Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.1.3.1 (alkaline phosphatase)
47,916 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Forty-eight patients with refractory anemia (RA) were retrospectively analyzed for their prognosis and subclassified into three groups: 12 patients with hematological improvement (A), 23 patients with no changes (B), and 13 patients with progression to RAEB or acute leukemia (C). For all patients, the median survival were 49.2 months, and the rate of leukemic transformation was 16%. The median survivals were 60.6, 32.1, and 17.9 months, respectively, for groups A, B and C. The factors indicating poor prognosis were low reticulocyte counts, low neutrophil alkaline phosphatase activity, low% red cell utilization, high M/E ratio, high blast percentage in the bone marrow and cytological abnormalities in the granulocyte and megakaryocyte series. By using multiple discriminant analysis, we obtained a formula for the prognostic estimation with a discrimination probability of 62.5%. This formula could predict either the patients with good (Y greater than 0.85) or poor (Y less than 0.59) prognosis, and might be useful to select the treatment for this intractable anemia at the time of diagnosis.
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PMID:[Multiple discriminant analysis for prognosis of refractory anemia]. 194 20

Myelodysplastic syndromes (SMD) were studied in 58 patients (37 men, 21 women; mean age 61 years, range 18-81) who were grouped according to FAB criteria (Table 1). None of them showed a secondary SMD to medullary toxic agents or cytostatic treatments although 5 presented concomitant neoplastic disease. Morphologic alterations in peripheral blood smears and bone marrow were registered by 3 hematologists working independently. The intracellular and extracellular iron deposits were evaluated in every case with Perls; peroxidase activity was determined in 16 patients and intraleucocitary alkaline phosphatase reaction was carried out in 17 patients. Twenty five patients (43%) had refractory anemia (RA); 10 (17%) sideroblastic anemia; 13 (25%) refractory anemia with excess of blasts (AREB); 3 (5%) AREB in transformation (AREB-T) and 7 myelomonocytic leukemia (LMMC). Clinical manifestations at diagnosis are described in Table 2. In the observation period there were cases of anemia requiring transfusion, bacterial infections, muco-cutaneous hemorrhage and hemorrhagic episodes in the central nervous system. In the bone marrow smears the cellularity was normal or increased in 53 cases and diminished in only 3. The degree of dysplastic characteristics (erythroid, granulocytic and megakaryocytic) ranged from low to severe. It was low in most of AR, being the erythroid population the most affected in AS and the granulocytic one in AREB and AREB-T. Patients with LMMC showed similar characteristics to those with myeloproliferative syndromes and the differential diagnosis were sometimes difficult, accounting for their separate inclusion in Table 4. Out of 23 patients, 5 presented clonal pathology detected in cytogenetic studies.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Myelodysplastic syndrome: experience of the Study and Treatment of Bone Marrow Failure Group]. 213 Feb 4

A 34-year-old man was admitted with lumbago and anemia in November 1992. Hematological examination revealed an Hb 9.2g/dl, WBC count 13,500 microliters (33% blasts), and monocyte count 3,400/microliters. Bone marrow examination showed hyperplasia with dysplasia in trilineage blood cells and increased blasts (21.8%). A diagnosis of refractory anemia with excess of blasts in transformation (RAEB in T) was made. Cytochemical examination revealed the neutrophils in the peripheral blood were 66.5% positive for alpha-naphthyl butyrate esterase inhibited by sodium fluoride, 4.0% positive for peroxidase and 75% positive for alkaline phosphatase. The results of immuno-alkaline phosphatase stainings (avidin biotin alkaline phosphatase complex method) of neutrophils were as follows; CD16 (94.5%), CD24 (91.0%), CD13 (93.0%), CD14 (52.5%), CD33 (39.0%), CD36 (16.5%), HLA-DR (17.0%). These neutrophils exhibited monocyte-specific features and failed to show characteristics of neutrophils.
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PMID:[CD14-positive and nonspecific esterase-positive neutrophils in a patient with refractory anemia with excess of blasts in transformation]. 750 51

Refractory thrombocytopenia (RTC) is a counter-concept to refractory anemia, which is characterized by isolated thrombocytopenia associated with clonal chromosomal abnormality. The diagnosis of RTC is difficult to establish based on morphologic features alone. And steroid therapy for RTC is often ineffective. We examined 3 patients with RTC to identify its characteristics and measured serum thrombopoietin levels. The mean platelet count was 5.1 x 10(4)/microl and the mean age was 64 years. None of our patients had clinical nor laboratory evidence of liver dysfunction, renal disease or disseminated intravascular coagulation. All patients were negative for antiplatelet antibody, PA-IgG and anticardiolipin-beta2GPI antibody. Leukocyte alkaline phosphatase level was low in two patients. Clonal chromosomal abnormalities of different types were detected in all patients. Bone marrow smears showed micromegakaryocytes. But there were no apparent morphological abnormalities of erythroid and granuloid series. Thrombopoietin levels, as determined by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, varied from <0.2 to 1.40 fmol/ml. We could not find the screening tool of RTC. In conclusion, there is a need to identify RTC from isolated thrombocytopenia because the patients with RTC don't have good prognosis as patients with isolated thrombocytopenia. Cytogenetic analysis is necessary to establish the diagnosis of RTC. We recommend that a patient above 50 years of age presenting with isolated thrombocytopenia and a low leukocyte alkaline phosphatase score should be suspected of having RTC.
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PMID:Clinical analysis and TPO levels in three patients with refractory thrombocytopenia. 1050 5

