was 21.3% and 13.4% at 2 and 3 years, respectively; 2 years' survival according to dose was 24.5% for 60 Gy, 19.9% and 11% for 50 and 30 Gy, respectively. Mean survival time (MST) was 14 months for 60 Gy, 13 months and 10 months, respectively, for 50 and 30 Gy. Survival and disease-free survival rates were similar in patients who received 50 and 60 Gy. No major complications related to irradiation were observed, not even in the group receiving the highest dose. Our data are similar to those reported in the literature.
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PMID:[Radiotherapy in the combined therapy of limited stage pulmonary microcytoma. The experience of the Department of Oncologic Therapy at the Multiregional Hospital of Varese (1980-1989)]. 165 12

Among lung tumors, well-differentiated neuroendocrine carcinomas are often misdiagnosed or may go unrecognized. Nineteen cases of well-differentiated neuroendocrine carcinoma (WDNC) were assessed at the National Cancer Institute of Milan over a ten-year period. There was only one woman and the age range was 50 to 77 years. Most of the patients were smokers (83 percent). All tumors were radically resected. There were 12 lobectomies, two sleeve-lobectomies, three bilobectomies, one pneumonectomy, and two segmentectomies (one patient had two synchronous WDNCs). There was neither operative mortality nor major complications. Sixteen tumors were stage 1, three were stage II, and one was stage IIIa. Five patients had adjuvant chemotherapy (cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, and vincristine [CAV] regimen). One patient was given local or regional radiotherapy. In ten patients the tumors recurred, even though four had had adjuvant treatment. The brain was the first site of metastasis in seven cases. The pathologic stage seemed not to be closely related to the appearance of metastases (six patients with stage I disease had recurrences). Only two patients with recurrence were still alive 12 and 103 months after the procedure. The percentage of survival for patients with stage I disease after more than 100 months was 68 percent. WDNC is similar to small-cell lung carcinoma (SCLC) with regard to the neurotropism of metastases. Surgery is curative for more than one half of the patients with localized disease. Therefore, multimodal therapy, probably based on tumor behavior and investigations of tumor markers, is advisable.
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PMID:Prognosis of resected well-differentiated neuroendocrine carcinoma of the lung. 165 62

A 78-year-old man was admitted to our hospital with dyspnea in June 1988, and diagnosed as having small-cell lung carcinoma by cytological findings of pleural effusion. He was treated three times with CAV (cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine) therapy and a partial response was achieved. In March 1989, he was again admitted complaining of right dull hypochondralgia accompanied by enlargement of primary tumor in the right lower lobe of the lung and metastases to mediastinal and intraabdominal lymph nodes. Because it was an aged and recurrent case, he was treated with continuous five-day infusion of etoposide, 30 mg/m2/day and CDDP, 18.5 mg/m2/day. After the second course, subjective symptoms clearly disappeared and swelling of mediastinal and intraabdominal lymph nodes was markedly reduced on computed tomography. No severe side effects except for moderate myelosuppression, alopecia and nausea were observed. This regimen appears useful in the treatment of small-cell lung carcinoma in elderly patients.
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PMID:[Successful treatment of a pretreated elderly case of small-cell lung carcinoma with continuous five-day intravenous infusion of cisplatin plus etoposide]. 165 91

