Results 151 to 160 of about 441,494 (200)
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Multiple primary malignancies

The American Journal of Surgery, 1934
Abstract 1. 1. A case of multiple primary malignancy is reported, a primary adenocarcinoma of the breast and papillary carcinoma of the bladder in a male. 2. 2. Multiple primary malignancies are a rare clinical entity. 3. 3. Attention is called to the unusual metastasis from the carcinoma of bladder, corpus spongiosum and cavernosa and ...
Herman L Kretschmer, Norris J Heckel
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Multiple (five) primary malignant lesions

The American Journal of Surgery, 1970
Abstract A case is reported, which is believed to be the first, of five histologically proved, distinct malignant tumors. Carcinomas of the breast, skin, uterus, cecum, and rectum, three with proved metastases, were treated surgically, and at autopsy, a solitary metastatic lesion in the cerebellum was the only remaining evidence of malignancy ...
M J, Healy   +3 more
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Immunodeficiency and Multiple Primary Malignancies

2009
The relationship between cancer onset and the immune response became a subject of great interest in the early 1900s, and led Ehrlich [1] to establish what came to be known as the theory of immunological surveillance. This theory is based on three principles: (1) cancer cells are antigenic, (2) these cells can be destroyed by the immune response of the ...
SANTANGELO, MICHELE   +13 more
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Multiple primaries among gynecologic malignancies

Gynecologic Oncology, 1984
Seventy-eight synchronous or metachronous tumors among 2362 patients followed by the Downstate Gynecologic Tumor Registry are reviewed. Significant synchronous tumor pairs include cervix (invasive and in situ)-ovary, cervix (in situ)-uterus, cervix (in situ)-kidney, endometrium-ovary, endometrium-rectosigmoid, and ovary-breast. Significant metachronous
J H, Axelrod, R, Fruchter, J G, Boyce
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Multiple primary malignancy

The American Journal of Surgery, 1945
Abstract 1. 1. A case report is given in which a patient had four primary carcinomas: (1) A medullary carcinoma of the breast; (2) a post-radiation carcinoma in the scar of the chest wall, with recurrence; (3) a transitional cell carcinoma of the cervix, and (4) a papillary adenocarcinoma of the rectum. 2. 2.
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Multiple Primary Malignancies

A.M.A. Archives of Surgery, 1956
To the surgeons who steadily spend thought, time, and a great deal of energy trying to eradicate cancer, it is truly encouraging to know that a patient with four primary successive major malignancies over a 21-year period was cured of three of them and survived the fourth by 7 years. With more than five years passing after the last cancer operation, it
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Multiple primaries and gynecologic malignancies

American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 1975
An analysis was done on all gynecologic malignancies over a 13 year period to review the frequency and types of multiple primaries. A surprising spectrum of malignancy is seen and certain radiologic studies are of particular value. The time from occurrence of the various extragenital and genital tract cancers to the original gynecologic malignancy is ...
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Multiple Primary Malignancies

2009
Many surgeons are confronted with cancer patients who have already been treated for another malignant neoplasm. This observation lead to several questions: What is the real incidence of MPM? What are the most frequent causes?Is the optimal prophylactic therapy surgical or medical? In this volume we have tried to answer these questions. The monografy is
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Multiple primary malignancies

The American Journal of Surgery, 1951
H D, STEIN, A, BEHREND
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[Primary multiple malignant tumors].

Voprosy onkologii, 1977
Since 1946 in the Kalinin Province 430 cases with primary multiple tumors were registered--0.39 per cent to all primary oncological patients. Among these patients there were 285 females (0.42%) and 145 males (0.33%). Synchronous tumors were found in 46 cases, metachronous--in 384. The results of radical treatment for recurrent tumors were no worse than
I V, Mikhirev, T N, Mikhireva
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