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Journal ArticleDOI

Primary salivary gland-type lung cancer: surgical outcomes.

TLDR
Surgical resection of primary salivary gland-type lung cancer was an effective treatment with low operative morbidity, and expected long-term survival, and Repeated surgical resection may be considered aneffective treatment modality in some cases of recurrence.
About
This article is published in Lung Cancer.The article was published on 2011-05-01. It has received 88 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Pneumonectomy & Salivary gland cancer.

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Citations
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The cribriform pattern identifies a subset of acinar predominant tumors with poor prognosis in patients with stage I lung adenocarcinoma: a conceptual proposal to classify cribriform predominant tumors as a distinct histologic subtype

TL;DR: The findings highlight the important prognostic value of comprehensive histologic subtyping and recording the percentage of each histologic pattern, according to the IASLC/ATS/ERS classification with the addition of the cribriform subtype.
Journal ArticleDOI

Primary Pulmonary Salivary Gland-type Tumors: A Review and Update.

TL;DR: A comprehensive summary of primary pulmonary SGT with particular emphasis on morphologic characteristics and latest developments in terms of immunohistochemical and molecular techniques is provided.
Journal ArticleDOI

Primary Salivary Gland–Type Lung Cancer: Clinicopathological Analysis of 88 Cases from China

TL;DR: Salivary gland–type lung cancers are a group of low-aggressive entities with higher tendency to recurrence/metastasis and intensive clinical, radiological, and pathological examinations are essential to estimation of the risk stratification and management.
Journal ArticleDOI

Primary Salivary Gland–Type Lung Cancer: Imaging and Clinical Predictors of Outcome

TL;DR: Higher FDG uptake is associated with nodal disease in patients with primary salivary gland-type tumors of the lung but is not predictive of survival, whereas CT features suggestive of advanced disease correlate with worse outcome.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Primary tracheal tumors: Treatment and results

TL;DR: Comparison of length of survival of patients with squamous cell carcinoma and adenoid cystic carcinoma who are alive without disease with those who died with carcinoma supports surgical treatment (usually followed by irradiation); positive lymph nodes or invasive disease at resection margins appear to have an adverse effect on cure of squamouscell carcinoma.
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Mucoepidermoid carcinoma: a clinicopathologic study of 80 patients with special reference to histological grading.

TL;DR: In this article, the reproducibility of histologic grading for salivary mucoepidermoid carcinoma (MEC) was evaluated using 20 slides and 20 observers, without prior discussion; slides were categorized as low-, intermediate-, or high grade according to one's own criteria, and then according to the AFIP criteria proposed by Goode et al.

A Clinicopathologic Study of 80 Patients With Special Reference to Histological Grading

TL;DR: This clinicopathologic analysis confirms the predictive value of tumor staging and three-tiered histologic grading in salivary mucoepidermoid carcinoma and proposes a modified grading schema, which enhances predictability and provides much needed reproducibility.
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Adenoid cystic carcinoma of the airway: Thirty-two-year experience

TL;DR: Although late local recurrence after resection is a feature of this tumor (up to 29 years), excellent long-term palliation is commonly achieved after both complete and incomplete resection.
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Results and prognostic factors in resections of primary tracheal tumors: A multicenter retrospective study

TL;DR: Long-term prognosis was worsened by the occurrence of second primary malignancies in patients with tracheal cancers and by the occurrences of late pulmonary metastases in patientsWith adenoid cystic carcinomas, survival was significantly longer for Those with complete resections than for those with incomplete resections.
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