The expression of leukocyte alkaline phosphatase (LAP) in neutrophils is reduced in some patients with myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS). We quantitatively assayed for LAP in MDS leukocytes by a flow cytometry based method using a monoclonal antibody raised against human bone alkaline phosphatase. The LAP expression was assayed in blood samples from a group of 46 MDS patients, consisting of 39 patients with refractory anemia (RA), 3 with RA with excess blasts (RAEB), and 4 patients with RAEB in transformation. The percentage of LAP-positive cells was significantly higher in the MDS patients than in the normal subjects and also higher in RA than in RAEB and RAEB in transformation. To investigate the cause of the elevated LAP expression, we measured the serum concentrations of several cytokines. The granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) level was significantly elevated in MDS patients, and the serum G-CSF concentration clearly correlated with the percentage of LAP-positive cells. Thus, the LAP activity in RA is higher than in normal subjects, and G-CSF is thought to be one of the causes stimulating LAP expression in MDS neutrophils.
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PMID:Flow-cytometric analysis of leukocyte alkaline phosphatase in myelodysplastic syndromes. 1052 12

We studied bone marrow stromal cell cultures from patients with childhood myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS, refractory anemia with excess of blasts, RAEB) and from matched normal donors. Stromal cell monolayers were characterized as myofibroblasts by the expression of smooth muscle alpha-actin, collagen IV, laminin and fibronectin. When normal cord blood cells were plated onto myelodysplastic stromas, a pathologic cell differentiation was observed, indicating altered myelosupportive properties. cDNA array analysis showed that patient stromas expressed increased levels of thrombospondin-1, collagen-I alpha2-chain, osteoblast-specific factor-2 and osteonectin, indicating the presence of increased osteoblast content, as confirmed by enhanced alkaline phosphatase synthesis. Alterations in the myelodysplastic stroma environment might contribute to abnormal hematopoiesis in this pathology.
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PMID:Bone marrow stroma in childhood myelodysplastic syndrome: composition, ability to sustain hematopoiesis in vitro, and altered gene expression. 1520 81

Despite the enormous cardiovascular disease epidemic and poor survival among individuals with chronic kidney disease (CKD), traditional risk factors such as hypercholesterolemia, hypertension, and obesity appear not as relevant as was previously thought, nor would their management improve survival in patients with CKD who are undergoing dialysis. On the contrary, kidney disease wasting (KDW) (also known as the malnutrition-inflammation complex), renal anemia, and kidney bone disease (KBD) appear to be the 3 most important nontraditional risk factors associated with cardiovascular disease in CKD. KBD-associated hyperparathyroidism may contribute to worsening refractory anemia and KDW/inflammation. The main cause of secondary hyperparathyroidism is active vitamin D deficiency. Hence, treatment of patients with KBD with vitamin D analogs, especially those with lesser effects on calcium and phosphorus such as paricalcitol, may be the most promising option for improving CKD outcomes. By conducting survival analyses in a 2-year (7/2001 to 6/2003) cohort of 58,058 patients on hemodialysis, we recently found that associations between high serum parathyroid hormone and increased death risk were masked by the demographic and clinical characteristics of patients, and that alkaline phosphatase had an incremental association with mortality. Administration of paricalcitol was associated with improved survival in time-varying models. We now present additional subgroup analyses that show that administration of any dose of paricalcitol, when compared with no paricalcitol, is associated with better likelihood of survival in virtually all subgroups of patients on hemodialysis. Because these associations may be secondary to bias by indication, randomized clinical trials are necessary to verify the findings of this and similar observational studies.
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PMID:Impact of kidney bone disease and its management on survival of patients on dialysis. 1719 30

In order to clarify the relationship between myelodysplastic morphologic features of marrow cells and prognoses and 1.0 define other prognostic factors, 124 patients with the FAB criteria of myelodysplastic syndrome (MIX) were analysed. These included 57 patients with refractory anemia (RA), 5 RA with ring sideroblasts (RARS), 25 RA with excess of blasts (RAEB), 14 chronic myelomonocytic: leukemia (CMML) and 23 with RAEB in transformation (RAEB in T). Univariate analysis of all MDS patients or those of RA demonstrated that the following factors, which were not reported or fully investigated previously, were significantly associated with prognosis. These included neutrophil alkaline phosphatase (NAP) score (significant only for all MDS), the percentage of marrow erythroblasts and lymphocytes present, the percentage of cells with morphological abnormalities in individual cell lineages and the number of cell lineages showing atypia (significant for all MDS and RA). Multiple regression analysis showed that (%) of marrow erythroblasts, NAP score, hemoglobin levels and number of marrow granulocytes with atypia were significant for predicting the prognosis of all MDS patients while the number of marrow megakaryocytes and granulocytes with atypia were significant for prognosis in the subgroup with RA.
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PMID:Prognostic Features in the Myelodysplastic Syndromes: Importance of Morphological Atypia in the Marrow Cell Lineages. 2746 20