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Response of canine esophagus to intraoperative electron beam radiotherapy

Sindelar WF; Hoekstra HJ; Kinsella TJ; Barnes M; DeLuca AM; Tochner Z; Pass HI; Kranda KC; Terrill RE
Tolerance of esophagus to intraoperative radiotherapy (IORT) was investigated in dogs. Thirteen adult foxhounds were subjected to right thoractomy, mobilization of the intrathoracic esophagus, and IORT to a 6 cm full-thickness esophageal segment using 9 MeV electrons at doses of 0, 2,000, or 3,000 cGy. Dogs were followed clinically and were evaluated at regular intervals after treatment with fiberoptic esophagoscopy, barium swallows, and postmortem histologic evaluations. One sham-irradiated control dog showed no abnormalities during follow-up of 24 months. Seven dogs receiving 2,000 cGy IORT showed transient mild dysphagia and mild esophagitis, but no clinically or pathologically significant complications. Five dogs receiving 3,000 cGy demonstrated severe ulcerative esophagitis within 6 weeks of treatment which progressed to chronic ulcerative esophagitis with stricture formation by 9 months following IORT. One 3,000 cGy dog died at 13 months from an esophageal perforation. On the basis of a pilot experience using 13 experimental animals, it was concluded that intact canine esophagus tolerates IORT well to doses of 2,000 cGy, but doses of 3,000 cGy pose serious and potentially lethal risks. The clinical application of IORT to the treatment of human intrathoracic neoplasms requiring esophageal irradiation should be approached with caution, particularly at doses exceeding 2,000 cGy
PMID: 3138218
ISSN: 0360-3016
CID: 59201

Pulmonary nodules resembling bronchioloalveolar carcinoma in adolescent cancer patients [Case Report]

Travis, W D; Linnoila, R I; Horowitz, M; Becker, R L Jr; Pass, H; Ozols, R; Gazdar, A
Pulmonary nodules morphologically indistinguishable from bronchioloalveolar carcinoma (BAC) were found in two adolescent cancer patients postchemotherapy. A solitary nodule was noted at thoracotomy for a single computerized tomography (CT) scan lesion in a 16-yr-old male, 6 yr after diagnosis of Ewing's sarcoma. A similar nodule was found in a 19-yr-old male coincident with resection of multiple lung metastases of a testicular germ cell tumor. Both lesions were discrete nodular masses (1 cm and 0.5 cm) consisting of atypical epithelial cells with a papillary and lepidic growth pattern and surrounded by histologically normal appearing lung. Immunohistochemistry of both cases was positive for laminoorganel (LO) antigen, which is found in normal type II pneumocytes, and one nodule showed carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) staining. Quantitative DNA analysis in one case indicated aneuploidy. Thus the morphology, immunohistochemistry, and DNA content of these lesions suggest that they may represent early lung cancers despite the highly unusual clinical context. The extreme rarity of BAC in this age group makes this report significant in light of heightening concern about second malignancies in pediatric cancer patients and reports of chemically induced pulmonary adenomas in mice. It also underscores the importance of basing therapeutic decisions on a histologic diagnosis of lung nodules in cancer patients rather than assuming the presence of metastatic disease
PMID: 2853363
ISSN: 0893-3952
CID: 110905

Randomized clinical trial of preoperative and postoperative adjuvant chemotherapy with cisplatin, vindesine, and bleomycin for carcinoma of the esophagus

Roth JA; Pass HI; Flanagan MM; Graeber GM; Rosenberg JC; Steinberg S
Thirty-nine patients with potentially resectable cancer of the middle or lower esophagus who had not previously been treated were randomly assigned to receive either immediate operation (n = 20) or operation plus preoperative and postoperative therapy with cisplatin, vindesine, and bleomycin (n = 19). Patients were stratified by tumor size and location and by sex, with no significant differences appearing between the two treatment groups. Median follow-up for both groups was 30 months. The preoperative response rate to chemotherapy was 47%. The postoperative complication rate for patients in the operation-only group was 47%; it was 29% for patients receiving chemotherapy. The overall resectability rates were similar for the two groups. Patients responding to chemotherapy preoperatively had significantly prolonged survival (median greater than 20 months) when compared with either nonresponders (median 6.2 months) or patients receiving only operation (median 8.6 months). A highly significant correlation was noted between a weight loss of less than 10% and response to chemotherapy, which suggested that responses occurred in patients with less advanced disease. We conclude that preoperative and postoperative cisplatin, vindesine, and bleomycin chemotherapy has acceptable toxicity and does not increase the incidence of postoperative complications. The natural history of epidermoid carcinoma of the esophagus is altered and overall survival is prolonged for patients responding to preoperative chemotherapy. Potential responding patients can be identified by the degree of preoperative weight loss
PMID: 2456424
ISSN: 0022-5223
CID: 59202

