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Publications (2)20.38 Total impact

  • Article: Dramatic response of teratoma-associated non--germ-cell cancer with all-trans retinoic acid in a patient with nonseminomatous germ cell tumor.
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    ABSTRACT: A patient with nonseminomatous germ cell cancer, treated with standard chemotherapy, subsequently developed a pathologically confirmed metastatic undifferentiated adenocarcinoma (non-germ-cell elements) arising from residual teratoma. Disease was present in both lobes of the liver and was deemed unresectable at the time of presentation. The patient was treated on a National Cancer Institute-sponsored institutional protocol with all-trans retinoic acid. After 60 days of oral therapy at a dose of 150 mg/m2/d (50 mg/m2 three times daily), the patient was found to have complete radiologic resolution of his hepatic metastases. He subsequently underwent surgery and his complete response was pathologically confirmed.
    American Journal of Clinical Oncology 07/2001; 24(3):269-71. · 2.01 Impact Factor
  • Article: Long-term follow-up of a phase III study of three versus four cycles of bleomycin, etoposide, and cisplatin in favorable-prognosis germ-cell tumors: the Indian University experience.
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    ABSTRACT: In a previously reported randomized Southeastern Cancer Study Group (SECSG) trial, three cycles of chemotherapy were found to be equivalent to four cycles in patients with favorable-prognosis germ-cell cancer. We have conducted a follow-up analysis of patients treated at Indiana University (Indianapolis, IN) to compare long-term survival between the two groups and to examine factors associated with survival. Sixty-nine patients with minimal-stage and 49 patients with moderate-stage disseminated germ-cell tumors were randomized to either three or four courses of bleomycin, etoposide, and cisplatin (BEP) administered every 3 weeks. Median follow-up time is 10.1 years (range, 7 months to 12.6 years). Ninety-two percent of patients have an actual follow-up time of > 5 years, and 97.5% of patients have an actual follow-up time of > 3 years. Survival analysis shows no significant difference between the two treatment groups in terms of overall (P = .80) or disease-free (P = .93) survival. Several clinical variables were examined by univariate analysis; only serum human chorionic gonadotropin (HCG) had an impact on survival. There were two disease-related deaths in 104 patients with HCG < or = 1,000 mIU/mL and five disease-related deaths in 14 patients with HCG greater than 1,000 mIU/mL (P < .001). Ninety-eight percent (95% CI, 95.2 to 100) of patients with favorable prognosis germ-cell tumor with an initial HCG of < or = 1,000 mIU/mL are alive without evidence of disease at 5+ years. With long-term follow-up, there is no statistically significant difference in survival between three or four cycles of BEP chemotherapy in patients with favorable prognosis germ-cell carcinoma. Serum HCG elevation of greater than 1,000 mIU/mL is a significant predictor of poor outcome in patients with otherwise good-risk disease.
    Journal of Clinical Oncology 02/1998; 16(2):702-6. · 18.37 Impact Factor