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Query: UMLS:C0699790 (
colon cancer
)
28,837
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The effective treatment of systemic cancer began in the 1950s on two fronts, i.e., childhood leukemia and choriocarcinoma. These two diseases were successfully treated as a direct result of the use of antifolate methotrexate. The demonstration of complete durable remissions in these diseases quickly led to development of other anticancer drugs, tested using the prospective clinical trials. In the 1960s as the number of active drugs increased, combination chemotherapy was introduced. Other systemic cancers, such as Hodgkin's, large cell lymphoma, and testicular cancer, became curable in the 1970s. For the common low-growth fraction solid tumors, the curability of
systemic disease
remained elusive until the introduction of adjuvant therapy to treat micrometastases. The past decade of the 1980s has seen improvement in the outcomes for breast cancer, osteosarcoma, and possible
colon cancer
utilizing adjunctive chemotherapy. The 1980s also saw the introduction of biologic therapies that have further improved the outcomes of several leukemias and produced consistent responses in patients with renal cell and melanoma. The 1990s will undoubtedly see more improvements as the effects of current drugs will be enhanced not only by improved integration of systemic and local therapies but also by utilizing cytokines and biologic response modifiers in concert with cytotoxics. Moreover, as we understand more about the process of cancer induction, promotion, and progression, more specific anti-cancer approaches will be developed to control cancer even before clinical cancer is diagnosed. Underlying and facilitating the improvement in cancer therapy have been not only the experimental results of many laboratory scientists but also the outcomes from many controlled clinical trials, the laboratory of clinical scientists.
...
PMID:Progress in the systemic treatment of cancer. Concepts, trials, drugs, and biologics. 230 52
Adenomatosis coli is recently regarded as a
systemic disease
with a predisposition to multiple tumor formation. We report siblings of familial adenomatosis coli with gastric cancers. Case 1 was a 58 year-old elder brother. His diagnosis was familial adenomatosis coli accompanied with
colon cancer
and simultaneous early gastric cancer. Total colectomy and partial gastrectomy were carried out on Mar. 13, 1984 at our hospital. Numerous polyps over the whole colon and an ulcerative tumor in the hepatic flexure were found in the resected colon. Histologically tubular adenocarcinoma were demonstrated in the ulcerative tumor, and all other polyps were adenomas. In the resected gastric specimen, there were two shallow, depressed lesions on the each anterior and posterior wall of the antrum. Histologically both of them were adenocarcinoma confined within the mucosa. Postoperative course was satisfactory and he is quite healthy 2 and a half years after surgery. Case 2 was a 56 year-old younger brother. He received a partial gastrectomy for advanced gastric cancer at another hospital on May 20, 1982. In one and a half year from the surgery, a large lung tumor (probably metastasis of the gastric cancer) was found and he received chemotherapy. He also received radiation therapy in June, 1984 and during this admission barium enema study was performed. It revealed numerous polyps over the whole colon. No cancerous lesions were found. He died of lung tumor on Dec. 8, 1985. The similar siblings were first reported by Kokaji et al. in 1984, and our cases seem to be the second ones.
...
PMID:[Siblings of familial adenomatosis coli with gastric cancer--case report]. 282 86
Congenital hypertrophy of the retinal pigment epithelium was seen in three affected members of a kindred with Gardner's syndrome. The latter consists of a triad of many intestinal polyps, hard-tissue abnormalities, and soft-tissue abnormalities. Although the appearance of the individual lesions in our patients was typical of hypertrophy of the retinal pigment epithelium, the following atypical features were present: multiple lesions per eye; bilateral occurrence; familial transmission; and association with
systemic disease
. Ophthalmoscopic examination can help identify children who are at risk of developing polyposis and
carcinoma of the colon
. In some instances, Gardner's syndrome may be diagnosed in a patient and his family as a result of observing the fundus lesions.
...
