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1/231. Intra-abdominal angiosarcomatosis after radiotherapy.

    BACKGROUND: We report a case of a 61-year-old Japanese woman who developed intra-abdominal angiosarcomatosis 20 years after receiving radiotherapy for squamous cell carcinoma of the cervix. methods AND RESULTS: The surgically resected portion of the ileum showed diffuse proliferating angiosarcoma, with irregular channels lined by atypical vascular endothelial cells. Immunohistochemical studies showed that the tumour cells were positive for factor viii-related antigen and ulex europaeus agglutinin 1. At autopsy, the tumour had disseminated to the peritoneum and invaded into the right thoracic cavity. CONCLUSIONS: These findings were compatible with radiation-induced angiosarcomatosis.
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ranking = 1
keywords = radiation-induced
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2/231. radiation-induced esophageal carcinoma 30 years after mediastinal irradiation: case report and review of the literature.

    A 54-year-old man who had been irradiated in 1964 for cervical involvement by Hodgkin's disease was admitted in December 1994 to our clinic with strong complaints of dysphagia. The reason was a moderately differentiated squamous cell carcinoma of the proximal esophagus in the previously irradiated region. The patient had no risk factors (abuse of nicotine or alcohol) for the developement of esophageal carcinoma. A reirradiation was performed, but the disease progressed locally and two weeks after the beginning of the therapy the patient developed two tracheoesophagocutaneous fistulae. The radiation therapy was discontinued and the tumor stenosis was bridged by a tube closing the fistulae. A retrospective dose analysis to evaluate the applied doses will be performed. Furthermore, an overview of 66 cases of the literature with radiation-induced esophageal carcinoma analysed concerning applied dose and latent interval will be given. In conclusion the reported case fits the criteria for radiation-induced malignancies (Chudecki Br J Radiol 1972;45:303-4) known from literature: (1) a history of previous irradiation, (2) a cancer occurring within the irradiated area, (3) gross tissue damage due to an excessive dose of radiation, and (4) a long latent interval between irradiation and development of cancer. Esophageal carcinomas belong to the rare secondary malignancies after the therapeutic use of ionizing radiation. Nevertheless in patients with dysphagia they should be suspected as a differential diagnosis even many years after mediastinal irradiation. The treatment of these tumors is very difficult and is associated with a poor prognosis.
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ranking = 2
keywords = radiation-induced
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3/231. Cytogenetic and molecular characterization of T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia as a second tumor after anaplastic large-cell lymphoma in a boy.

    We report a case of acute T-cell lymphoblastic leukemia which developed in a boy 8.5 years after successful treatment for anaplastic large-cell lymphoma. Cytogenetic and molecular characterizations of the second tumor were performed. The cytogenetic investigation revealed a complex pattern of karyotypic alterations, including double minutes, ring chromosomes, and a duplication of the p21-32 region of chromosome 1. The microsatellite dna analysis excluded rearrangement or deletion of the TAL1 gene in the tumor cells; rearrangements of the MLL gene were excluded by Southern blot analysis. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of T-cell lymphoblastic leukemia arising after treatment of CD 30 anaplastic large-cell lymphoma. The different T-cell receptor rearrangement evidenced in the two tumors indicates that this second malignancy most likely emerged de novo, but was plausibly related to the previous radiation and chemotherapy.
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ranking = 0.0004755076825733
keywords = leukemia
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4/231. meningioma after radiotherapy for Hodgkin's disease.

    The most common second primary tumors after treatment of childhood Hodgkin's disease are leukemia, lymphoma, breast cancer, soft tissue sarcoma, and thyroid cancer. Although intracranial meningioma has been reported after radiotherapy to the scalp for benign conditions and for intracranial primary brain tumors, this appears to be an extremely rare sequelae of treatment for Hodgkin's disease. The authors describe a 15-year-old boy who underwent radiotherapy for Hodgkin's disease and in whom a meningioma developed in the posterior fossa 27 years later.
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ranking = 7.9251280428884E-5
keywords = leukemia
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5/231. Cytogenetic study of eight new cases of radiation-induced solid tumors.

