Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:2.1.1.69 (BMT)
2,655 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We have utilized the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to sensitively detect persistence of the chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) malignant clone and to study bcr/abl mRNA splicing patterns following bone marrow transplantation. Thirteen of sixteen patients displayed persistent malignant cells during post-BMT clinical remission. In two patients bcr/abl mRNA was detected 4 and 9 months prior to clinical relapse. In eleven of fourteen patients in continued clinical remission malignant cells were detected post-BMT. Ten of these eleven patients were also cytogenetically normal. Seven patients have lost all evidence of bcr/abl transcript, but only at 1-2 years posttransplant, while four have shown persistence of the bcr/abl transcript from 28 days to 3 years post-BMT and one has converted from an initially negative result at 1 year post-BMT to detectable levels of chimeric mRNA at 2 years. Thus, 8/9 patients tested at or before 6 months, 7/12 at 1 year, and 3/10 at 2 years showed persistent detectable CML cells. Intriguingly, mRNA splicing patterns changed in 5 patients following BMT, with complete loss of mRNA containing bcr exon 3 (n = 2) or new appearance of mRNA not containing bcr exon 3 (n = 2). A single patient transiently lost evidence of bcr exon 3 expression while persistently expressing the bcr exon 2/abl exon 2 splice. Our data suggest that the majority of patients harbor small numbers of malignant cells following transplantation, and that such persistence may not inevitably predict clinical relapse. Complete elimination of the malignant CML clone post-BMT may rely on immunological mechanisms (e.g., graft-vs-leukemia).
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PMID:bcr/abl mRNA detection following bone marrow transplantation for chronic myelogenous leukemia. 175 65

The polymerase chain reaction (PCR) allows the detection of minimal amounts of nucleic sequences and has been successfully used to test for the chronic myeloid leukemia-specific bcr/abl transcripts. We studied blood samples from 17 patients who had undergone allogeneic bone marrow transplantation for CML, using a modified polymerase chain reaction-based assay for the detection of leukemic mRNA. This nested PCR technique was found to be highly sensitive, detecting the chimeric bcr/abl transcript in 16 of 17 patients including several long-term survivors. Cytogenetic techniques failed to detect Ph mitoses. The clinical significance of the persisting bcr/abl transcript for long periods following BMT is poorly understood and remains to be elucidated by further studies.
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PMID:Frequent detection of minimal residual disease by use of the polymerase chain reaction in long-term survivors after bone marrow transplantation for chronic myeloid leukemia. 240 20

Detection of the chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML)-related marker, the bcr/abl m-RNA transcript, in blood or bone marrow of patients with CML in hematologic remission after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (allo-BMT) may be associated with the presence of minimal residual disease but does not uniformly predict hematologic relapse. In contrast, when there is cytogenetic reappearance of the Philadelphia (Ph1) translocation [t(9;22)(q34;q11)] along with additional cytogenetic abnormalities, especially more than 2 years after BMT, progression to hematologic relapse and acceleration of CML usually occur. An exception to this rule may be our patient, who was a 29-year old white woman diagnosed with Ph1-positive CML by cytogenetics. She was initially treated with hydroxyurea. An allo-BMT was performed 4 months after the diagnosis, while the patient was still in the first chronic phase of her disease, her HLA-identical brother serving as bone marrow (BM) donor. The conditioning regimen for BMT consisted of cytosine arabinoside, cyclophosphamide, total body irradiation, splenic irradiation, and intrathecal methotrexate. Graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) prophylaxis consisted of cyclosporin A and methotrexate. Her hospital course was unremarkable and without evidence of acute GVHD. Six months after transplantation, the patient had mild chronic GVHD and was treated with azathioprine and prednisone for 6 months. A year later, she recurred with mild chronic GVHD. She was treated with azathioprine alone for 5 months. Subsequently, she received cyclosporin A and prednisone for 8 months, with resolution of her symptoms. Serial BM cytogenetic studies showed normal male donor karyotypes 12 and 24 months after BMT. At 36, 42, and 50 months after BMT, reappearance of the Ph1 was noted along with some cells with additional cytogenetic abnormalities, including t(6;14)(p21;q32). The breakpoint involvement of 14q32, the heavy chain Ig locus, in the new clone may be indicative of B-lymphoid lineage-based evolution. The abnormal clones disappeared 56 months from BMT and remained absent through 69 months after BMT. The patient has remained in hematologic remission during her entire post-BMT course. Clinically, she continues to do well without immunosuppressants at presently 69 months after BMT. The reappearance of the Ph1 chromosome could be associated with the immunosuppressive therapy given for chronic GVHD. This case supports the concept that immunologic mechanisms may be important in the eradication of CML after allo-BMT, and even cytogenetic evidence of blast crisis CML may spontaneously remit after allo-BMT.
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PMID:Case report of spontaneous remission of cytogenetic relapse of chronic myelogenous leukemia suggestive of progression to blast crisis after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. 782 5

The polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was used to amplify the bcr/abl transcript as a marker of minimal residual disease (MRD) in 76 patients with chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) subjected to allogeneic BMT and in complete hematological remission. We examined 56 patients transplanted in chronic phase (CP) and 20 in advanced phase (AD), including 16 in accelerated phase and four in blastic transformation. A total of 135 samples collected between 4 and 105 months from BMT were analyzed and the PCR analysis was positive in 33 (24%) samples from 20 patients. The bcr/abl chimeric transcript was detected in 7/13 (54%) patients analyzed within 1 year and in 21/88 (23%) beyond 1 year from BMT. Fluctuation of the residual disease at the molecular level in individual patients was recorded. The results have been correlated with a number of clinical parameters obtained before and after BMT; among the tested variables only the phase of the disease at BMT was associated with higher frequency of PCR positivity after BMT. The probability of finding persisting disease 1 year beyond BMT was significantly higher (P = 0.00005) in patients allografted in AD (14/26, 54%) as compared to patients grafted in CP (7/62, 11%). At any interval from BMT the difference between the two groups remained statistically significant: the bcr/abl transcript was present in 5/31 patients transplanted in CP compared to 9/15 patients transplanted in AD (P = 0.003) between 12 and 36 months from BMT, and in 2/31 CP vs 5/11 AD patients (P = 0.008) beyond 36 months from BMT.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:bcr/abl chimeric transcript in patients in remission after marrow transplantation for chronic myeloid leukemia: higher frequency of detection and slower clearance in patients grafted in advanced disease as compared to patients grafted in chronic phase. 852 78

The chronic myelogenous leukemia [CML] is a clonal disease of hematopoietic stem cells with unknown etiology. The incidence is around 2/100,000/year, the median age at diagnosis about 47 years. The course of CML is characterized by a chronic phase with few symptoms and good therapeutic response of about 4 to 5 years duration and by transition to a prognostically unfavourable blast phase of about 3 months duration. Therapy of choice, at present, is early allogenous bone marrow transplantation [BMT], which is curative in 40 to 80% of transplanted cases. In patients below 55 years, a donor search should be started at the earliest possible time after diagnosis. Drug therapy of choice are interferon alpha [IFN] and hydroxyurea, which are both superior to busulfan with regard to duration of chronic phase and survival. Complete cytogenetic remissions are observed in 5 to 9% of IFN-treated patients in randomized studies, but virtually all remain positive for bcr/abl by PCR. Whether and in how far IFN is superior to hydroxyurea appears, at least in part, to depend on the treatment intensity with hydroxyurea and on patients characteristics. In analyzing median survival times, the risk profiles of the patients have to be considered. In the future, intensive chemotherapy with or without autografting might play an important role in the therapy of chronic-phase CML. Forthcoming trials have to consider both, conventional and new experimental treatment modalities. An example is the treatment strategy of the ongoing randomized study of the German CML Study Group which compares allogenous BMT with the best available drug therapy and, in addition, analyses the influence of intensified drug therapy on survival.
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PMID:[Chronic myeloid leukemia]. 862 68

Reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) has shown promise as a means of detecting low levels of cells bearing the Philadelphia chromosome (Ph1) and for detecting cytogenetically inapparent ("masked") Ph1 in patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML). For detection by karyotyping, dividing cells must be used, precluding use of peripheral blood samples in cases with low peripheral blood blast counts. Reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction was performed in 83 bone marrow and 30 peripheral blood samples from patients with CML to compare results with karyotyping and to evaluate utility of this test on peripheral blood samples. Using isolated total cellular RNA and a single primer pair, cDNA was transcribed, amplified, electrophoresed, and probed for bcr/abl fusion involving M-bcr exons 2 and 3 of the bcr gene. Fifty-three samples were from untreated or conventionally treated patients (pre-BMT), and 60 were from patients who had undergone bone marrow transplantation (post-BMT). Fifty of 53 pre-BMT samples were positive by RT-PCR. Two samples, negative by RT-PCR, had complex translocations, t(9;16;22) and t(4;14;22). One case was indeterminate by RT-PCR, but positive on retesting. Forty-five of 53 had Ph1 by karyotyping; 8 were negative, including 5 peripheral blood samples, 2 bone marrow samples with "masked" Ph1, and 1 bone marrow sample with poor growth. Thirty-five of 60 post-BMT samples were positive by RT-PCR. Fourteen of 60 post-BMT samples had Ph1 by karyotyping. Of the RT-PCR+/Ph1- cases, most showed a weak but definite band by RT-PCR, suggesting a low level of the bcr/abl fusion gene. Nineteen patients had concurrent peripheral blood and bone marrow samples analyzed by RT-PCR and karyotyping. Of 16 patients with satisfactory RNA extraction, 15 had concordant results by RT-PCR. Five patients had adequate metaphase cells for karyotypic analysis. All had Ph1 in bone marrow, but were negative in peripheral blood. Our results indicate that RT-PCR for detection of bcr/abl fusion is more sensitive than karyotyping in pre- and post-BMT samples. Furthermore, RT-PCR can be successfully performed on peripheral blood, yielding excellent correlation with bone marrow samples.
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PMID:Reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction for bcr/abl fusion in chronic myelogenous leukemia. 865 51

A patient, who was treated twice with donor lymphocyte infusions for relapse of CML after an allogeneic BMT was given lymphoblastoid human alpha-IFN after a third relapse. Further donor lymphocyte infusions were followed by repeated courses of 30 days treatment with a low dosage of IL-2 subcutaneously, alternately with alpha-IFN. This treatment resulted in a hematologic and cytogenetic remission. He also developed a limited degree of chronic GVHD. At the latest follow-up at 20 months after the third course of lymphocyte infusions he is in continuous hematologic and cytogenetic remission. Furthermore, a qualitative PCR analysis for the bcr/abl translocation is negative.
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PMID:Lymphoblastoid human interferon and low dose IL-2 combined with donor lymphocyte infusion as therapy of a third relapse of CML--a case report. 883 27

Donor CD4+ and CD8+ T cells mediate graft-vs.-leukemia (GVL) responses in the allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (alloBMT) setting. To evaluate the role of functional T cell subsets in the mediation of GVL, alloreactive donor CD4+ (Th1/Th2) and CD8+ (Tc1/Tc2) T cells of defined cytokine phenotype were generated by in vitro culture. A leukemia/transplantation model (B6 into B6C3F1; 1050 cGy host irradiation) was established using the bcr/abl-transfected myeloid leukemia line, 32Dp210 (P210; H-2k). Leukemia control mice (1X10(4) P210 cells per recipient) died at day 12.0 post-BMT. Recipients of the CD4+, Th1-type or CD8+, Tc1-type populations were conferred a survival advantage (death at 20.7 and 23.5 days post-BMT, respectively). In contrast, the CD4+, Th2-type population did not mediate GVL (death at 12.3 days). Furthermore, cell mixing experiments demonstrated that the Th2 subset abrogated both Th1- and Tc1-mediated GVL. The CD8+, Tc2 population, which secreted type II cytokines and lysed the P210 leukemia target in vitro, mediated GVL in some experiments; interestingly, the magnitude of Tc2-mediated GVL was inversely related to the level of interleukin-10 (IL-10) secreted in vitro by the Tc2 population. These studies therefore indicate that alloreactive T cells of type I phenotype maximally generate GVL, and that type I/type II interactions are an important consideration for allogeneic transplantation in the setting of leukemic hosts.
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PMID:Allospecific CD4+, Th1/Th2 and CD8+, Tc1/Tc2 populations in murine GVL: type I cells generate GVL and type II cells abrogate GVL. 919 54

