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Query: UMLS:C0699790 (
colon cancer
)
28,837
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Twelve hundred ninety-six patients with resected
colon cancer
that either was locally invasive (Stage B2) or had regional nodal involvement (Stage C) were randomly assigned to observation or to treatment for one year with levamisole combined with fluorouracil. Patients with Stage C disease could also be randomly assigned to treatment with levamisole alone. The median follow-up time at this writing is 3 years (range, 2 to 5 1/2). Among the patients with Stage C disease, therapy with levamisole plus fluorouracil reduced the risk of
cancer recurrence
by 41 percent (P less than 0.0001). The overall death rate was reduced by 33 percent (P approximately 0.006). Treatment with levamisole alone had no detectable effect. The results in the patients with Stage B2 disease were equivocal and too preliminary to allow firm conclusions. Toxic effects of levamisole alone were infrequent, usually consisting of mild nausea with occasional dermatitis or leukopenia, and those of levamisole plus fluorouracil were essentially the same as those of fluorouracil alone--i.e., nausea, vomiting, stomatitis, diarrhea, dermatitis, and leukopenia. These reactions were usually not severe and did not greatly impede patients' compliance with their regimen. We conclude that adjuvant therapy with levamisole and fluorouracil should be standard treatment for Stage C colon carcinoma. Since most patients in our study were treated by community oncologists, this approach should be readily adaptable to conventional medical practice.
...
PMID:Levamisole and fluorouracil for adjuvant therapy of resected colon carcinoma. 236 11
The postoperative survival rate after radical surgery for large intestinal cancer shown to be differentiated adenocarcinoma is relatively good. However, the effect of surgical adjuvant therapy on this cancer is considered to be the least promising. 5-FU, FT-207, MMC, ADR and VCR are used for chemotherapy and OK-432, PSK, BCG, levamisole and lentinan are also used as forms of immune therapy. There are no significant differences in the statistics used for comparison with controls as to the effects of these adjuvant therapies. A more intensive regional therapy has therefore been adopted for local recurrence of rectal cancer and liver metastasis of
colon cancer
considering the form of postoperative
cancer recurrence
. MMC was injected into the superior rectal artery for rectal cancer and into the portal vein during surgery for
colon cancer
in the 1st program of research of the Kajitani group. However, the efficacy of these procedures was not proved. Although immune therapy with OK-432 has also been subsequently added in the second research program, no efficacy was apparent. Taylor and Birmingham have reported that liver metastasis was remarkably decreased by continuous infusion of 5-FU through the portal vein. There is also a report by GITSG in the USA that a reduction of local recurrence was obtained by combination of 5-FU and Me-CCNU with irradiation treatment after surgery for rectal cancer.
...
PMID:[Surgery and adjuvant therapy of cancer of the large intestine]. 308 76
A 57-year-old female patient with recurrent sigmoid
colon cancer
was successfully treated with 5-FU and UFT for 8 years. The patient, with
cancer recurrence
in the para-aortic lymph nodes, which were palpated in the abdomen, was given oral 5-FU at a daily dose of 200 mg. During the second week of administration, the mass showed a remarkable decrease in size, and complete disappearance was achieved within one month. However, 5 years and 2 months after discontinuation of 5-FU administration, recurrence in the supra-clavicular lymph nodes and para-aortic lymph nodes was recognized. After administration of UFT at a daily dose of 600 mg, complete disappearance of para-aortic lymph node recurrence was observed. At present, the patient is under observation as an outpatient at our hospital. This case suggests the effectiveness of 5-FU and UFT for lymph node metastases of sigmoid
colon cancer
.
...
PMID:[A case of recurrent sigmoid colon cancer successfully treated with 5-FU and UFT]. 312 10
Data are presented from 1,166 patients with Dukes B and C
carcinoma of the colon
who were entered into the National Surgical Adjuvant Breast and Bowel Project (NSABP) Protocol C-01 between November 1977 and February 1983. Patients were randomized to one of three therapeutic categories: 1) no further treatment following curative resection (394 patients); 2) postoperative chemotherapy consisting of 5-fluorouracil, semustine, and vincristine (379 patients); or 3) postoperative BCG (393 patients). The average time on study was 77.3 months. A comparison between patients receiving postoperative adjuvant chemotherapy and those treated with surgery alone indicated that there was an overall improvement in disease-free survival (P = .02) and survival (P = .05) in favor of the chemotherapy-treated group. At 5 years of follow-up, patients treated with surgery alone were at 1.29 times the risk of developing a treatment failure and at 1.31 times the likelihood of dying as were similar patients treated with combination adjuvant chemotherapy. Comparison of the BCG-treated group with the group treated with surgery alone indicated that there was no statistically significant difference in disease-free survival (P = .09). There was, however, a survival advantage in favor of the BCG-treated group (P = .03). At 5 years of follow-up, patients randomized to the surgery-alone arm were at 1.28 times the risk of dying as were similar patients treated with BCG. Further investigation disclosed that this survival advantage in favor of BCG was a result of a diminution in deaths that were non-cancer related. When analyses were conducted on which events not related to
cancer recurrence
were eliminated, the survival difference between the BCG and control groups became nonsignificant (P = .40); the cumulative odds at 5 years decreased from 1.28 to 1.10. The findings from this study are the first from a randomized prospective clinical trial to demonstrate that a significant disease-free survival and survival benefit can be achieved with postoperative adjuvant chemotherapy in patients with Dukes B and C
carcinoma of the colon
who have undergone curative resection.