Resection of pulmonary metastases from malignant melanoma: results of a 16-year experience

Pogrebniak HW; Stovroff M; Roth JA; Pass HI
Between 1970 and 1986, 49 patients had resection of presumed pulmonary metastases from malignant melanoma. Sixteen patients were found to have benign disease only despite the appearance of a new nodule in 13. Patients with benign disease had a significantly longer mean survival (169 months) compared with the group with malignant disease (22 months). Median survival for all patients with malignant disease was 13 months. Survival after resection did not correlate with the Clark level of the original lesion, lymph node status, disease-free interval, or number of nodules on preoperative tomograms. Two of 10 patients with 1 nodule resected are long-term survivors (88 and 120 months). Exploration in patients with presumed pulmonary metastases from melanoma is justified to rule out benign disease even if a new solitary nodule is detected. There are no prognostic indicators predicting survival after resection of melanoma metastases, and a significant number of patients will have benign disease
PMID: 3382281
ISSN: 0003-4975
CID: 59203

Trachea-innominate artery fistula [Letter]

Perry RR; Knego RS; Pass HI
PMID: 3290587
ISSN: 0022-5223
CID: 59204

Cognitive function in manics with associated neurologic factors

Hoff, A L; Shukla, S; Cook, B L; Aronson, T A; Ollo, C L; Pass, H L
Researchers studying cognition in mania have assumed that mania is a homogeneous entity. Recent preliminary evidence indicates that some manic syndromes may be preceded by medical, pharmacological, and neurologic antecedents. While DSM-III suggests that mild cognitive impairment may be associated with these manic syndromes, studies to date have not documented this assertion. We compared bipolar patients with antecedent neurologic factors (neurologic manics, NM) to bipolar patients without such histories (primary manics, PM) on standard neuropsychological measures and clinical parameters to ascertain whether cognitive testing could be used as an adjunctive diagnostic tool in defining this subgroup of patients. Results indicated that the NM group was more dysfunctional in intellectual functioning and course of psychiatric illness than the PM group
PMID: 2968386
ISSN: 0165-0327
CID: 110906

Role of imaging and interventional techniques in the diagnosis of respiratory disease in the immunocompromised host

Ognibene FP; Pass HI; Roth JA; Shelhamer JH; Milne EN
A pure 'pattern-recognition' approach to lung diseases in immune compromised patients as seen on the chest film is of limited value since any infection can present with several different patterns, and processes such as embolism, aspiration, edema, and hemorrhage may give appearances similar to infection. However certain pulmonary infections do occur commonly in association with one type of immunosuppression but rarely with others. Knowledge of these associations assists in narrowing down the differential diagnosis and in deciding upon the most appropriate next confirmatory diagnostic step
PMID: 3283372
ISSN: 0883-5993
CID: 59205

Nervous system abnormalities in Lyme disease

Halperin JJ; Pass HL; Anand AK; Luft BJ; Volkman DJ; Dattwyler RJ
PMID: 3190096
ISSN: 0077-8923
CID: 65099

Hardy's textbook of surgery

Hardy JD; Kukora JS; Pass HI
Philadelphia PA : Lippincott, 1988
Extent: xix, 1414 p.
ISBN: 0397508174
CID: 1461

The infected chest wall prosthesis: management by excision and contralateral transverse rectus abdominis musculocutaneous flap [Case Report]

Wiebke EA; McDonald HD; Pass HI
A patient with a chest wall sarcoma whose original prosthetic reconstruction became infected after a course of radiation therapy is described. After removal of the prosthesis, salvage reconstruction was performed using a transverse rectus abdominis musculocutaneous flap. Management of the infected chest wall prosthesis, with emphasis on the indications for use of the transverse rectus abdominis musculocutaneous flap, is discussed
PMID: 2823732
ISSN: 0003-4975
CID: 59206