Metastases in carcinoma.Analysis of 1000 autopsied casesNE of the most striking and disheartening qualities of cancer is the relentlessness of its spread throughout the organism. At the Montefiore Hospital for Chronic Diseases, the observation was made that widespread metastases were present in a higher percentage of the cases that reached the autopsy table than the literature would lead one to believe. Such organs as spleen, ureter, heart-usually considered rare sites of secondary carcinomaappeared to have been involved not uncommonly. Because there have been few recent comprehensive studies of the metastases of carcinoma, it was thought that a study of the metastases of one-thousand consecutive autopsied cases of carcinoma would be of value.
cis-Dichlorodiammineplatinum(II)-based chemotherapy as initial treatment of advanced head and neck cancer.During the past 2--3 years, a total of 73 patients with advanced head and neck cancer (mostly stage IV) were treated with cis-dichlorodiammineplatinum(II) (cis-platinum) as initial therapy, either alone or in combination with other agents. After chemotherapy, the patients received surgery and/or radiation therapy in standard fashion. Major degrees of tumor regression were seen in 40%--71% of the patients. cis-Platinum and bleomycin given by infusion gave the highest response rate (71%). The addition of high-dose methotrexate to cis-platinum plus bleomycin produced an unacceptable level of toxicity. Similarly, a four-drug regimen in which low-dose methotrexate and vinblastine were added to cis-platinum and bleomycin resulted in increased toxicity without additional therapeutic effect. Initial chemotherapy does not compromise subsequent surgery or increase either the immediate complications of surgery or the acute toxicity of radiation therapy. It seems unlikely that initial chemotherapy has altered the grim prognosis of an advanced, inoperable presentation. The effect of initial chemotherapy on advanced, operable disease will have to be assessed by suitable controlled trials.
Organ-function preservation in advanced oropharynx cancer: results with induction chemotherapy and radiation.David G. Pfister, L.B. Harrison, Elliót W. Strong et al.|Journal of Clinical Oncology|1995 PURPOSE: To evaluate the feasibility and efficacy of a strategy using induction chemotherapy followed by radiation therapy (RT) as a means of organ-function preservation in patients with advanced oropharynx cancer. PATIENTS AND METHODS: From January 1983 to December 1990, 33 patients with advanced squamous cell oropharynx cancer whose appropriate surgical management would have required a tongue procedure and potential total laryngectomy were treated with one to three cycles of cisplatin (CDDP)-based induction chemotherapy. Patients with a complete response (CR) or partial response (PR) at the primary site then received definitive external-beam RT with or without interstitial implant with or without neck dissection with surgery to the primary tumor site reserved for disease persistence or relapse; patients with less than a PR after chemotherapy had appropriate surgery and postoperative RT recommended. RESULTS: With a median follow-up period of 6.2 years, actuarial overall and failure-free survival rates at 5 years are 41% and 42%, respectively. Chemotherapy toxicity contributed to the death of two patients and was possibly a factor in two others. Local control was achieved in 14 patients (42%) without any surgery to the larynx or tongue. Among 13 patients currently alive, all had a preserved larynx and only one required tongue surgery; 12 of 13 have speech subjectively described as always understandable; and nine of 13 have no significant restrictions in their diet. CONCLUSION: This treatment program is feasible and effective in patients with advanced oropharynx cancer and produces an excellent functional outcome in most long-term survivors. Modifications to optimize patient selection, minimize toxicity, and improve local control are indicated. The relative toxicity, efficacy, and functional outcome provided by this and other chemotherapy and RT programs versus either standard surgery and/or RT options can only be addressed in a randomized comparison of these therapies.
Procedure for Study of Reality Testing in SchizophrenicsPerky's (1910) method of studying perception and imagery was adapted to study reality testing in schizophrenia. 10 schizophrenic and 10 non-schizophrenic Ss were seen in 2 identical sessions during which they were asked to differentiate between sounds they imagined and sounds they heard through earphones. The schizophrenic Ss, although reporting fewer images, manifested more perceptual distortions and more misperceptions of actual sounds as images. The procedure described seems to hold promise as both a research tool and a diagnostic technique for assessing reality testing in the laboratory.
Combination chemotherapy and radical radiation in stage IV epidermoid cancers of the head and neckAlvaro Vallejo, Beryl McC. Chabora, B. Wittes et al.|International Journal of Radiation Oncology*Biology*Physics|1977