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Now showing items 1 - 16 of 54

  • Historical Perspective of the Treatment of Osteosarcoma: An Interview With Dr Norman Jaffe

    Pearson   M.  

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  • Historical Perspective of the Treatment of Osteosarcoma: An Interview With Dr Norman Jaffe

    Pearson, M.  

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  • Historical perspective of the treatment of osteosarcoma: An interview with Dr Norman Jaffe

    PEARSON  

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  • Historical perspective of the treatment of osteosarcoma: An interview with Dr Norman Jaffe

    PEARSON, M  

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  • Norman S. Jaffe, MD: The American Pioneer

    Stephen A. Obstbaum  

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  • Norman S. Jaffe, MD: The American Pioneer

    Obstbaum   Stephen A.  

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  • Osteosarcoma: Evolution of Treatment Paradigms

    Norman Jaffe   Ajay Puri   Hans Gelderblom  

    This paper reviews the contribution of chemotherapy in the conquest of osteosarcoma. It discusses how the treatment of osteosarcoma has evolved over the last five decades, resulting in a more than fivefold increase in survival. Though the initial improvements in survival were dramatic, essentially there has been no change in the outlook for this disease over the past 30 years. The paper also highlights the necessity of a multidisciplinary approach to combat this disease and stresses the need to explore newer treatment agents in order to build on the lessons learnt from the past while striving to achieve greater levels of success.
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  • Osteosarcoma: Lessons Learned and Future Avenues

    Ajay Puri   Norman Jaffe   Hans Gelderblom  

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  • Reinforcement device for a biological valve and reinforced biological valve

    A reinforcement device for a biological valve includes an arrangement of supports configured to establish a double-trigone geometry in the valve and coupled to a base upon which the valve may be mounted. A plurality of commissural supports establish the geometry of a commissural trigone, and a plurality of intercommissural supports establish the geometry of an intercommissural trigone. A method for reinforcing a biological valve includes using commissural supports in conjunction with intercommissural supports, both sets of supports coupled to a base upon which the valve is mounted.
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  • Single and multiple metachronous osteosarcoma tumors after therapy

    Norman Jaffe   Peggy Pearson   Alan W. Yasko   Patrick Lin   Cynthia Herzog   Kevin Raymond  

    BACKGROUND: The objective of the current study was to determine the incidence, clinical and pathologic characteristics, and outcome of patients with conventional osteosarcoma who developed metachronous tumors after treatment for the primary tumor and prevention of pulmonary metastases. METHODS: The medical records of 270 pediatric patients (younger than age 18 years) were reviewed. The prevention and absence of pulmonary metastases was confirmed by chest radiographs and computerized scans of the lungs. Radionuclide bone scans were used to confirm the absence of skeletal metastases. RESULTS: Eleven patients with metachronous tumors were identified. Index primary tumors involved the femur (n=8), the tibia (n=2), and the radius (n=1). Single metachronous tumors developed in the femur (n=6), in the humerus (n=1), and multifocal in multiple bones (n=4). Two patients later developed second metachronous tumors. The interval between identification of the primary tumor to development of the single metachronous tumors varied from 11 months to 78 months and from 12 months to 42 months for synchronous multifocal tumors. Metachronous tumors were treated with single-agent cisplatin or ifosfamide. Only 1 patient experienced >90% tumor necrosis. Pulmonary metastases were not detected in 10 of 11 patients at the time metachronous tumors were discovered. In the 11th patient, synchronous pulmonary metastasis with the metachronous tumor was noted. Three patients had a prior history of bilateral retinoblastoma. The Li-Fraumeni syndrome may have been present in another patient. Six patients died. Five patients have survived for 20+ to 50+ months after the appearance, treatment, and resection of metachronous tumors. CONCLUSIONS: With improvement in the cure rate, metachronous osteosarcoma should be recognized as an important sequela in long-term survivors. The etiology of this disease is unknown. Speculation rests on a skeletal multicentric origin, which includes an inherited predisposition to develop osteosarcoma in retinoblastoma and in the Li-Fraumeni syndrome. Meticulous follow-up is required to permit early detection and successful therapeutic intervention.
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  • Method and system for access to automatically synchronized remote files

    A method and system for the simple, fast, and effective maintenance of consistent data files across a multiplicity of computer systems, which functionality is useful in collaborative work, effective backup, and disaster recovery. Consistency is maintained using secure file storage remote from any number of clients the files on which are automatically synchronized consuming minimal network bandwidth. Automated bi-directional “one-click” synchronization is implemented via a method that is neutral with respect to platform, operating system, firewall, and network configuration. The software product based on the invented method has the substantial advantage of installation, setup, and operation all without intervention by system administrators.
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  • Atlas of Ophthalmic Surgery: Norman S. Jaffe J.B. Lippincott 1990

    Rod Nowakowski  

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  • Atlas of Ophthalmic Surgery: Norman S. Jaffe J.B. Lippincott 1990

    Rod Nowakowski  

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  • Can cure in patients with osteosarcoma be achieved exclusively with chemotherapy and abrogation of surgery?