PMID:Hypertrophy of the retinal pigment epithelium associated with Gardner's syndrome. 744 47
The most common structural neurologic complication of systemic cancer is brain metastasis. For the most part, treatment is palliative because the majority of patients (> or = 50%) have uncontrollable systemic cancer. However, for patients in whom the only metastasis is to the brain, death is more likely to result from the metastasis than from the
systemic disease
; hence, treatment of the metastasis is vitally important. Although radiotherapy is generally considered the preferred treatment, surgical removal of the mass, whether single or multiple, may be the most effective palliation, especially for tumors from radio-resistant diseases such as melanoma, kidney and
colon cancer
. We review the information regarding therapeutic decision-making; advances in surgical procedures, namely computer-assisted stereotactic and/or intraoperative ultrasound and mapping techniques; the efficacy of postoperative WBRT; complications and benefits of surgery; our experience with reoperation for recurrent metastatic brain tumors, the results of which indicate that reoperation for recurrent brain metastasis can prolong survival and improve quality of life for most individuals; our results comparing surgery versus radiosurgery, which show that patients who undergo surgical treatment live longer and have better tumor control than those treated with radiosurgery; and the patient's prognosis. The conclusion is that surgery should remain the treatment of choice whenever possible.
...
PMID:Surgical treatment of metastatic brain tumors. 884 61
Autosomal-dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) is a
systemic disease
with multiple extrarenal manifestations. It accounts for 7% to 11% of patients receiving dialysis or renal transplantation (RT) for end-stage renal disease (ESRD) in Europe. We analyzed retrospectively the causes of death, the prevalence of cardiovascular risk factors (CVRF) and the patient and graft survivals in 62 consecutive ADPKD patients who received 63 cadaveric grafts (29 men and 34 women), of the 600 RTs performed between 1980-2001. The diagnosis of ADPKD was established by family history and ultrasound techniques. At present, 50 patients (79.4%) have functioning grafts, with a mean follow-up of 84.7 months (range, 12-255), and 13 patients have lost their grafts. The main cause of failure was patient death with a functioning graft (9 cases). Malignancies occurred in 5 patients, including 2 lymphomas, 1 renal carcinoma, 1 pancreas sarcoma, and 1 lung cancer associated with infection. Three patients died of cardiocerebrovascular events, and 1 patient of pneumonia. One patient lost the graft after decreasing the immunosuppression for an obstructing
colon cancer
. Three additional patients now on dialysis lost their grafts due to chronic rejection in 2 cases and primary nonfunction in 1 case. The prevalence of cardiovascular risk factors among the 50 patients with functional grafts were: hypertension, 70%; hypercholesterolemia, 62%; hyperhomocysteinemia, 30%; hyperfibrinogenemia, 68%; increased lipoprotein (a), 18%; microalbuminuria, 22%; hyperuricemia, 48%; hyperparathyroidism, 24%; overweight status, 24%; and nonlethal myocardial infarction, 10%. We conclude that ADPKD patients have good graft and patient survivals, and that the presence of malignancy is the main cause of death and graft failure at our center.
...
PMID:Autosomal-dominant polycystic kidney disease: high prevalence of graft loss for death-related malignancies and cardiovascular risk factors. 1296 69
Blood-borne metastases to the kidneys from solid tumors have received little attention in the medical literature because they usually occur in a setting of advanced
systemic disease
, and renal involvement is a relatively minor cause of symptoms. Although the frequency of metastases to the kidney in cancer patients is 7-13% in large autopsy series, incidental discovery of a renal metastasis as the first manifestation of a primary tumor is a very rare event. The most common primary malignancy to involve the kidney is bronchogenic carcinoma,followed by breast and gastrointestinal cancers. In this article, we report a patient with left
colon cancer
and isolated metastasis to the right kidney at the time of initial diagnosis. Left hemicolectomy and right nephrectomy were performed. Adjuvant systemic chemotherapy consisting of 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) and folinic acid (FA) was given. 5-FU and FA were stopped after four cycles because metastases to the lung and liver occurred about 3 mo after the surgery during adjuvant chemotherapy. Capecitabine was started. The patient died 9 mo after the discovery of the isolated renal metastasis. Nephrectomy is more for diagnostic clarification in the setting of synchronous primary because it has no effect on survival and its effect on quality of life is minimal; as seen in our case, the other organ metastases rapidly occur and the survival is limited. Nephrectomy may also compromise the choice of chemotherapy agents that require renal clearance, thus a careful evaluation of renal functions is necessary if a nephrectomy is performed. In the matter of a decreased renal clearance,the doses of these drugs should be decreased or the choice should be reevaluated.
...