...
PMID:Postoperative adjuvant chemotherapy or BCG for colon cancer: results from NSABP protocol C-01. 327 1
Of 668 Rochester, Minnesota residents with colon or rectal cancer diagnosed from 1940 through 1979, 400 (60%) were operated on for cure and had a known disease stage. The influence of patient sex, age, and decade of diagnosis, disease stage, grade, site, and size, and the presence of obstruction or perforation were examined as prognostic factors for death, death from colorectal cancer, and
cancer recurrence
. In this population-based inception cohort, overall survival was independently associated with male sex (P = 0.0002), older age (P less than 0.001), and more advanced disease stage (P less than 0.001). Death due to
colon cancer
, on the other hand, was associated with disease stage (P less than 0.0001), more advanced grade (P = 0.016), and the presence of obstruction (P = 0.003). One hundred seven (27%) patients had a recurrence of their
colon cancer
. Seventy-one percent of recurrences were evident within the first 2 years and 91% by 5 years. Recurrence was associated with disease stage (P less than 0.0001), grade (P = 0.006), and the presence of perforation (P = 0.012).
...
PMID:Predictors of survival after curative resection of carcinoma of the colon and rectum. 344 Feb 38
An adverse relationship between perioperative blood transfusions and the risk of subsequent recurrence of cancer was reported recently. We reviewed retrospectively the records of 171 patients who received initial therapy for colorectal adenocarcinoma from 1977 to 1979 at the Virginia Mason Medical Center. One hundred three patients (60%) received transfusions within 1 month of surgery and 37 patients (22%) developed recurrent cancer. No overall relationship between transfusion status (yes or no) and tumor recurrence or patient survival was found, although among subsets of patients (those with
colon cancer
or Dukes' Stage C2 disease), patients who had received transfusions were less likely to develop recurrent cancer than patients who had not (P = 0.01). No effect of transfusion on patient survival was found, even after consideration of potential confounding variables. The conflicting data regarding blood transfusion and
cancer recurrence
are reviewed, but it would appear to be premature to alter radically current blood transfusion practices based on the possibility that transfusion may adversely influence the risk of
cancer recurrence
.
...
PMID:Perioperative blood transfusion does not increase the risk of colorectal cancer recurrence. 359 5
Pharmacologists have realized that tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI) have potential as anti-cancer agents, both in prevention and therapy protocols. Nonetheless, concern about the risk of toxicity caused by synthetic TKIs restricted their development as chemoprevention agents. However, a naturally occurring TKI (the isoflavone genistein) in soy was discovered in 1987. The concentration of genistein in most soy food materials ranges from 1-2 mg/g. Oriental populations, who have low rates of breast and prostate cancer, consume 20-80 mg of genistein/day, almost entirely derived from soy, whereas the dietary intake of genistein in the US is only 1-3 mg/day. Chronic use of genistein as a chemopreventive agent has an advantage over synthetic TKIs because it is naturally found in soy foods. It could be delivered either in a purified state as a pill (to high-risk, motivated patient groups), or in the form of soy foods or soy-containing foods. Delivery of genistein in soy foods is more economically viable ($1.50 for a daily dose of 50 mg) than purified material ($5/day) and would require no prior approval by the FDA. Accordingly, investigators at several different sites have begun or are planning chemoprevention trials using a soy beverage product based on SUPRO, an isolated soy protein manufactured by Protein Technologies International of St. Louis, MO. These investigators are examining the effect of the soy beverage on surrogate intermediate endpoint biomarkers (SIEBs) in patients at risk for breast and
colon cancer
, defining potential SIEBs in patients at risk for prostate cancer, and determining whether the soy beverage reduces the incidence of
cancer recurrence
.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Rationale for the use of genistein-containing soy matrices in chemoprevention trials for breast and prostate cancer. 853 97
Carcinoma of the large bowel is the second leading cause of cancer mortality in Singapore. Although the great majority of patients are discovered at a stage where resection with curative intent is possible, almost half of the patients afflicted will die of it. The combination of 5-fluorouracil + levamisole used in patients with curatively resected high risk Dukes B2 and all Dukes' C colon cancers has been shown to reduce
cancer recurrence
rate and improve overall survival. Since 1990 adjuvant chemotherapy has been recommended for this group of patients. This report describes patients treated in Singapore, their toxicities and their outcome. A total of 341 patients were treated between 1990 and 1996. Treatment compliance was 71.8%. Toxicity was moderate with mainly grade 1-2 nausea and vomiting, diarrhoea, stomatitis, alopecia, and neutropenia. There was 1 treatment-related death. Median recurrence-free interval was 81 months and median survival was not reached at 90 months. This regimen is tolerable. Until further randomised reports comparing 5-fluorouracil + levamisole to other combinations are available, this combination chemotherapy is recommended to patients after surgical resection of the high risk Dukes' B2 and Dukes' C
colon cancer
to reduce
cancer recurrence
and improve overall survival.
