Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Irvin D. Fleming is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Irvin D. Fleming.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2001

Final version of the American Joint Committee on Cancer staging system for cutaneous melanoma

Charles M. Balch; Antonio C. Buzaid; Seng Jaw Soong; Michael B. Atkins; Natale Cascinelli; Daniel G. Coit; Irvin D. Fleming; Jeffrey E. Gershenwald; Alan N. Houghton; John M. Kirkwood; Kelly M. McMasters; Martin F. Mihm; D.L. Morton; Douglas S. Reintgen; Merrick I. Ross; Arthur J. Sober; John A. Thompson; John F. Thompson

PURPOSE To revise the staging system for cutaneous melanoma under the auspices of the American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC). MATERIALS AND METHODS The prognostic factors analysis described in the companion publication (this issue), as well as evidence from the published literature, was used to assemble the tumor-node-metastasis criteria and stage grouping for the melanoma staging system. RESULTS Major changes include (1) melanoma thickness and ulceration but not level of invasion to be used in the T category (except for T1 melanomas); (2) the number of metastatic lymph nodes rather than their gross dimensions and the delineation of clinically occult (ie, microscopic) versus clinically apparent (ie, macroscopic) nodal metastases to be used in the N category; (3) the site of distant metastases and the presence of elevated serum lactic dehydrogenase to be used in the M category; (4) an upstaging of all patients with stage I, II, and III disease when a primary melanoma is ulcerated; (5) a merging of satellite metastases around a primary melanoma and in-transit metastases into a single staging entity that is grouped into stage III disease; and (6) a new convention for defining clinical and pathologic staging so as to take into account the staging information gained from intraoperative lymphatic mapping and sentinel node biopsy. CONCLUSION This revision will become official with publication of the sixth edition of the AJCC Cancer Staging Manual in the year 2002.


Cancer | 2000

A new American Joint Committee on Cancer staging system for cutaneous melanoma.

Charles M. Balch; Antonio C. Buzaid; Michael B. Atkins; Natale Cascinelli; Daniel G. Coit; Irvin D. Fleming; Alan N. Houghton; John M. Kirkwood; Martin F. Mihm; Donald L. Morton; Douglas S. Reintgen; Merrick I. Ross; Arthur J. Sober; Seng-jaw Soong; John A. Thompson; John F. Thompson; Jeffrey E. Gershenwald; Kelly M. McMasters

The Melanoma Staging Committee of the AJCC has proposed major revisions of the melanoma TNM and stage grouping criteria. The committee members represent most of the major cooperative groups and cancer centers worldwide with a special interest in melanoma; the committee also collectively has had clinical experience with over 40,000 patients. The new staging system better reflects independent prognostic factors that are used in clinical trials and in reporting the outcomes of various melanoma treatment modalities. Major revisions include 1) melanoma thickness and ulceration, but not level of invasion, to be used in the T classification; 2) the number of metastatic lymph nodes, rather than their gross dimensions, the delineation of microscopic versus macroscopic lymph node metastases, and presence of ulceration of the primary melanoma to be used in the N classification; 3) the site of distant metastases and the presence of elevated serum LDH, to be used in the M classification; 4) an upstaging of all patients with Stage I,II, and III disease when a primary melanoma is ulcerated; 5) a merging of satellite metastases around a primary melanoma and in-transit metastases into a single staging entity that is grouped into Stage III disease; and 6) a new convention for defining clinical and pathologic staging so as to take into account the new staging information gained from intraoperative lymphatic mapping and sentinel lymph node biopsy. The AJC Melanoma Staging Committee invites comments and suggestions regarding this proposed staging system before a final recommendation is made.


CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians | 2004

An evidence-based staging system for cutaneous melanoma.

Charles M. Balch; Seng Jaw Soong; Michael B. Atkins; Antonio C. Buzaid; Natale Cascinelli; Daniel G. Coit; Irvin D. Fleming; Jeffrey E. Gershenwald; Alan N. Houghton; John M. Kirkwood; Kelly M. McMasters; Martin F. Mihm; Donald L. Morton; Douglas S. Reintgen; Merrick I. Ross; Arthur J. Sober; John A. Thompson; John F. Thompson

A completely revised staging system for cutaneous melanoma was implemented in 2003. The changes were validated with a prognostic factors analysis involving 17,600 melanoma patients from prospective databases. This major collaborative study of predicting melanoma outcome was conducted specifically for this project, and the results were used to finalize the criteria for this evidence‐based staging system. In fact, this was the largest prognostic factors analysis of prospectively followed melanoma patients ever conducted. Important results that shaped the staging criteria involved both the tumor‐node‐metastasis (TNM) criteria and stage grouping for all four stages of melanoma. Major changes in the staging include: (1) melanoma thickness and ulceration are the dominant predictors of survival in patients with localized melanoma (Stages I and II); deeper level of invasion (ie, IV and V) was independently associated with reduced survival only in patients with thin or T1 melanomas. (2) The number of metastatic lymph nodes and the tumor burden were the most dominant predictors of survival in patients with Stage III melanoma; patients with metastatic nodes detected by palpation had a shorter survival compared with patients whose nodal metastases were first detected by sentinel node excision of clinically occult or “microscopic” metastases. (3) The site of distant metastases (nonvisceral versus lung versus all other visceral metastatic sites) and the presence of elevated serum lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) were the dominant predictors of outcome in patients with Stage IV or distant metastases. (4) An upstaging was implemented for all patients with Stage I, II, and III disease when a primary melanoma is ulcerated by histopathological criteria. (5) Satellite metastases around a primary melanoma and in‐transit metastases were merged into a single staging entity that is grouped into Stage III disease. (6) A new convention was implemented for defining clinical and pathological staging so as to take into account the new staging information gained from lymphatic mapping and sentinel node biopsy.


