We reviewed the clinical features, essential laboratory data, pituitary imaging findings (computerized tomography and magnetic resonance imaging), management, and outcome of 353 consecutive patients with the presumptive diagnosis of pituitary tumor investigated from January 1984 through December 1997 at University Hospital, Lausanne, Switzerland. In 18 cases primary empty sella turcica was diagnosed, and in 13 cases of pseudacromegaly there were no endocrine abnormalities. The remaining 322 patients disclosed abnormal pituitary masses, including 275 pituitary adenomas, 18 craniopharyngiomas, 6 cases of primary pituitary hyperplasia, 6 intrasellar meningiomas, 6 cases of distant metastases, 4 intrasellar cysts, 2 chordomas, 1 primary lymphoma, and 1 astrocytoma. Biologic data and immunohistochemical analysis of the excised tissues demonstrated that prolactinomas and nonsecreting adenomas (NSAs) were the most frequent pituitary tumors (40% and 39%, respectively), followed by somatotropic adenomas with acromegaly (11%) and Cushing disease (6%). In contrast with the vast majority of NSAs, which significantly expressed glycoprotein hormones in tissue without secreting them, there was a small group of glycoprotein hormone-secreting adenomas (2%), which had a more severe clinical course after surgery. Thirty-eight pituitary masses were incidentally discovered, most of them NSAs. The expansion of pituitary adenomas into the right cavernous sinus was twice as frequent as to the left cavernous sinus. For the differential diagnosis of hyperprolactinemia, basal prolactin (PRL) levels above 85 micrograms/L, in the absence of renal failure and PRL-enhancing drugs, and a PRL increment of less than 30% after thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) accurately ruled out functional hyperprolactinemia due to NSA, and were typical of prolactinomas. For screening and follow-up of acromegaly, basal growth hormone (GH) and insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1) levels, as well as the paradoxical GH response to TRH (present in 2/3 acromegalic patients), could be used as convenient tools, but the most accurate test for diagnosis and prediction of outcome after therapy was GH (lack of) suppression during oral glucose tolerance test. In Cushing disease, single evening plasma cortisol was as good as the overnight dexamethasone suppression test for screening, and a combined dexamethasoneovine corticotropin-releasing hormone (oCRH) test was as accurate as the long dexamethasone suppression test to confirm the diagnosis. Bilateral inferior petrosal sinus catheterization coupled with oCRH test confirmed the pituitary origin of excess adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) in all patients, including those with normal pituitary on magnetic resonance imaging (50% of the cases). However, this procedure failed to predict tumor localization correctly within the pituitary in 21% of patients. Pituitary cysts, meningiomas, and craniopharyngiomas with an intrasellar component were correctly diagnosed based on pituitary imaging in 75%, 67%, and 44% of cases, respect...
Second cancer risk assessment for radiotherapy is controversial due to the large uncertainties of the dose-response relationship. This could be improved by a better assessment of the peripheral doses to healthy organs in future epidemiological studies. In this framework, we developed a simple Monte Carlo (MC) model of the Siemens Primus 6 MV linac for both open and wedged fields that we then validated with dose profiles measured in a water tank up to 30 cm from the central axis. The differences between the measured and calculated doses were comparable to other more complex MC models and never exceeded 50%. We then compared our simple MC model with the peripheral dose profiles of five different linacs with different collimation systems. We found that the peripheral dose between two linacs could differ up to a factor of 9 for small fields (5 × 5 cm2) and up to a factor of 10 for wedged fields. Considering that an uncertainty of 50% in dose estimation could be acceptable in the context of risk assessment, the MC model can be used as a generic model for large open fields (≥10 × 10 cm2) only. The uncertainties in peripheral doses should be considered in future epidemiological studies when designing the width of the dose bins to stratify the risk as a function of the dose.
To assess the prognostic factors and the outcome in patients with squamous-cell carcinoma of the penis, a retrospective review of 41 consecutive patients with non-metastatic invasive carcinoma of the penis, treated between 1962 and 1994, was performed. The median age was 59 years (range: 35±76 years). According to the International Union Against Cancer (UICC) 1997 classi®cation, there were 12 (29%) T1, 24 (59%) T2, 4 (10%) T3 and 1 TX (2%) tumours. The N-classi®cation was distributed as follows: 29 (71%) patients with N0, 8 (20%) with N1, 3 (7%) with N2 and 1 (2%) with N3. Forty-four per cent (n=18) of the patients underwent surgery: partial penectomy with (n=4) or without (n=12) lymph node dissection, or total penectomy with (n=1) or without (n=1) lymph node dissection. 23 patients were treated with radiation therapy alone, and all but 4 of the patients who were operated upon received postoperative radiation therapy (n=14). The median follow-up period was 70 months (range 20±331 months). In a median period of 12 months (range 5±139 months), 63% (n=26) of the patients relapsed (local in 18, locoregional in 2, regional in 3 and distant in 3). Local failure (stump in the operated patients, and the tumour bed in those treated with primary radiation therapy) was observed in 4 out of 16 (25%) patients treated with partial penectomy AEpostoperative radiotherapy versus 14 out of 23 (61%) treated with primary radiotherapy (P=0.06). 15 (83%) out of 18 local failures were successfully salvaged with surgery. In all patients, 5-and 10-year survival rates were 57% (95% con®dence interval (CI), 41±73%) and 38% (95% CI, 21± 55%), respectively. The 5-year local and locoregional rates were 57% (95% CI, 41±73%) and 48% (95% CI, 32±64%), respectively. In patients treated with primary radiotherapy, 5-and 10-year probabilities of surviving with penis preservation were 36% (95% CI, 22±50%) and 18% (95% CI, 2±34%), respectively. In multivariate analyses, survival was signi®cantly in¯uenced by the N-classi®-cation, and surgery was the only independent factor predicting the locoregional control. We conclude that, in patients with squamous-cell carcinoma of the penis, local control is better in patients treated with surgery. However, there seems to be no di erence in terms of survival between patients treated by surgery and those treated by primary radiotherapy AEsalvage surgery, with 39% having organ preservation. #
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