A retrospective review of the records of the Division of Neuropathology at the New York University Medical Center between 1977 and 1988 revealed 53 cases of adult supratentorial astrocytomas. Fifty were fibrillary, and three were gemistocytic. Two additional patients had pilocytic tumors and were not included in the study. The majority of patients had either a subtotal (64%) or gross total resection (19%). Biopsy (17%) was performed for deep-seated lesions and for those lesions confined to eloquent cortex. Forty-eight patients (91%) received postoperative radiation therapy. The median survival was 7 1/4 years with a 5-year survival of 64%. Multivariate regression analysis demonstrated that the most important prognosticators for improved survival were young age, absence of contrast enhancement of the original tumor on computed tomography (CT) and the performance status of the patient. Patients with hemispheric tumors died from dedifferentiation into an anaplastic astrocytoma or a glioblastoma multiforme, with a median time to recurrence of 4.5 years from the original surgery. Survival from the time of recurrence was 12 months. Subsequent operations confirmed progression towards malignancy in six of seven (86%) recurrent tumors. CT contrast enhancement of the original tumor was associated with a 6.8-fold increase in risk for later recurrence. Patients with thalamic tumors (six patients) had a poor prognosis with a median survival of less than 2 years. A review of their CT scans suggest that four died of progressive low-grade disease; however, confirmatory autopsy data were available for only one patient. This study supports others that have shown improved survival for adult patients with astrocytomas treated in the CT era.
Distinguishing cutaneous signs which are associated with hereditary cancer-prone syndromes are known as cancer-associated genodermatoses. Muir-Torre syndrome (M-T) is characterized by the occurrence of sebaceous hyperplasia, adenoma and carcinoma, basal cell carcinoma with sebaceous differentiation, and/or keratoacanthoma in association with visceral cancer (often multiple), and improved survival. Family studies of M-T have been either wholly lacking or too incomplete to elucidate hereditary aetiology. We describe the cutaneous phenotype of M-T in an extended kindred with a possible variant of the Cancer Family Syndrome. We emphasize the need for more thorough documentation of family histories and cancer association in this cancer-associated genodermatosis in order to clarify hereditary syndrome identification, and to improve cancer control through employment of cutaneous signs as a beacon for highly targeted forms of visceral cancer.
A retrospective review of the records of the Division of Neuropathology at the New York University Medical Center between 1977 and 1988 revealed 53 cases of adult supratentorial astrocytomas. Fifty were fibrillary, and three were gemistocytic. Two additional patients had pilocytic tumors and were not included in the study. The majority of patients had either a subtotal (64%) or gross total resection (19%). Biopsy (17%) was performed for deep-seated lesions and for those lesions confined to eloquent cortex. Forty-eight patients (91%) received postoperative radiation therapy. The median survival was 7 1/4 years with a 5-year survival of 64%. Multivariate regression analysis demonstrated that the most important prognosticators for improved survival were young age, absence of contrast enhancement of the original tumor on computed tomography (CT) and the performance status of the patient. Patients with hemispheric tumors died from dedifferentiation into an anaplastic astrocytoma or a glioblastoma multiforme, with a median time to recurrence of 4.5 years from the original surgery. Survival from the time of recurrence was 12 months. Subsequent operations confirmed progression towards malignancy in six of seven (86%) recurrent tumors. CT contrast enhancement of the original tumor was associated with a 6.8-fold increase in risk for later recurrence. Patients with thalamic tumors (six patients) had a poor prognosis with a median survival of less than 2 years. A review of their CT scans suggest that four died of progressive low-grade disease; however, confirmatory autopsy data were available for only one patient. This study supports others that have shown improved survival for adult patients with astrocytomas treated in the CT era.
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