    Norman Jaffe   Humberto Carrasco   Kevin Raymond   Alberto Ayala   Farzin Eftekhari  

    BACKGROUND: Contemporary therapy for osteosarcoma is comprised of initial treatment with chemotherapy and surgical extirpation of the primary tumor in the affected bone. In view of the major advances forged by chemotherapy in the treatment of the primary tumor, an attempt was made to destroy the tumor exclusively with this therapeutic modality and abrogate surgery. METHODS: Thirty-one consecutive patients were treated. All had localized disease (absence of metastases) at the time of diagnosis. Initial treatment with chemotherapy was comprised of high-dose methotrexate and leucovorin rescue (MTX-LF) in 3 patients and intraarterial cisplatin in 28 patients. Clinical, radiologic, angiographic, radionuclide, and histologic investigations were utilized to assess the efficacy of treatment. After a response at 3 months, entry into the study was permitted and treatment was maintained for a total of 18-21 months with a combination of agents comprised of MTX-LF, intraarterial cisplatin, and doxorubicin. Patients were monitored closely for disease recurrence with the investigations outlined earlier. Two informed consents were required: one at the time of diagnosis and another at 3 months after the initial response had been attained. RESULTS: Only 3 of 31 patients were cured with the administration of chemotherapy alone. Local recurrence and pulmonary metastases were not reported to develop in these 3 patients during a follow-up period of 204+ to 225+ months. Four other patients also possibly were cured with chemotherapy alone. At their request, several months after the cessation of chemotherapy, they underwent surgical extirpation of the tumor. No evidence of viable tumor was found. These patients remained free of disease for 192+ to 216+ months. Thus, only seven patients did not develop local recurrence and/or pulmonary metastases. Among the remaining 24 patients, 9 developed local recurrences without pulmonary metastases 14-74 months (median, 30 months) after the initial response. Eight of the nine patients were rendered tumor free by extirpation of the local recurrence. Two of these eight patients subsequently died, one of the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) and the other of varicella septicemia. The ninth patient refused amputation and died of metabolic complications. Three other patients developed local recurrences 20-69 months and pulmonary metastases 10-98 months after achievement of the initial response. These patients were rendered tumor free by extirpation of the local recurrence and metastasectomy. One of these patients also later died of AIDS. In the remaining 12 patients, local recurrences developed 5-29 months (median, 14 months) after the initial response was achieved. The patients also developed pulmonary metastases 11-60 months after the initial response. In eight patients the local recurrences were extirpated and metastasectomy was performed; however, these patients later died of recurrent pulmonary metastases. The remaining four patients refused to undergo extirpation of the local recurrence. The pulmonary metastases were not resected. They failed to respond to alternate therapy. Thus, the tumor-free survival rate was 23% (7 of 31 patients): 3 patients who were treated with chemotherapy only and 4 patients who were treated with chemotherapy plus surgery. The overall survival rate (patients who remained free of disease and those who underwent resection for local recurrence and metastasectomy) was 48% (15 of 31 patients). Prior to the deaths from AIDS and varicella septicemia, the overall survival was 58% (18 of 31 patients). CONCLUSIONS: Utilizing the regimen employed in the current study, only 3 of 31 patients with osteosarcoma (10%) were cured exclusively with chemotherapy. Four additional patients who underwent extirpation of the primary tumor without disease recurrence and in whom no viable tumor was found in the resected specimens possibly could increase the number of patients who potentially were cured with chemotherapy to 7 (23%). With an overall expected cure rate of 50-65% with "conventional" strategies, the results of the current study do not justify the adoption of current forms of chemotherapy as exclusive treatments for osteosarcoma.
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  • Discussion of Presentation by Dr Norman Jaffe

    Drews   Robert C.  

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  • Intraocular lens implants: by Norman Jaffe

    Alan Sugar  

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