PMID:Colon cancer with isolated metastasis to the kidney at the time of initial diagnosis. 1536 38
Colon cancer
is a
systemic disease
in 19% of patients and metastasizes most frequently to the liver and the lung. Survival is enhanced with complete surgical resection of pulmonary metastases. Comprehensive restaging and verification of preoperative fitness must precede resection. The operative approach is dictated by the anatomic location of the metastases, whereas the extent of resection remains a balance between complete removal of metastatic deposits while preserving as much lung parenchyma as possible. The presence of metastatic involvement of hilar and mediastinal lymph nodes is ominous. Multidisciplinary care is highly recommended. An evidence-based algorithm for the identification assessment and treatment of patients with pulmonary metastases is proposed.
...
PMID:Surgical management of colorectal lung metastasis. 2103 14
In cancer patients detection of
systemic disease
is of great importance to obtain prognostic information and to guide therapy. Bone marrow (BM) seems to be a common homing tissue for the early spread of tumor cells from various epithelial tumors; however, verification of the prognostic significance of BM-disseminated tumor cells (BM-DTCs), is restricted to breast cancer so far. These cells may be dormant for a long time, and signals triggering their activation leading to recurrence remain to be characterized. A recent study involving metastatic breast cancer patients reported that the shortest disease-free survival is correlated with cytokeratin (CK)-negative BM aspirates and that CK-positive BM-DTCs correspond to dormant tumor cells. Soluble CK fragments in serum including CK18 and 19 (measured as TPS and CYFRA 21-1, respectively) and caspase-cleaved CK18 are widely used to monitor tumor progression and response to therapy, actually indicating proliferation and/or necrotic/apoptotic cell death. In order to assess the source of the CK fragments, we used determinations of CK18 and caspase-cleaved CK18 fragments in serum samples before and after radical tumor surgery in
colon cancer
patients. Elevated serum concentrations of CK18 were found to persist in patients with a high incidence of BM-DTCs, and high perioperative levels of caspase-cleaved CK18 fragments were detected in patients with early relapses, respectively. These results indicate that in some patients at increased risk of recurrence disseminated cell populations exist that are responsible for the release of the bulk of CK fragments after removal of the apparently nonmetastatic tumor. In good agreement with the results in metastatic breast cancer patients, release of CK18 or 19 fragments by BM-DTCs seem to indicate disseminated tumor cells mainly in a dormant state, whereas caspase-cleaved CK18 may indicate skipping of this latent phase and early progression. Therefore, caspase cleavage of CKs in intact tumor cells seems to accompany or is involved in the differentiation leading from dormant to progressively active disseminated tumor cells. Release of respective CK fragments would result in an apparent clearing of CK-positive cells in BM, leaving malignant cells that have possibly undergone an epithelial-mesenchymal transition. Micrometastatic cancer cell lines derived from breast cancer patients were found to display loss of epithelial CK8, 18 and 19 as well as ectopic expression of vimentin as in mesenchymal cells. In conclusion, degradation of CKs may represent a marker indicating reactivation of dormant tumor cells in BM.
...
PMID:Circulating cytokeratin 18 fragments and activation of dormant tumor cells in bone marrow of cancer patients. 2313 85
Metastases to the thyroid gland are uncommon. Renal, lung, breast, and
colon cancer
and melanoma are the most common primary diseases implicated. Few retrospective series have been reported. Treatment decisions must be individualized, and will depend on the state of
systemic disease
. Selected patients could benefit from surgical treatment. Although most patients selected for surgery will not be cured, the aim of surgery is to avoid the complications of uncontrolled central neck disease.
...
PMID:Thyroid metastasectomy. 2412 78
Neoadjuvant therapy is an under-utilized regimen for the treatment of metastatic melanoma. The use of this approach has been increasing in other tumor types. Neoadjuvant therapy may reduce occult circulating tumor cell burden in the face of bulky disease and afford a real time evaluation of treatment effectiveness. Neoadjuvant approach can also provide preoperative histologic and molecular analysis of treated tissue that may guide the postoperative treatment planning in patients with resectable metastatic melanoma lesions. The putative benefits of better margin control and clearance of occult
systemic disease
would theoretically improve surgical outcome. With the advent of effective agents against metastatic melanoma, this common approach to the treatment of rectal cancer, metastatic
colon cancer
, and breast cancer should also be evaluated as a viable treatment strategy for advanced stage melanoma.
...
PMID:Neoadjuvant treatment of melanoma: case reports and review. 2449 50
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