To determine if chemotherapy dose intensity (DI) influences treatment outcome, 60 published studies in limited- and extensive-stage small-cell carcinoma of the lung (SCCL) were retrospectively analyzed for relationship between intended DI and response (complete response [CR] or partial response [PR]) or median survival (MS). Agents used in the regimens included cyclophosphamide (C), doxorubicin (A), vincristine (V), etoposide (E), and cisplatin (P). Relative DI (RDI) of each study regimen was calculated against a reference regimen, and weighted regression analysis was used. Additionally, analysis of individual drug RDI within combinations was performed. For CAV, increasing RDI of the regimen showed no correlation with outcome. For the individual drugs, C RDI correlated positively, while A RDI correlated negatively with attainment of CR in limited disease, but both only after unduly influential observations were eliminated. In extensive-stage disease, A RDI correlated positively with CR+, PR but only in randomized trials, and this correlation lost statistical significance after unduly influential observations were eliminated. For CAE and CAVE, the RDI of the regimens correlated positively with MS in extensive-stage disease as did the C RDI. In limited disease, the C RDI correlated negatively with MS. For EP, no significant correlations were seen. We conclude that DI-outcome correlations are not consistent for these chemotherapy regimens in SCCL. Meta-analysis of retrospective data can generate hypotheses for testing in prospective clinical trials, but study sample and method of analysis can appreciably affect conclusions.
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PMID:Dose-intensity meta-analysis of chemotherapy regimens in small-cell carcinoma of the lung. 184 68

Between 1974 and 1986, 576 patients (284 limited and 292 extensive stages) were treated at this institution. To keep multiagent chemotherapy (CT) at a uniform intensity, patients who received (a) combined modality approach of both multiagent chemotherapy and thoracic radiotherapy (RT) and (b) greater than or equal to 3 cycles of multiagent chemotherapy (greater than or equal to 3 drugs), were chosen for this analysis. Out of 284 patients with limited Stage small-cell lung carcinoma, there were 154 such patients who met these strict criteria, and the treatment methods for the remaining 130 patients were as follows: (a) chemotherapy alone with radiotherapy reserved for local failure (47 pts); (b) radiotherapy alone (20 pts); (c) surgery +/- adjuvant chemotherapy or radiotherapy (37 pts); (d) modified chemotherapy plus radiotherapy (26 pts). During the 12-year period, the therapeutic factors have evolved. Radiation-dose was increased from 30-40 Gy (time dose fractionation 49-66) in 1974-1977 to 44-52 Gy (time dose fractionation 73-86) in 1978-1986. The target volume for radiotherapy included the primary lesion with a 2-cm margin of normal lung and the mediastinum. Chemotherapy program also evolved from COP, CAV (1974-1977) to MACC, VCE-VCA, PCE-ACE (1978-1986). Fifty of 154 patients (32%) developed loco-regional recurrence (infield failure) and 98% (49/50) of these patients exhibited this by 2.5 years. Survival data of 154 patients were as follows: (a) Median survival time (MST) was 12 M; (b) actuarial survival rates at 2 and 5 years were 21% and 8%, respectively. Fifty percent of these patients died within 12 months (MST 12 M) and were not exposed to the full length of the risk period for loco-regional failure. To take into account the duration of exposure to the risk period, actuarial method was employed to measure the probability of loco-regional failure. Loco-regional failure rates at 2.5 years were 37%, 39%, 49%, 79%, and 84% for 50 Gy, 45 Gy, 40 Gy, 35 Gy, and 30 Gy, respectively. The difference between the recurrence rates of 37% and 79% by 50 Gy and 35 Gy was statistically significant, p less than 0.05. Although the recurrence rates of 37% and 49% by 50 Gy and 40 Gy were not statistically different, there was a strong trend of a better control rate of loco-regional carcinoma by higher radiation doses. The time to recurrence seems also shorter with lower radiation-dose than that of higher radiation doses.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Importance of radiation dose in achieving improved loco-regional tumor control in limited stage small-cell lung carcinoma: an update. 254 6

Fifty-five patients with small cell carcinoma of the lung (SCCL) were treated with alternating courses of CAV (cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, and vincristine) and VHM (etoposide, hexamethylmelamine, and methotrexate) at 21-day intervals. One regimen contained high-dose cyclophosphamide (2400 mg/m2 iv), while the second contained an increased dose of etoposide (250 mg/m2 iv on Days 1-3). Patients achieving a complete response (CR) received a minimum of six cycles of therapy or two cycles beyond the achievement of CR. These patients as well as those with partial response with disease limited to the lung then received radiotherapy to the lung primary (5100 rads in 300-rad fractions) as well as prophylactic cranial radiotherapy (3000 rads in 300-rad fractions). All therapy was subsequently stopped until relapse. There were no deaths during the aplastic periods induced by the intensive chemotherapy. CR was achieved in 57% of the patients and partial response was achieved in 38%. The actuarial median survival for the 27 patients with extensive disease was 13.5 months and for the 28 patients with limited disease was 13 months. Survival at this point appears comparable to less intensive regimens in which maintenance therapy was given. We conclude that prolonged intensive induction chemotherapy in SCCL is well-tolerated. Studies are needed to examine in a randomized trial the role of alternating combinations and maintenance therapy in SCCL.
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PMID:Intensive alternating chemotherapy regimen in small cell carcinoma of the lung. 298 90

