Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:P52742 (pT3)
1,034 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

BACKGROUND: Precise knowledge of the abdominal nodal spread of cardia adenocarcinoma in relation to the depth of invasion of the tumor and its longitudinal extension may be very important for the surgeon as a guide in choosing the type of resection and lymphadenectomy.METHODS: The frequency of node metastases in each abdominal station of the first and second tier was prospectively studied in 101 patients with type II and III cardia cancer (defined as approved by the consensus conference held during the second International Gastric Cancer Conference in Munich in April, 1997) who underwent total gastrectomy with D2 lymphadenectomy during the period January 1994 to April 1998. Lymph nodes were retrieved immediately after operation by the surgeon and assigned to the appropriate station according to the classification of the Japanese Research Society for Gastric Cancer.RESULTS: In early gastric cancer, of both type II and type III, lymph node involvement was limited to the perigastric nodes of the upper half of the stomach and to the lymph node station of the celiac trunk. In advanced cancers, whether of type II or type III, there was a fairly high frequency of metastases to the perigastric nodes of the lower half of the stomach; there was also high frequency of metastases at N2 stations, without differences in frequency between pT2 and pT3 tumors (staged according to the classification of the Japanese Research Society for Gastric Cancer).CONCLUSIONS: The results of our study provide evidence for the need to perform a total gastrectomy with D2 lymphadenectomy in all patients with advanced cardia cancer type II or type III. In early cancers, a less extensive resection (proximal gastrectomy) with D2 lymphadenectomy may be indicated.
...
PMID:Nodal abdominal spread in adenocarcinoma of the cardia. Results of a multicenter prospective study. 1195 59

Cancer of the papilla or the ampulla of Vater appears, from a clinical point of view, to be an intraduodenal or ampullary cancer. An adenoma-dysplasia-carcinoma sequence has been established. In 20%-40% of the patients with an adenoma of the papilla, a cancerous lesion in the adenoma is additionally observed. Oncological resection using a Kausch-Whipple technique or a pylorus-preserving partial pancreatico-duodenectomy (PPPD) offers a 5-year survival probability of between 45% and 65%. The hospital mortality after oncological resection at experienced centers is below 5%. The most frequent treatment-related complication is pancreatic fistula, which occurs in around 20% of the patients. In about 10% of the patients with a pT1 cancer and in 25% to 67% with pT2 and pT3 cancer, lymph node involvement has been observed. Lymph nodes in front of and behind the head of the pancreas are the primary targets for cancer cell disseminations. In more than one-third of the patients, lymph nodes in the inter-aortocaval space and the lymph nodes around the superior mesenteric artery and the nodes in the pancreatic segment of the hepatoduodenal ligament are involved. Therefore, tissue dissection, including, selectively, the N2 lymph nodes, is an essential component of radical surgery for cancer of the papilla. A standard Kausch-Whipple resection or PPPD without a selective extended lymph node dissection, including the interaortocaval and superior mesenteric artery nodes, results in about 30% of the patients having an R2-resection, i.e., with cancer left behind. The long-term survival is determined by the tumor biological factors: (1) absence of lymph node involvement and (2) absence of infiltration into the pancreas. The surgeon's contribution to the cure of cancer of the papilla is to perform an R0-resection with low hospital mortality and low postoperative morbidity. Patients without lymph node involvement, and with absence of infiltration into the pancreas, no lymph vessel invasion, and tumor-negative margins have major benefits from oncological resection in regard to curability of the cancer.
...
PMID:Pathogenesis and treatment of neoplastic diseases of the papilla of Vater: Kausch-Whipple procedure with lymph node dissection in cancer of the papilla of Vater. 1536 6

Colonoscopic ultrasound (CUS) enables total colonoscopic examination combined with staging of tumor. Rigid probe transrectal ultrasound (TRUS) is reliable in assessing rectal cancer. Both the modalities are associated with an initial learning curve. We evaluated the predictability CUS in preoperative staging of rectal cancer during the learning curve, despite experience with TRUS. Forty-four patients with non-obstructing rectal cancer were assessed by colonoscopy and colonic ultrasound using a 7.5 MHz rotating transducer. Accuracy of ultrasound staging was compared with pathological staging. Tumor staging and nodal staging at pathology and ultrasound were named pT, pN and uT, uN, respectively. The pathological staging was pT1 in two (4.5%), pT2 in 16 (36%), pT3 in 21 (48%) and pT4 in five (11.5%) rectal cancer specimens. CUS understaged the tumor in 11 cases and overstaged it in 10 cases. Overall, the positive predictive value was 61%, negative predictive value 73%, sensitivity 61%, and specificity 73%. Lymph nodes were not visualized in 14. The overall un-weighted kappa of CUS staging of RC was 0.18 (poor). The predictive value in tumor staging of CUS is suboptimal in the learning phase, despite previous experience with TRUS.
...
PMID:Colonoscopic ultrasound is associated with a learning phenomenon despite previous rigid probe experience. 1990 59