    radiation-induced tumors were selected according to the criteria defined by Cahan (1948) for sarcomas. Cell cultures and/or xenografts in nude mice were performed with biopsies obtained from second primary tumors. Karyotypes of eight tumors were established after R-banding. After comparison with literature data on 15 other cases, two distinct cytogenetic patterns could be distinguished. One was characterized by polyclonal karyotypes, of which a large proportion were simple and carriers of balanced translocations. Another one was characterized by monoclonal chromosome alterations observed in highly aneuploid and complex karyotypes, in which many deletions were observed. These two different patterns could be related to the modality of metaphase harvesting. Polyclonal karyotypes were preferentially observed after long-term cultures, and monoclonal karyotypes after short-term cultures or xenografts. The following scheme of radiation oncogenesis is proposed: a) induction of recessive gene mutations including that of tumor suppressor genes; b) accumulation of genomic alterations in the irradiated tissue with aging, including deletions or mutations of normal alleles from mutated tumor suppressor genes; and c) loss of tumor suppressor gene function and initiation of a multistage tumor development and progression. Polyclonal abnormalities are assumed to exist in noncancerous cells which acquired radiation-induced chromosome aberrations.
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ranking = 5
keywords = radiation-induced
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6/231. Fine structure of a radiation-induced osteogenic sarcoma.

    An osteogenic sarcoma arose in the right orbit of a 7-year-old boy some 5 years after the right orbit had been treated by four courses of radiotherapy (total dose approximately 13,000 rads) for a multicentric retinoblastoma. death occurred 6 months after the orbital tumor was first detected. Study of the orbital tumor by electron microscopy revealed a cell population of varied morphology in which two main types were identified. In one group, the cells were large with radiolucent cytoplasm, which contained long branching segments of rough endoplasmic reticulum. In the second group, the cells were smaller with irregular nuclei and an electron-dense cytoplasm, which contained short segments of dilated rough endoplasmic reticulum and numerous mitochondria. The first group of cells closely resembled osteoblasts, while the second group had some features of osteoclasts or their percursors. The branching processes of the tumor cells were separated by an amorphous ground substance, which contained collagen-like fibrils and hydroxyapatite crystals. Crystal deposition was in some instances in close relation to extracellular membrane-bound vesicles.
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ranking = 4
keywords = radiation-induced
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7/231. Transrectal ultrasound appearance of squamous cell carcinoma involving the prostate.

    PURPOSE: This report describes the transrectal ultrasound appearance of squamous cell carcinoma of the prostate. case reports: One case of squamous cell carcinoma involving the prostate by extension from a primary urethral carcinoma and a second case of radiation-induced primary prostatic squamous cell carcinoma are presented and the ultrasound findings discussed. CONCLUSIONS: In these 2 cases, squamous cell carcinomas involving the prostate exhibited similar transrectal ultrasound appearances. Both lesions demonstrated an irregular, anterior, relatively hyperechoic appearance. copyright copyright 1999 S. Karger AG, Basel
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ranking = 1
keywords = radiation-induced
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8/231. polycythemia rubra vera progressing to Ph1-positive chronic myelogenous leukemia.

    polycythemia rubra vera and chronic myelogenous leukemia are both myeloproliferative disorders and, as such, share certain clinical features. Although some myeloproliferative disorders may transform into others, conversion of polycythemia rubra vera to chronic myelogenous leukemia has been denied. We report here an elderly man with polycythemia rubra vera and a normal leukocyte alkaline phosphatase who developed chronic myelogenous leukemia with a low leukocyte alkaline phosphatase and a marrow karyotype of 45, X, Ph1-positive. In addition, we have collected evidence of two similar cases and thus conclude that, although uncommon, polycythemia rubra vera may on occasion progress to chronic myelogenous leukemia.
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ranking = 0.00063401024343107
keywords = leukemia
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9/231. Spontaneous epidural haematoma associated with radiation-induced malignant fibrous histiocytoma.

    We report a case of spontaneous epidural haemorrhage associated with metastatic radiation-induced malignant fibrous histiocytoma of the dural meninges in a patient who had been previously treated for nasopharyngeal carcinoma with radiotherapy.
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ranking = 5
keywords = radiation-induced
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10/231. Malignant melanoma occurring within a previously irradiated area.

    The commonest radiation-induced neoplasms are sarcomas. Ionizing radiation is not usually associated with the development of malignant melanoma. We report two patients with malignant melanoma occurring within a previously irradiated area. There is evidence to support radiation in the pathogenesis of melanoma but the family histories, especially in one patient, suggest that genetic mutations may also have played a role, particularly in relation to the short latent period.
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ranking = 1
keywords = radiation-induced
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