Etoposide can be administered orally. On the average, the bioavailability of etoposide administered in a soft gelatin capsule is approximately 50%. For both the oral and intravenous (IV) routes, there is a significant amount of inter- and intrapatient variability. In spite of the variability, clinical studies show that oral etoposide is clearly active in small-cell lung carcinoma (SCLC). In addition, combination chemotherapy studies using etoposide have yielded toxicity equivalent to IV administered programs such as CAV (cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine). Oral etoposide has been used in several large combination chemotherapy studies safely and with clear efficacy.
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PMID:Oral etoposide in small-cell lung cancer. 302 Jul 4

The paper reviews the role of surgery in the local treatment of the primary tumour of small-cell bronchial carcinomas (SCLC) and the preliminary results of a multicentre cooperative prospective randomized trial with multimodality treatments of SCLC. This randomized cooperative trial was activated in 1979 comparing a new sequential intermittent polychemotherapy (sq CT) of three different drug combinations alternatingly given intermittently within one year after surgery, with a standard chemotherapy (CT) of one combination of four drugs given intermittently within three years after surgery. Observations on 25 patients at nine different cooperating surgical departments showed that sq CT was applicable and unexpected side-effects did not occur. Live table curves, calculated from 56 patients up to February 1986, indicate the improvement of the survival rate five years after surgery for the cure of 25 patients receiving sq CT after surgery in comparison with 31 patients receiving standard chemotherapy (36% : 22%). Following discussions of this and other results at the symposium "Adjuvant Therapy of Small-Cell Bronchial Carcinoma" at the 13th Congress of the International Society of Chemotherapy (ISC) 1983 in Vienna, a related new protocol was designed and activated by a further enlarged ISC-Study-Group in October 1984. This protocol for a two-armed randomized cooperative trial for patients operated for T1, 2N0M0SCLC is comparing a chemotherapy-combination 1 (CAV)--as also used in a trial of the North American Lung Cancer Study Group-0--with chemotherapy 2 (sq CT) as used in our forementioned previous study.
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PMID:Multimodality treatment with surgery in small-cell lung cancer. 303 24

Between 1978 and 1983, 34 patients (32 evaluable) suffering from limited small cell lung carcinoma (SCLC-L) were treated following the protocol polychemotherapy (CAV) plus thoracic cobalt teletherapy and "precautionary" cranial irradiation (30 Gy in 2 weeks). Minimum follow-up was 30 months. After induction chemotherapy there was complete remission (CR) in 20% of cases whereas at the end of induction chemo-radiotherapy there was complete remission (CR) in 44% (p less than 0.05) of cases. Median duration of the responds was 12 months. Total median survival is 15 months, median NED survival 32 months (6-90 months). Seven out of 14 CR patients received consolidated thoracic radiotherapy (Rt); 6 of these survived disease-free for over 2 years. No salvage therapy carried out has proved useful. Only in one patient (3%) brain metastasis occurred. Iatrogenic toxicity was also kept within limits of brain level. The role Rt plays in increasing the CR percentage, in drastically diminishing the incidence of brain metastasis, in improving the quality of life by increasing the disease-free interval must be emphasized. Finally it should be noted that only CR patients have the possibility to become "long survivors".
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PMID:[Combined chemotherapeutic and radiotherapeutic treatment of limited pulmonary microcytoma]. 303 23


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