Cancer
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Between 1957 and 1980, 54 children less than 20 years of age with a diagnosis of glioblastoma multiforme or malignant astrocytoma were treated. All patients had a minimum follow-up period of 5 years. Twenty-seven patients had glioblastoma multiforme and 27 had malignant astrocytoma. ⋯ Only one patient developed a late neurologic deficit attributable to therapy. The patient had hearing loss after two courses of 50 Gy each to a temporal lobe tumor. However, six of the 11 patients who survived for 5 years or longer had intellectual, emotional, or endocrine dysfunction.
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Adenoid cystic carcinomas (ACC) of the salivary glands are aggressive tumors characterized by multiple late local recurrences and distant metastases. Current therapy includes wide local excision and high-dose postoperative radiation therapy (XRT) (5400 to 7000 cGy). Despite early aggressive treatment, local recurrence remains a major problem with limited safe and effective therapeutic options available. ⋯ Two patients remain alive and free of local disease at 42 and 63 months of follow-up. Two patients died--one with metastases (with persistent local control) and one with a local recurrence at 9 and 30 months, respectively, after XRT and HT. This is the first report of HT and low-dose XRT in the management of previously irradiated ACC and suggests a potential role for the use of this modality in the treatment of ACC.
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Between March 1983 and June 1986 127 patients with localized osteosarcoma of the extremity were treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Preoperative chemotherapy consisted of two cycles of methotrexate (MTX) (high or moderate doses) followed by 6 days by cisplatin (CDP). Surgery was an amputation or a rotation plasty, or a limb salvage. ⋯ According to the doses of MTX, survival at 5 years was 58% for patients who received high doses and 42% for patients treated with moderate doses. No differences in the rate of survivors were observed between amputated patients and patients treated with limb salvage. The authors conclude that (1) a limb salvage procedure is possible in about 70% of cases and as safe as demolitive surgery, if adequate surgical margins are achieved; (2) good responders have a better prognosis than fair and poor responders if postoperative chemotherapy is sufficiently prolonged and also includes ADM; (3) a different postoperative chemotherapy for poor responders did not improve their prognosis; and (4) a multidrug regimen using high doses of MTX is probably more effective than moderate doses.