Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.4.22.36 (caspase-1)
6,285 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Autologous bone marrow transplantation for the treatment of solid tumors in adults remains an uncommon therapeutic approach. The feasibility of such high-dose therapies is clearly proved, especially with the advent of hematopoietic growth factors and the rescue by the peripheral stem cells to reduce the duration of the chemotherapy-induced myeloid aplasia. The question is to exactly define the place of high-dose therapy in the land of solid tumors. For the treatment of primary chemoresistant gonadal germ-cell tumors, the possibility to cure the patients and the interest of high-dose therapy with autologous bone marrow transplantation are clearly demonstrated. As consolidation for the treatment of poor prognosis tumors, the place of high-dose therapies remains moot. For the treatment of chemoresistant extragonadal germ-cell tumors, especially for primary mediastinal tumors, the level of resistance to cisplatin-based chemotherapy regimens is generally too high to be overcome by intensive therapies given as single course or as tandem courses. However in association with debulking surgery, this therapeutic approach has to be considered for some patients. In the treatment of poor prognosis breast cancer, high-dose therapy with autologous bone marrow transplantation or with peripheral stem cells support is able to convert some patients with partial response into complete responders. However, the consequences on overall survival and on disease-free survival are not evident. For metastatic breast cancer and for poor-prognosis tumors (inflammatory breast cancer, axillary metastatic nodes > or = 8), the interest of high-dose therapy has to be determined by randomized studies. These studies are ongoing in USA and in Europe. For the treatment of poor-prognosis ovarian cancer, the situation is more difficult to appraise. Once again, randomized studies have to be done to precisely define the place of high-dose therapy. In the land of small-cell lung carcinomas, high-dose therapy is actually forsaken by most of authors, even for limited diseases. The results of previous studies are disappointing. Moreover, occult medullary micrometastases involvement is frequent, once again even in limited diseases. However new therapeutic associations, as the ICE regimen (IFM, Carboplatin, VP-16) delivered as single or tandem therapy, have to be studied, especially as early consolidation therapy for the treatment of limited small-cell lung carcinomas.
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PMID:[Therapeutic intensification and hematopoietic stem cell autotransplantation in the treatment of solid tumors in adults: principles, realization and application to the treatment of germ cell, trophoblastic, breast, ovarian and small-cell bronchial tumors. 1]. 787 Dec 69

Cervical carcinoma is a common disease for which the prognosis has not been substantially improved with standard locoregional treatments. Three stage IB patients with untreated cervical carcinoma were treated with high-dose chemotherapy and refrigerated peripheral blood stem cell support using the ICE program (Ifosfamide 10 g/m2 plus mesna at 100% of the ifosfamide dose; Carboplatin at 1.5 g/m2 and Etoposide 2.1 g/m2). Patients received the treatment in an adjuvant setting after radical hysterectomy with pelvic lymph-node dissection and postoperative cisplatin-based standard-dose chemotherapy. All patients underwent postoperative radiotherapy. The treatment was well-tolerated, all patients had rapid hematologic recovery, and the most frequent complications were grade 3 mucositis and neutropenic fever. The three patients are disease-free at 58, 60, and 63 months of follow-up. Our results show that adjuvant high-dose chemotherapy could be effective to reduce the likelihood of relapse in high-risk patients. High-dose chemotherapy deserves a formal evaluation in high-risk cervical cancer.
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PMID:Adjuvant high-dose chemotherapy supported by peripheral blood stem cell transplantation for high-risk cervical carcinoma. 1124 Jul 89

Intestinal aspergillosis is an infection with a very high death rate especially in leukemic patients. Here we describe a case of a 46 years old woman with acute myeloid leukemia (LAM M5) who developed intestinal primary aspergillosis. This patient was diagnosed with LAM M5 through bone marrow aspiration and bone biopsy in March 2004. Symptoms of the disease were slight persistent fever, weight loss, asthenia, anemia, thrombocytopenia,and leukocytosis with high number of blasts in peripheral blood. After induction chemotherapy with ICE (Ifosfamide, Carboplatin, Etoposide), she developed neutropenia and high fever without apparent infective foci. She was treated with empiric antibiotic therapy, nevertheless she developed an intense diarrhea and ileo-cecal distention. Diagnostic exams didn't show signs of a focal lesion. Despite the change in antibiotic treatment and the transfusions of granulocytes and blood cells, the patient developed extremely critical conditions with persistence of neutropenia and abdominal distention. A surgical treatment was decided at the time. We treated the patient with a two steps surgical procedure. The first step was a right abdominal ileostomy followed by improvement of general conditions and then the second step a right colectomy. The histological morphology confirmed necrotizing colitis with Aspergillus ife. At that time , treatment with voriconazole was started. The general conditions of the patient improved rapidly and we were able to treat the patient with other medical anti-leukemic therapies. The patient is now cured and in healthy state. We obtained a good clinical result as only in other few cases described in literature.
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PMID:Emergency hemicolectomy for intestinal primary aspergillosis in acute myeloid leukemia. 2252 50