We studied the feasibility of the clinical application of a new bcr/abl analysis system, C-TRAK t(9;22), consisting of a multiplex RT-PCR and a colormetric assay. With this system, bcr/abl transcripts could be detected in all of 24 cytogenetic Philadelphia chromosome (Ph) positive leukemia patients and in none of eight Ph negative patients. Multiple bcr/abl transcripts could be detected in three of the 24 Ph positive patients, the fusion of bcr exon 1 to abl exon 2 (e1a2 junction) dominated that of bcr exon 13 to abl exon 2 (b2a2 junction) in two cases and that of bcr exon 14 to abl exon 2 (b3a2 junction) and b2a2 dominated e1a2 in one case. This system was sensitive enough to be able to detect even one bcr/abl transcript-producing cell in 50000 bcr/abl negative background cells, thus making it suitable for semiquantitative evaluation. Minimal residual disease (MRD) was monitored in one Ph positive leukemia patient who underwent allogenic bone marrow transplantation (allo-BMT). After allo-BMT, a weak positivity of the bcr/abl transcript continued with no clinical relapse; this result was consistent with that of a conventional nested PCR assay using ethidium bromide staining. Including all the procedures for RNA extraction, it took only about 10 h to detect the bcr/abl transcripts. Our findings indicate that this bcr/abl analysis system provides a quick and sensitive method for screening bcr/abl transcripts and possibly for monitoring MRD in Ph positive leukemia patients.
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PMID:Detection of bcr/abl fusion transcripts by semiquantitative multiplex RT-PCR combined with a colormetric assay in Ph positive leukemia. 950 Feb 7

Transformed chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) has a dismal prognosis, and treatment with a variety of chemotherapeutic agents is extremely disappointing. A novel therapeutic approach was initiated to improve the outcome of this condition. Nine patients, four females and five males, with either acceleration of CML or blast crisis (myeloid), or, in two instances, both, entered this pilot study. Median age was 60 years; seven patients were Philadelphia chromosome positive; two were negative but showed a bcr/abl rearrangement. All patients had a well-defined preceding period of stable chronic phase, for which they received sequentially hydroxyurea (N = 9), interferon (IFN) (N = 3), busulfan (N = 2), melphalan (N = 1), 6-MP (N = 1), or allogeneic BMT (N = 1). Median length of preceding chronic phase to acceleration or blast crisis was 56 months. All patients responded to treatment with a starting dose of IFN (9 Mio U/day), subcutaneously, and hydroxyurea (3 g/day), orally, by reversal to chronic phase. Three of the patients responded repeatedly during their course of disease. Median time for reversal to chronic phase was 4 weeks. Adverse side effects like nausea, vomiting, hair loss, fever, and prolonged cytopenia as seen after chemotherapy were not observed. The duration of chronic phase varied, and lasted, in six instances, more than 5 months, while the Philadelphia chromosome persisted. One additional patient received an unrelated bone marrow transplantation after reaching chronic phase (+24 months). Disease progression occurred 2 months after cessation of treatment. This treatment has proven very promising so far.
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PMID:Successful treatment of accelerated and blastic phase of chronic myeloid leukemia with high-dose interferon-alpha combined with hydroxyurea. 961 49


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