Merkel cell carcinoma (MCC) is a rare malignant cutaneous tumor of the elderly with rapidly growing skin nodules found predominantly on sun-exposed areas of the body. The vast majority of patients present with localized disease, while up to 30% have regional lymph node metastases. Despite local excision and the incidence of local recurrence, regional lymph node metastases and distant metastases is high and usually occurs within 2 years of primary diagnosis. The optimal treatment for patients with MCC remains unclear. The best outcome is achieved with multidisciplinary management including surgical excision of primary tumor with adequate margins and post-operative radiotherapy (RT) to control local and regional disease. Patients with regional nodal metastases should be treated with lymph node dissection plus RT. Adjuvant chemotherapy (CT) should be considered as part of the initial management. In case of metastatic disease CT based on regimens used for small-cell lung cancer is the standard treatment of care.
Key Words. Brain metastases • Surgery • Stereotactic radiosurgery • Whole-brain radiotherapy • Chemotherapy
Learning ObjectivesAfter completing this course, the reader will be able to:1. Select the appropriate treatment strategies for ovarian cancer patients with solitary brain metastases and extracranial disease.2. Describe the most important prognostic factors for ovarian cancer patients with brain metastases.3. List the diagnostic steps needed to establish the diagnosis of brain metastases in ovarian cancer patients.
The administration of irinotecan with docetaxel in platinum-refractory NSCLC prolonged TTP, but did not improve significantly RR, median survival or 1-year survival. Second-line docetaxel monotherapy offers significant and reproducible efficacy in platinum-refractory NSCLC.
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