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1/112. Spontaneous partial fibrotic regression of a primary renal carcinoma: a case report.

    Spontaneous regression of non metastatic renal carcinoma is a very unusual finding in daily urologic practice. Furthermore this is the first case of a partial primary renal cancer remission documented by hystopathological specimens. Current hypothesis were discussed.
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ranking = 1
keywords = carcinoma
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2/112. Spontaneous regression of hepatocellular carcinoma.

    A 62-year-old Japanese man with hepatitis b virus-related liver cirrhosis revealed alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) elevation. Dynamic computed tomography, taken at this time, showed a liver tumor in the anterior segment. As the patient refused any further medical treatment, he was observed in an outpatient clinic. The size of the tumor reduced and the serum level of AFP decreased gradually without any treatment. Twelve months after the initial diagnosis, the tumor could not be detected by computed tomography (CT) scan, and the level of AFP had declined to the normal range. blood supply is essential for tumor growth and an arterioportal shunt near the tumor may change the dynamics of blood flow to the tumor. The shunt found in this patient was thought to be one of the causative factors leading to regression, but it could not be denied that immunological mechanisms may have played an important role in the spontaneous regression of hepatocellular carcinoma.
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ranking = 1
keywords = carcinoma
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3/112. Spontaneous regression of a large hepatocellular carcinoma with portal vein tumor thrombi: report of a case.

    A 65-year-old man with chronic hepatitis c showed a markedly elevated serum alpha-fetoprotein concentration. Computed tomography revealed a huge tumor occupying the entire right hepatic lobe. Three months later, the tumor regressed spontaneously from 12 cm to 7 cm in diameter without any medical treatment. A right hepatic lobectomy was performed 4 months after the initial diagnosis. The main tumor, located in the posterior inferior segment, was completely necrotic, and had a thick fibrous capsule. Many inflammatory cells had also infiltrated into the tumor. Only a small portion of a tumor thrombus in the portal vein and one of three intrahepatic metastases contained viable cancer cells. The tumor was found to be poorly differentiated hepatocellular carcinoma. Tumor regression may have been caused by a disturbance in hepatic circulation associated with the portal vein thrombus.
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ranking = 1
keywords = carcinoma
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4/112. Regressing Merkel cell carcinoma-a case showing replacement of tumour cells by foamy cells.

    Merkel cell carcinoma (MCC) is a malignant neuroendocrine tumour with a high rate of recurrence and metastasis. However, some cases of spontaneous regression have recently been reported. We describe the clinical course of an 80-year-old Japanese woman with regressing MCC. We also report histological findings of the regressing tumour for the first time. After the patient's first visit to our hospital, the lesion was a rapidly progressive tumour, but suddenly began decreasing in size, and rapidly regressed. The surface of the tumour flattened, the colour changed from red to dark red, and finally the lesion appeared as a small yellowish plaque. Histopathological analysis of the completely regressed tumour revealed that the tumour cells were completely replaced by numerous foamy cells. This is the first report demonstrating the histopathological features of regressing MCC.
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ranking = 1
keywords = carcinoma
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5/112. Recurrent hepatocellular carcinoma after spontaneous regression.

    The prognosis of untreated hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is usually grave, although there have been a few case reports of spontaneous regression. Tumor recurrence after spontaneous regression has been rarely reported, and there have been no previous reports of recurrent hepatocellular carcinoma after spontaneous regression. Two cases of hepatocellular carcinoma that spontaneously regressed and subsequently recurred are presented. The patients' tumors spontaneously regressed, as reflected by the radiologically evidenced reduction in tumor size and markedly decreased alpha-fetoprotein levels. Subsequent tumor recurrences after regression were evidenced by radiologic findings of newly growing nodules and appreciably increased alpha-fetoprotein levels. To the authors' knowledge, these two patients represent the first reported cases of hepatocellular carcinoma recurrence after spontaneous regression. In both of these patients, new hepatocellular carcinomas recurred at different sites before the spontaneous regression of the original HCCs was complete. Although the precise causes of the regression and the subsequent recurrence remain to be further investigated, this phenomenon suggests that multicentric hepatocarcinogenicity and intratumoral events in each hepatocellular carcinoma nodule may be involved.
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ranking = 2
keywords = carcinoma
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6/112. Complete spontaneous regression of Merkel cell carcinoma: a review of the 10 reported cases.

