1.Clinicophathologic characteristics and treatment of small cell carcinoma of uterine cervix.
Aijun YU ; Ping ZHANG ; Hongkun LOU
Chinese Journal of Oncology 2002;24(4):400-403
OBJECTIVETo study the clinicopathologic characteristics, prognostic factors, response to chemotherapy, chemotherapy-caused disease-free interval and overall survival of small cell carcinoma of uterine cervix (SCCUC).
METHODSTwelve patients with SCCUC were treated from 1995 to 1999, with their clinic ophathologic data retrospectively analyzed. Their stages were I b(1) 2, I b(2) 4, II a 3, II b 1, III b 1 and IV b1. All 12 samples were assessed through immunohistochemical methods including epithelial cell markers and neuroendocrine cell markers, showing positive results in all. Nine early stage patients underwent radical hysterectomy with pelvic lymphadenectomy. Five of these 9 patients had received neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NCH) once or twice before operation, three patients received adjuvant chemotherapy (ACH) once to six times after operation. Three patients with advanced lesions received concurrent chemotherapy twice to four times.
RESULTS44.4% (4/9) of patients treated by pelvic lymphadenectomy showed positive lymph node metastasis. The average disease free intervals of patients who showed positive or negative pelvic lymph node were 16.1 and 25.7 months, overall survival of 19 and 32 months. The success rate of surgery in the NCH group was 100%, 60% of whom showed chemotherapy response pathologically. They showed overall response rates of 80% (4/5), 20% CR (1/5) and 60% PR (3/5).
CONCLUSIONPoor prognosis of small cell carcinoma of uterine cervix, even the early lesions, is due to its high incidence of pelvic lymph metastasis. The risk factor of this lesion is high sensitivity to chemotherapy, but chemotherapeutic long-term survival should be studied further with more allotted material.
Adult ; Carcinoma, Small Cell ; drug therapy ; pathology ; surgery ; Female ; Humans ; Middle Aged ; Neoplasm Staging ; Treatment Outcome ; Uterine Cervical Neoplasms ; drug therapy ; pathology ; surgery
2.Gene expression profile differences in high and low metastatic human ovarian cancer cell lines by gene chip.
Shenhua XU ; Hanzhou MOU ; Guiquan LÜ ; Chihong ZHU ; Zhengyan YANG ; Yongliang GAO ; Hongkun LOU ; Xianglin LIU ; Yong CHENG ; Wen YANG
Chinese Medical Journal 2002;115(1):36-41
OBJECTIVESTo study the difference between gene expressions of high (H0-8910PM) and low (HO-8910) metastatic human ovarian carcinoma cell lines and screen novel associated genes by cDNA microarray.
METHODScDNA retro-transcribed from equal quantities of mRNA derived from high and low metastatic tumor cells or normal ovarian tissues were labeled with Cy5 and Cy3 fluorescein as probes. The mixed probe was hybridized with two pieces of BioDoor 4096 double dot human whole gene chip and scanned with a ScanArray 3000 laser scanner. The acquired image was analyzed by ImaGene 3.0 software.
RESULTSA total of 355 genes with expression levels more than 3 times larger were found by comparing the HO-8910 cell with normal ovarian epithelial cells. A total of 323 genes with expression levels more than 3 times larger in HO-8910PM cells compared to normal ovarian epithelium cells were also detected. A total of 165 genes whose expression levels were more than two times those of HO-8910PM cells compared to their mother cell line (HO-8910) were detected. Twenty-one genes with expression levels > 3 times were found from comparison of these two tumor cell lines.
CONCLUSIONScDNA microarray techniques are effective in screening differential gene expression between two human ovarian cancer cell lines (H0-8910PM; HO-8910) and normal ovarian epithelial cells. These genes may be related to the genesis and development of ovarian carcinoma. Analysis of the human ovarian cancer gene expression profile with cDNA microarray may help in gene diagnosis, treatment and prevention.
Female ; Gene Expression Profiling ; Humans ; Neoplasm Metastasis ; Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis ; Ovarian Neoplasms ; genetics ; pathology ; Tumor Cells, Cultured
3.Antithrombotic therapy after iliac vein stenting.
Wen ZHONG ; Yan LOU ; Chenyang QIU ; Donglin LI ; Hongkun ZHANG
Journal of Zhejiang University. Medical sciences 2020;49(1):131-136
Stenting for iliac vein stenosis or compression has become a common therapeutic approach in recent years. The antithrombotic therapy after the stent deployment, however, reaches no consensus. Medications strategies and patients' prognoses differ in non-thrombotic, acute thrombotic and chronic thrombotic these three circumstances. Non-thrombotic patients usually possess satisfactory stent patency whatever antithrombotic therapy is used. Anticoagulant is the basic medication for acute thrombotic patients, benefits from additional antiplatelet drug remains to be clarified. In terms of chronic thrombotic patients, their prognoses are unsatisfactory under all antithrombotic therapies. In this review, we outlined the recent progress of antithrombotic therapy after iliac vein stenting, aiming to provide feasible medication plans for each circumstance.
Constriction, Pathologic
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drug therapy
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surgery
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Fibrinolytic Agents
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therapeutic use
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Humans
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Iliac Vein
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surgery
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Stents
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Treatment Outcome
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Vascular Patency