Cancer | 1997

Second malignant neoplasms occuring in survivors of osteosarcoma

Charles B. Pratt; William H. Meyer; Xiaolong Luo; Alvida M. Cain; Sue C. Kaste; Alberto S. Pappo; Bhaskar N. Rao; Irvin D. Fleming; Jesse J. Jenkins

Second malignant neoplasms have been noted infrequently in survivors of osteosarcoma treated before 1970.


Journal of Pediatric Surgery | 1993

Breast malignancy in children

David A. Rogers; Thom E Lobe; Bhaskar N. Rao; Irvin D. Fleming; Kurt P. Schropp; Charles B. Pratt; Alberto S. Pappo

In 25 years, 18 patients with breast cancer were treated at St Jude Childrens Research Hospital, 16 were female and 2 were male. The patients presented with primary malignancy (2), metastatic disease (13), or secondary malignancy (3). One of the females with primary breast malignancy had alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma. She was treated with wide excision and is currently receiving chemotherapy. The other patient presented with non-Hodgkins lymphoma of the right breast. After biopsy, she was treated with chemotherapy. Of 13 patients with metastatic disease, the primary lesion was rhabdomyosarcoma in nine. One patient each had non-Hodgkins lymphoma, Hodgkins lymphoma, neuroblastoma, and signet-cell adenocarcinoma. All patients with metastatic disease to the breast died of the disease. Three females presented with invasive ductal carcinoma of the breast after treatment for Hodgkins disease. Two underwent mastectomy and are alive without evidence of disease. One patient refused therapy and died of the second malignancy. We conclude that (1) breast malignancies had three distinctly different presentations in our patients, (2) the breasts of pediatric oncology patients should be carefully and routinely examined for metastatic disease, and (3) metastatic disease in the breast of a child is a manifestation of disseminated disease and is associated with an extremely poor prognosis.


Cancer | 1985

Thyroid dysfunction and neoplasia in children receiving neck irradiation for cancer

Irvin D. Fleming; Timothy L. Black; Elizabeth I. Thompson; Charles B. Pratt; Bhaskar N. Rao; Omar Hustu

The reported relationship of radiation exposure and thyroid carcinoma stimulated this retrospective study of 298 patients treated at St. Jude Childrens Hospital with radiation therapy to the neck for childhood cancer to identify patients who developed subsequent thyroid abnormalities. This series includes 153 patients with Hodgkins disease, 95 with acute lymphocytic leukemia, 28 with lymphoepi‐thelioma, and 22 with miscellaneous tumors. Inclusion in the study required 5 years of disease‐free survival following therapy for their original tumor, which included thyroid irradiation. Follow‐up has been 100%. Most patients also received chemotherapy. Seventeen patients were found to have decreased thyroid reserve with normal levels of free triiodothyroxine (T3) or free thyroxin, (T4) and an elevated level of thyroid‐stimulating hormone (TSH). In nine patients hypothyroidism developed, with decreased T3 or T4 levels and an elevated level of TSH. One hyperthyroid patient was identified. Two patients had thyroiditis, and seven had thyroid neoplasms: (carcinoma in two, adenoma in two, colloid nodule in one, and undiagnosed nodules in two). This survey has demonstrated an increased incidence of thyroid dysfunction and thyroid neoplasia when compared to the general population. The importance of long‐term follow‐up for thyroid disease is emphasized in patients who have received thyroid irradiation. The possible role of subclinical hypothyroidism with TSH elevation coupled with radiation darnage to the thyroid gland as a model for the development of neoplastic disease is discussed. Cancer 55:1190‐1194, 1985.


Cancer | 1990

Adjuvant chemotherapy for osteosarcoma of the extremity long‐term results of two consecutive prospective protocol studies

Charles B. Pratt; John Champion; Irvin D. Fleming; Bhaskar N. Rao; A.P. Mahesh Kumar; William E. Evans; Alexander A. Green; Stephen L. George

Seventy‐six patients with classic high‐grade osteosarcoma of an extremity received adjuvant chemotherapy by two protocols, initiated in 1972 and 1977, respectively, after appropriate amputations. Chemotherapy consisted of high‐dose methotrexate, doxorubicin, and cyclophosphamide. Dose intensity of high‐dose methotrexate and doxorubicin was greater for the patients treated with the protocol initiated in 1977. The proportion of long‐term disease‐free survivors on the two protocols are 46% and 56%. A better outcome (P = 0.042) was seen for the latter group, which received more intensive chemotherapy. Overall, metastases developed in 35 patients; in 19 who were receiving chemotherapy and in 16 after chemotherapy. The outcome for these two protocols, compared with two control groups that were given no chemotherapy or ineffective chemotherapy (biweekly vincristine and cyclophosphamide), confirms the results of controlled studies that showed an advantage of adjuvant chemotherapy after amputation for osteosarcoma.


