The risk of spontaneous pneumothorax in patients with osteogenic sarcoma and testicular cancer

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Abstract

Seven cases of unilateral, spontaneous pneumothorax were found in a retrospective study of 63 patients with osteogenic sarcoma who were admitted to The Norwegian Radium Hospital (NRH) in the period 1970–1977. The relative risk of pneumothorax developing doubled, from 7–14%, after the introduction of chemotherapy for this disease at NRH. This difference was not statistically significant. Pneumothorax developed in two of 18 patients (11%) with lung metastases who never received chemotherapy. Pneumothorax occurred in four of 19 patients (21%) treated with chemotherapy for manifest lung metastases, and in one of eight patients (13%) who received adjuvant chemotherapy, but in whom lung metastases developed later. Pneumothorax did not develop in 79 patients treated with chemotherapy for disseminated testicular cancer, despite the fact that 82% of these patients had manifest lung metastases. Copyright © 1982 American Cancer Society

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Smevik, B., & Klepp, O. (1982). The risk of spontaneous pneumothorax in patients with osteogenic sarcoma and testicular cancer. Cancer, 49(8), 1734–1737. https://doi.org/10.1002/1097-0142(19820415)49:8<1734::AID-CNCR2820490833>3.0.CO;2-K

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