In order to determine the natural history and results of treatment of intracerebral metastases in solid-tumor patients, the records of 191 patients with an antemortem diagnosis of intracerebral metastasis made during the period from August 1974 to November 1978 were reviewed. Malignancies included lung (122 patients), breast (26), unknown primary (16), melanoma (8), colorectal (6), hypernephroma (4), and others (12). Favorable prognostic factors included solitary brain metastasis (P less than 0.001), ambulatory performance status (P less than 0.001), symptoms of headache (P less than 0.001), or visual disturbances (P less than 0.02), and estrogen receptor positivity in breast cancer patients (P = 0.055). Poor prognostic factors included advanced age (P less than 0.04) and evidence of impaired consciousness, i.e., disorientation, lethargy, stupor, or coma (P less than 0.007). Median survival time after diagnosis of intracerebral metastasis was 3.7 months for the entire series. In those patients with a single intracerebral metastasis and minimal tumor burden, the type of treatment used had a significant impact on survival. Those cases treated with surgery and radiation had a median survival time of 9.7 months versus 3.7 months for those treated with radiation alone (P less than 0.02). When using a proportional hazard regression analysis to adjust for the three most important prognostic factors, treatment (surgery and radiation versus radiation alone) still appeared to be important. Intracerebral metastases were the immediate or contributing cause of death in 50% of the patients in this series. Patients at greater risk of dying of intracerebral metastases included those in whom the brain was the first site of distant metastasis, those with an intracerebral metastasis from an unknown primary site, and those whose presentation of malignancy was with symptoms of a brain metastasis. Although the therapeutic goal in intracerebral metastases is generally palliative, it appears that there are categories of cases that may benefit from more aggressive treatment.
Pancreatic islet transplantation is a promising treatment option for patients severely affected with type 1 diabetes. This report from CITR presents pre- and post-transplant human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class I sensitization rates in islet alone transplantation. Data came from 303 recipients transplanted with islet alone between January 1999 and December 2008. HLA class I sensitization was determined by the presence of anti-HLA class I antibodies. Panel-reactive antibodies (PRA) from prior to islet infusion and at 6 months, and yearly post-transplant was correlated to measures of islet graft failure. The cumulative number of mismatched HLA alleles increased with each additional islet infusion from a median of 3 for one infusion to 9 for three infusions. Pre-transplant PRA was not predictive of islet graft failure. However, development of PRA ≥20% post-transplant was associated with 3.6 fold (p=.001) increased hazard ratio for graft failure. Patients with complete graft loss who had discontinued immunosuppression had significantly higher rate of PRA ≥ 20% compared to those with functioning grafts who remained on immunosuppression. Exposure to repeat HLA class I mismatch at second or third islet infusions resulted in less frequent development of de novo HLA class I antibodies when compared to increased class I mismatch. The development of HLA class I antibodies while on immunosuppression is associated with subsequent islet graft failure. The risk of sensitization may be reduced by minimizing the number of islet donors used per recipient, and in the absence of donor-specific anti-HLA antibodies, repeating HLA class I mismatches with subsequent islet infusions.
Sixty-two patients with metastatic colorectal carcinoma involving the liver were treated by hepatic intra-arterial chemotherapy using an implantable infusion pump. The 53 patients with metastases confined to the liver had a median survival (MS) of 17 months and an objective response rate of 32%. Four patients (8%) demonstrated a complete response (CR), with normal abdominal computed tomography (CT) scan results and plasma carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) levels, and 13 patients (25%) demonstrated a partial response (PR), with at least a 50% decrease in the liver lesions by CT scan and at least a 50% decrease in CEA levels. Thirty patients (57%) had stable disease (S), and six patients (11%) had no response (NR). Nine patients with extrahepatic tumor plus hepatic metastases had an MS of only 4.9 months. None of these patients had an objective response, and only four patients had S. Quality of response was clearly associated with longevity. Forty patients treated with floxuridine (FUDR) and mitomycin (M) (F + M) showed a 20% objective response rate, while the 13 patients treated with FUDR and dichloromethotrexate (DCMTX) (F + D) attained a 69% objective response rate. Although F + D treatment appears to be superior, there may have been selection biases that make such an observation only preliminary. Twenty-six (49%) of the 53 patients developed hepatitis during infusion chemotherapy, which resolved after temporary cessation of the chemotherapy. Of the 17 patients with CR or PR, 12 patients (71%) had hepatitis, whereas only 14 (39%) of the 36 patients with S or NR had hepatitis. Eleven patients had evidence of peptic ulceration by endoscopic examination during the infusion chemotherapy. All the ulcers healed after chemotherapy was discontinued.
Among various forms of glomerulonephritis, focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS) is the most common cause of end-stage renal disease leading to transplantation in children. Previous reports of the recurrence of FSGS vary widely. The North American Pediatric Renal Transplant Cooperative Study carried out a special study to determine the rate of recurrence and risk factors leading to recurrence in 132 transplants. Fifty-five percent of the patients were white children, and the remaining were black and Hispanic children. Fifty percent of the patients were under 5 yr of age at the time of the diagnosis of FSGS. Twenty-seven (20.5%) of 132 patients (95% confidence interval, 14 to 27) had a biopsy-proven recurrence of FSGS. The median time to recurrence was 14 days. The recurrence rate was similar in white children (23%) when compared with that in Hispanic children (20%) but was lower than that in black children (9%) (3 of 32 children).2+ (20%). The mean serum albumin level of patients with recurrence was 1.7 versus 2.0 g/dL for those without recurrence. The mean serum cholesterol level of patients with recurrence was 525 versus 476 mg/dL for those without recurrence. The duration of dialysis was similar in the two groups. The mean time from diagnosis to end-stage renal disease status was 33 months for patients with recurrence and 52 months for those without recurrence (P less than 0.05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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