Cancer | 1976

Combined therapy to prevent complete pelvic exenteration for rhabdomyosarcoma of the vagina or uterus.

A.P. Mahesh Kumar; Earle L. Wrenn; Irvin D. Fleming; H. Omar Hustu; Charles B. Pratt

Three children with rhabdomyosarcoma (sarcoma botryoides) of the vagina or uterus were managed by modified radical resection combined with pre‐ and/or postoperative chemotherapy and high‐dose irradiation. This plan of therapy contrasts sharply with the conventional approach: i.e., pelvic exenteration consisting of cystectomy, hystovaginectomy, and oophorectomy, with urinary diversion by ureteroileostomy or ureterosigmoidostomy. Two patients had complete regressions of tumor following preoperative chemotherapy and irradiation. The third patient received no preoperative therapy, but was given postoperative radium implantation, irradiation, and chemotherapy. The surgical approach consisted of hystovaginectomy and oophorectomy without urinary diversion. These patients are free of tumor for 32, 44, and 54 months, respectively. There were no serious toxic reactions to the drugs, nor any significant postoperative urinary tract problems. The results reported here suggest that hystovaginectomy and oophorectomy coordinated with chemotherapy and irradiation is an acceptable alternative to pelvic exenteration in patients with sarcoma botryoides of the vagina or uterus.


Journal of Pediatric Surgery | 1993

Primary malignancy of the salivary gland in children

David A. Rogers; Bhaskar N. Rao; Laura C. Bowman; Neyssa Marina; Irvin D. Fleming; Kurt P. Schropp; Thom E Lobe

Seventeen pediatric patients with a major salivary gland malignancy (16 parotid, 1 submaxillary) were reviewed. Eight patients presented with carcinoma. The usual presentation was a mass over the affected gland. Six patients had localized disease, which was treated by excision. This was accomplished by either a total or subtotal parotidectomy or resection of the submaxillary gland. Two patients received adjuvant radiation therapy. All six patients with localized carcinoma are alive, without evidence of disease. Two patients presented with metastatic disease and died of the disease despite treatment with multiagent chemotherapy, and in one case, radiation therapy. Nine patients had rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS). The usual presentation was a mass at the angle of the mandible. Five patients had involvement of one or more cranial nerves, and two had concomitant cervical adenopathy. Eight patients had a biopsy and then were treated according to an existing prospective institutional protocol. The ninth patient initially underwent a superficial parotidectomy. Seven patients received radiation therapy. In one patient, rapid progression of the disease precluded this treatment. Seven patients died of progressive local and distant disease 2 months to 2 years (median, 6 months) from the time of diagnosis. Two patients are alive, without evidence of disease, 3 and 7 years after presentation. We conclude that carcinoma should be managed with complete excision. For RMS of the salivary gland, a biopsy should be performed, and treatment should consist of chemotherapy and radiation therapy.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1986

Therapy for childhood soft-tissue sarcomas other than rhabdomyosarcoma: a review of 62 cases treated at a single institution.

M E Horowitz; Charles B. Pratt; B L Webber; H O Hustu; Erlinda Etcubanas; J Miliauskas; Bhaskar N. Rao; Irvin D. Fleming; A P Mahesh Kumar; Alexandra Green

The rarity and diverse characteristics of the nonrhabdomyosarcomatous soft-tissue sarcomas (NRSTS) in children have hindered study of their clinical presentations and response to therapy. Here we describe the findings of a retrospective analysis of 62 cases of NRSTS seen in a single institution from 1962 through 1983. The most common histopathologic diagnosis was synovial sarcoma, occurring in 18 patients, followed by malignant schwannoma in 12. The median age at diagnosis was 11 years (range, 2 months to 20 years). Anatomic sites of primary tumors were the trunk (28), extremity (24), and head and neck (10). Of the 31 patients whose tumors were completely resected, 26 (84%) survive with no evidence of disease. Postoperative chemotherapy, administered to nearly one half of this group, did not produce any demonstrable gains in survival. Only one of the 26 patients with local or metastatic gross tumor after resection survives. We conclude that an aggressive surgical approach is imperative in patients with NRSTS and that the contribution of other treatment modalities needs to be defined in a collaborative group trial.

Collaboration


Dive into the Irvin D. Fleming's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Charles B. Pratt

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Bhaskar N. Rao

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Charles M. Balch

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Monica Morrow

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

A.P. Mahesh Kumar

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Charles M. Balch

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alan N. Houghton

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alexander A. Green

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge