Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0699790 (colon cancer)
28,837 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Surgical resection continues to be the primary curative modality for patients with adenocarcinoma of the rectum. However, local tumor recurrence in the pelvis and/or distant metastasis may occur in spite of complete excision of grossly visible malignant disease. Surgical and pathologic staging can identify a subset of surgically treated rectal cancer patients at high risk for tumor relapse and death. Irradiation and chemotherapy have been used as adjuvant therapy in conjunction with surgery as single modalities and in combination for patients with high risk rectal cancer. Evidence from controlled clinical trials indicates a significant decrease in local tumor recurrence, and a significant improvement in disease-free and overall survival with the use of combined postoperative irradiation and chemotherapy in this setting. A current national clinical trial in the United States of America is studying whether irradiation can be combined with new chemotherapy regimens which have shown significant therapeutic benefit as surgical adjuvant therapy for patients with high risk colon cancer (5FU + levamisole) and for patients with metastatic colorectal cancer (5FU + leucovorin) to further improve the efficacy of surgical adjuvant therapy for adenocarcinoma of the rectum.
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PMID:Adjuvant therapy for adenocarcinoma of the rectum. 158 89

An unselected prospective consecutive series of 575 patients with a single adenocarcinoma of the colon and of 331 patients with a single adenocarcinoma of the rectum registered between 1971 and 1984 at the Princess Alexandra Hospital is reported. The tumours were staged according to the Australian Clinicopathological Staging (ACPS) System. Approximately one-quarter of the patients were incurable when they presented. For curative operations for carcinoma of the colon, the operative mortality was 3%. For curative operations for carcinoma of the rectum, the operative mortality was 1% for abdominoperineal resection and 4.5% for anterior resection. The relative 5 year survival for all patients was 54.5%. The findings are compared with other large Australian series as well as with series from the United Kingdom and the United States.
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PMID:Colorectal cancer: a large unselected Australian series. 244 90

Sulindac, a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug, causes regression of polyps in familial polyposis coli and may prevent new lesions. However, it is not clear whether the effect of sulindac in preventing polyps also applies to carcinoma. This case report describes a patient with familial polyposis coli who developed a carcinoma in a rectal segment after subtotal colectomy and ileorectal anastomosis. She had been treated with 450 mg sulindac daily for 28 months and was free of polyps during the latter 12 months of this period. However, despite intensive endoscopic follow-up, she developed an adenocarcinoma of the rectum. This finding may have important implications for our understanding of the development of colon cancer in familial polyposis coli and the use of sulindac to prevent it. Development of de novo carcinoma in microadenomatous tissue of the rectal mucosa, which bypasses the polyp-cancer sequence, must be considered as a possibility in these patients.
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PMID:Adenocarcinoma in the rectal segment in familial polyposis coli is not prevented by sulindac therapy. 807 72

Multiple primary malignant neoplasms (MPMN) are not uncommon, however, finding more than three primary malignancies in one individual is unusual. Surviving five malignancies is considered exceptional. Two patients surviving five primary malignant neoplasms for 12 and 18 years are reported: a 55-year-old woman with a squamous cell carcinoma of the larynx, two carcinomas of the breast, a carcinoma of the kidney and an adenocarcinoma of the colon, and a 75-year-old woman with a sarcoma of the myometrium, a carcinoma of the thyroid, an adenocarcinoma of the rectum, a leiomyosarcoma of the colon and a bronchial carcinoid. Only twelve other reported cases with five or more primary infiltrating malignancies involving more than three sites, diagnosed while the patient was alive have been found. Relevant features were that colon cancer was quite often present more than once and survival was longer than expected for the stage (median overall survival, 20 years; 95% confidence interval: 12-28 years).
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PMID:Report of two cases of quintuple primary malignancies and review of the literature. 1903 39

The efficacy of oxaliplatin monotherapy against several solid tumors and its relative lack of nephrotoxicity and myelosupression, coupled with results of the Multicenter International Study of Oxaliplatin/5-Fluorouracil/Leucovorin in the Adjuvant Treatment of Colon Cancer trial, led to a great deal of interest for the implementation of this chemotherapeutic agent in the preoperative setting for the management of adenocarcinoma of the rectum. Despite limited in-vitro and in-vivo data with regard to the radiosensitizing properties of oxaliplatin in rectal cancer, it rapidly entered phase I-III clinical trials. This study reviews the results of these trials and the current status of oxaliplatin as a radiosensitizing agent in the neoadjuvant management of rectal cancer.
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PMID:Oxaliplatin as a radiosensitizing agent in rectal cancer. 2128 66