To ascertain the risk of lymph node metastasis (LNM) from early rectal cancer, the authors retrospectively analyzed 154 patients with pT1 or pT2 rectal cancer treated by radical resection. Gross and microscopic pathologic characteristics of the primary tumor were examined as predictors of LNM. Comparisons were done by Fisher's test; significance was defined as a P value of less than 0.05. The incidence of LNM for T1 and T2 tumors was 3 of 26 (12%) and 28 of 128 (22%), respectively. LNM occurred significantly less often in well‐differentiated cancers (0 of 12, 0%). The incidence of LNM for T1/T2 tumors without lymphatic vessel invasion (LVI) or blood vessel invasion (BVI) (20 of 119, 17%) was significantly less than that for T1/T2 tumors with LVI or BVI (10 of 32,31%). None of the T1 tumors without LVI or BVI had LNM. There was a trend toward decreased LNM for sessile nonulcerated tumors compared with nonpolypoid, exophytic, or ulcerated lesions (P = 0.06). Tumor size and colloid histologic characteristics were not significant predictive features for LNM. The data suggest that local excision alone is adequate for well‐differentiated or moderately differentiated T1 rectal cancer in the absence of LVI or BVI and for well‐differentiated T2 tumors. Radical resection or local excision combined with pelvic radiation therapy may be more appropriate for the remainder of early cancers.
Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is one of the most lethal cancers in the United States with a five-year survival rate of 7.2% for all stages. Although surgical resection is the only curative treatment, currently we are unable to differentiate between resectable patients with occult metastatic disease from those with potentially curable disease. Identification of patients with poor prognosis via early classification would help in initial management including the use of neoadjuvant chemotherapy or radiation, or in the choice of postoperative adjuvant therapy. PDAC ranges in appearance from homogeneously isoattenuating masses to heterogeneously hypovascular tumors on CT images; hence, we hypothesize that heterogeneity reflects underlying differences at the histologic or genetic level and will therefore correlate with patient outcome. We quantify heterogeneity of PDAC with texture analysis to predict 2-year survival. Using fuzzy minimum-redundancy maximum-relevance feature selection and a naive Bayes classifier, the proposed features achieve an area under receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) of 0.90 and accuracy (Ac) of 82.86% with the leave-one-image-out technique and an AUC of 0.80 and Ac of 75.0% with three-fold cross-validation. We conclude that texture analysis can be used to quantify heterogeneity in CT images to accurately predict 2-year survival in patients with pancreatic cancer. From these data, we infer differences in the biological evolution of pancreatic cancer subtypes measurable in imaging and identify opportunities for optimized patient selection for therapy.
A case of multicentric secretory breast carcinoma in a 39-year-old white female is described. Mammograms, DNA analysis, touch preparation cytology, and positive estrogen receptors are reported for the first time in this rare favorable mammary carcinoma. A review of the 33 reported cases with follow-up in adult females, including the present case, has revealed lymph node metastases in nine (27%), recurrence in four (12%), and distant metastases leading to death in two cases (6%). In patients treated with less than simple mastectomy there has been local recurrence in 4 (33%) of 12 cases and in three of the four cases (75%) greater than or equal to 2.0 cm. Increased size and lack of gross circumscription of the neoplasm and presentation in the adult age group appear to identify cases with an increased risk of disease progression. In patients over 20 years old, especially with neoplasms greater than 2 cm in diameter, modified radical mastectomy has to date achieved the most favorable outcome. Minimal experience (two cases) is available regarding treatment with limited surgery and radiation therapy, and there is no available data regarding possible benefit from adjuvant chemotherapy.
The most effective reinduction regimen for acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients who do not achieve complete remission (CR) after one cycle of cytarabine combined with an anthracycline is not well established. In an effort to search for new synergistic and non-cross resistant antileukemic regimens different chemotherapeutic combinations have been investigated in refractory AML patients. Multiple regimens including high dose cytarabine, anthracyclines, fludarabine and etoposide have been used with CR rates up to 40%. Mitoxantrone and etoposide have activity in AML as induction agents but their role in reinduction in patients not responding to first line therapy has not been fully established. In the current retrospective study we evaluated the efficacy and toxicity of mitoxantrone and etoposide in AML patients treated at our institution who did not respond to first induction therapy with cytarabine and an anthracycline. A total of fifty seven AML patients were treated with mitoxantrone and etoposide (mean age 55 years, range 18–75 years). Twenty four patients were treated with mitoxantrone 10 mg/m2/d and etoposide 100 mg/m2/d both administered intravenously, days 1 to 5 (regimen 5+5) and thirty three patients were treated with mitoxantrone 10 mg/m2/d administered intravenously days 1 to 3 and etoposide 100 mg/m2/d administered intravenously, days 1 to 5 (regimen 3+5). Twenty six of fifty seven patients (46%) achieved CR. CR was achieved in 38% of patients (9/24) treated with the 5+5 regimen and 52% of patients (17/33) treated with the 3+5 regimen. Mean blast percentage before treatment with mitoxantrone and etoposide was 25% in patients who achieved CR vs 40% in patients who did not achieve CR (p < 0.03). Grade 3/4 hepatic toxicities were seen in 5% (3/57) of patients and there were no grade 3 or 4 renal toxicities. The median duration of neutropenia in patients achieving CR was 29 days after reinduction. 10% (6/57) of the patients died from infectious complications. Cytogenetic analyses were performed prior to first-line therapy in all patients. Patients with favorable cytogenetics treated with etoposide and mitoxantorne had 100% CR (3/3), patients with standard cytogenetics had 58% CR (19/33) and patients with unfavorable cytogenetics had 19% CR (4/21). Overall CR was achieved in 61% (22/36) of patients with favorable and standard cytogenetics. Our data suggest that the combination of etoposide and mitoxantorne is an active and well tolerated regimen, especially in patients with favorable and standard cytogenetics, and warrants further studies in prospective trials.
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