...
PMID:Adjuvant chemotherapy for patients with resected Dukes' C and high-risk B2 colon cancer with fluorouracil and levamisole. 991 52
Although cancer surgery has been of great benefit to patients with large bowel cancer, a flaw that has caused the death of countless patients has gone unrecognized. Although surgeons have dealt successfully with the primary tumor, they have neglected to treat microscopic residual disease. Persistent cancer cells within the abdomen and pelvis are responsible for the death of 30-50% of the patients who die with this disease and for quality of life consequences that result from intestinal obstruction caused by
cancer recurrence
at the resected site and on peritoneal surfaces. New surgical techniques for large bowel cancer resection minimize the surgery-induced microscopic residual disease that may result from surgical trauma. New developments in exposure, hemostasis, adequate lymphadenectomy, and qualitatively superior margins of excision have occurred. Clinical data show that a 40% improvement in survival with an optimization of surgical technique is possible. Not only should the surgical event for primary colon and rectal cancer be optimized, but also the successful treatment of peritoneal carcinomatosis should be pursued. Resected site disease and peritoneal carcinomatosis can be prevented through the use of perioperative intraperitoneal chemotherapy in patients at high risk of persistent microscopic residual disease. These are patients with perforated cancer, positive peritoneal cytology, ovarian involvement, tumor spill during surgery, and adjacent organ involvement. Patients with established peritoneal carcinomatosis can be salvaged with an approximate 50% long-term survival rate if the timely use of peritonectomy procedures, intraperitoneal chemotherapy, and knowledgeable patient selection are utilized. Peritonectomy procedures allow the removal of all visible peritoneal carcinomatosis with acceptable surgical morbidity (25%) and mortality (1.5%) rates. Heated intraoperative intraperitoneal chemotherapy using mitomycin C, in addition to early postoperative intraperitoneal 5-fluorouracil, can eradicate microscopic residual disease in the majority of patients. The peritoneal cancer index, which quantitates
colon cancer
peritoneal carcinomatosis by distribution and by lesion size, must be used in the selection of patients who may benefit from these advanced oncologic surgical treatment strategies. The completeness of the cytoreduction score is the most powerful prognostic indicator in this group of patients. The surgeon must be aware that there are no long-term survivors unless complete cytoreduction occurs. With a combination of proper techniques for the resection of primary disease, peritonectomy procedures for the removal of all visible peritoneal implants, intraoperative and early postoperative chemotherapy for the eradication of microscopic residual disease, and quantitative tools for proper patient selection, one can optimize the surgical treatment of patients with large bowel cancer.
...
PMID:Successful management of microscopic residual disease in large bowel cancer. 1035 54
Estrogen replacement therapy either with (HRT) or without (ERT) accompanying progesterone is routinely offered to well women at the time of menopause, in order to relieve vasomotor symptoms, (hot flashes), reduce urogenital atrophy and reduce the risks of cardiovascular disease, osteoporosis and perhaps
colon cancer
and Alzheimer's disease. It is generally felt however, that women with a previous diagnosis of breast cancer are not suitable candidates for such therapy since either estrogen or progesterone may be associated with an increased risk of
cancer recurrence
. There are however, a variety of approaches to menopausal therapy in such women. A careful history must first be taken in order to identify the symptoms or conditions of concern. Vasomotor symptoms can be reduced by the use of other medications such as the antidepressant venlafaxine (Effexor). Estring, a vaginal estrogen ring can be used to reduce genitourinary symptoms, with little systemic estrogen absorption. Osteoporosis can be prevented or treated with calcium supplements, exercise, improved diet, bisphosphonates and/or selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs) while cardiovascular risk can be reduced by diet and exercise, as well as the appropriate use of lipid lowering and antihypertensive medications.
...
PMID:The role of hormone replacement therapy in women with a previous diagnosis of breast cancer and a review of possible alternatives. 1133 40
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