One hundred thirty-one patients with operable breast cancer were treated with adjuvant chemoimmunotherapy consisting of 5-fluorouracil, adriamycin, cyclophosphamide, and BCG (FAC-BCG). Fifty-five of 131 patients were premenopausal of which 71% (38/55) became amenorrheic. To determine the mechanism of amenorrhea, we measured the immunoreactive serum luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), and plasma estradiol (E2) before and after intravenous administration of luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LH-RH) in 11 unselected premenopausal patients who developed amenorrhea and 11 unselected patients who did not. Serum prolactin (PRL) levels were also measured before and after iv administration of thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH). Our results showed that patients who developed amenorrhea had abnormally high serum LH and FSH levels at basal and after LH-RH stimulation and low plasma estradiol. Serum PRL levels were normal. Patients who developed amenorrhea were older than those who did not, but their serum LH and FSH levels were also significantly higher and plasma estrogens were significantly lower than that found in 11 normal women with regular menses of the same age range. These results indicate that amenorrhea that develops in some patients with breast cancer after FAC-BCG therapy is a result of primary ovarian failure.
Adrenal and total body scintigraphs with 131I-6-beta-iodomethyl-19-norcholesterol were obtained in 5 patients who had had prior resection of adrenal cortical carcinoma. The results were compared with roentgenographic findings and liver, bone, and total body gallium-67 citrate scintigraphs. Metastatic lesions were detected with radiolabeled cholesterol in 4 of 5 patients, including 3 liver metastases, 2 bone metastases, and 1 lung metastasis. These lesions were also demonstrated by one or more of the other diagnostic modalities. All initial findings were negative in a fifth patient, who developed brain metastases within two months. The 6-methyl-analog of iodocholesterol makes it possible to detect metastatic adrenocortical carcinoma with total body scans. Whether or not this agent is "tumor specific" and will be of significant clinical utility will have to be determined more fully in a larger series of patients.
A 47-year-old male with histiocytic lymphoma and no previous history of heart disease developed significant fluctuations of blood pressure, electrocardiographic evidence of myocardial ischemia, and life-threatening arrhythmia after the first dose of BACOP (bleomycin, adriamycin, cyclophosphamide, Oncovin, and prednisone) chemotherapy. The presence of pheochromocytoma was suspected, and it was demonstrated by elevated urinary metanephrines, catecholamines, and vanillylmandelic acid, and finally confirmed on autopsy. The possible role of chemotherapeutic agents in stimulating excessive catecholamine release, thus causing transient cardiac injury, is suggested.
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