    BACKGROUND: Merkel cell (neuroendocrine) carcinoma (MCC) is a very aggressive primary cutaneous neoplasm occurring most often on the head and neck of the elderly. Complete spontaneous regression (CSR) of MCC was first described in 1986. Since then other cases have been reported bringing the total to 10. OBJECTIVE: To review these 10 cases and obtain long-term follow-up data, to compare them for similarities and differences. METHOD: Each original case report was extensively reviewed and authors contacted in most cases for confirmation and updated information. RESULTS: In no case did MCC recur after CSR was noted, although follow-up information in some cases was short. When CSR occurred, it was swift and dramatic with complete regression of skin and lymph node metastasis in 1-3 months. CONCLUSION: While only 10 cases of CSR is a small number, MCC is itself a rare malignancy with just over 600 reported cases. Today most cases of MCC receive aggressive combined therapy effectively precluding diagnosis of CSR. The nature of regression in these 10 cases may point toward future immunologic therapy just as similar cases of CRS in patients with melanoma have led to advances in the immunologic treatment for that malignancy.
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ranking = 1
keywords = carcinoma
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7/112. Regression of cutaneous neoplasms following delayed-type hypersensitivity challenge reactions to microbial antigens or lymphokines.

    Induction of delayed-type hypersensitivity challenge reactions to microbial antigens at sites of neoplasms involving the skin resulted in regression of mycosis fungoides, reticulum cell sarcoma, superficial basal cell carcinoma and adenocarcinoma of the breast. Similar reactions induced by lymphokine preparations also resulted in regression of lesions of mycosis fungoides and superficial basal cell carcinoma. The role of the large monomuclear cells in the inflammatory infiltrate of the delayed hypersensitivity reaction in eliciting the tumor regression is discussed. It is proposed that these large mononuclear cells represent the effectors in a primitive surveillance mechanism for neoplastic cells.
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ranking = 0.6
keywords = carcinoma
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8/112. Spontaneous regression of hepatocellular carcinoma--a case report.

    Spontaneous regression of cancer is a rare phenomenon seldom described in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma. A 54-year-old Korean woman suffered from cytologically-proved advanced hepatocellular carcinoma, for which she received no treatment. Papanicolaou's smears revealed high cellularity. Many clusters of polygonal cells showed long, thick anastomosing cords covered by flattened endothelial cells. The polygonal cells showed small hepatocytoid appearance, characterized by increased nuclear/cytoplasmic ratio. She remained in good clinical condition and, at 4 years of follow-up, the hepatocellular carcinoma could not be visualized radiologically. To date, only 14 case reports of apparently spontaneous regression of hepatocellular carcinoma have been published in the English literature. The mechanisms underlying this intriguing phenomenon remain unknown.
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ranking = 1.6
keywords = carcinoma
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9/112. Spontaneous regression of a solitary cerebral metastases in renal carcinoma followed by meningioma development under medroxyprogesterone acetate therapy.

    A case of regression of a probable cerebral metastasis of a hypernephroma after nephrectomy and hormone therapy is presented. The patient subsequently developed a meningioma after therapy with medroxyprogesterone acetate. A relationship between meningioma growth and sex hormones has been documented, but little is known about the effect of hormone therapies on tumour growth.
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ranking = 0.8
keywords = carcinoma
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10/112. Regression of gastric T cell lymphoma with eradication of helicobacter pylori.

    helicobacter pylori is thought to be important in the pathogenesis of chronic active gastritis, peptic ulceration, gastric adenocarcinoma, and gastric B cell lymphoma of mucosa associated lymphoid tissue. The mechanism of evolution from chronic gastritis to monoclonal B cell proliferation is not known but is thought to be dependent on antigen specific T cells to H pylori and its products. Here, we report a case of gastric T cell lymphoma associated with chronic H pylori gastritis which regressed with eradication of the organism. This is the first report of a gastric T cell lymphoma regressing with H pylori eradication, and suggests a causal link between primary gastric T cell lymphoma and this organism.
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ranking = 0.2
keywords = carcinoma
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