Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.5.1.1 (asparaginase)
2,695 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Between May 1980 and April 1987, 49 children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) in isolated testicular and first leukemia relapse (ITR) were enrolled in the Associazione Italiana Ematologia ed Oncologia Pediatrica (AIEOP) multicenter study REC80-ITR. According to the Rome Workshop criteria, 77% were at standard and 23% at high initial prognostic risk. In 33% of the cases, ITR occurred during first treatment. The REC80-ITR protocol consisted of an induction phase regimen of vincristine (VCR), cytarabine (ARA-C), methotrexate (MTX), and asparaginase (L-asp), and bilateral testicular irradiation, and CNS prophylaxis with intrathecal MTX and a maintenance phase with a multidrug rotating regimen. Total treatment duration was 30 months. The median time of observation after ITR was 51 months. The Kaplan-Meier estimates of survival and disease-free survival (DFS) at 4 years were 67.7% and 41%, respectively. Patients who had an ITR on therapy or within the first off-therapy year showed the poorest outcome. The DFS at 3 years was 20%, 47.6%, and 100%, respectively, for children who had an ITR on treatment (n = 16), within the first year of treatment withdrawal (n = 22), or later (n = 10) (P = .001). Patients with an asymptomatic occult testicular infiltrate at treatment discontinuation had a very unfavorable prognosis. Eighty-one percent of second relapses involved the bone marrow. In our experience, children presenting an early ITR (ie, within 6 months of treatment withdrawal) need a very aggressive treatment because of the high probability of an underlying systemic disease. On the other hand, patients with a late ITR seem to have a truly local recurrence and can apparently be cured by standard protocols, as shown in protocol REC80-ITR.
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PMID:Treatment of isolated testicular relapse in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia: an Italian multicenter study. Associazione Italiana Ematologia ed Oncologia Pediatrica. 217 80

We prospectively treated 127 children with ALL with a risk-adapted regimen. All patients received the identical induction-consolidation therapy. The early maintenance included intermediate dose methotrexate in patients with standard risk (n = 79) and medium risk (n = 39). In addition patients with high risk (n = 6) received high dose ARA-C followed by L-asparaginase. Intensification treatment and prophylactic cranial irradiation was also tailored according to the risk group. Treatment duration was 2 years. Complete remission was achieved in 97.6% of all patients. Treatment-related toxicity accounted for one death in complete remission. The probability of event-free survival (pEFS) for the combined group was 72% at a median follow-up of 42 months. The pEFS was higher in patients with standard risk (SR) than in patients with medium risk (MR) (80% versus 65%; p less than 0.05) at 30 months, but attenuated in the follow-up evaluation at 42 months (76% versus 63%; p less than 0.1). The number of high-risk patients was too small for statistical evaluation. Relapse within the first 18 months after diagnosis indicated a poor prognosis and was more common in patients with MR than in patients with SR. The immunophenotype of the leukemic cells was not found to constitute an independent risk factor after treatment has been risk-adapted. Patients with an initial white blood cell count of more than 50 X 10(9)/l had a worse prognosis than patients with a lower white blood cell count (p less than 0.01).
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PMID:Childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia: results of the Austrian Cooperative Study Group with the ALL A 84 protocol. 240 31

149 children with acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL) were admitted to a prospective therapeutic regime. Remission induction was achieved by vincristine, daunorubicine, L-asparaginase and prednisone. During consolidation the patients received three intermediate dose methotrexate (MTX) infusions over 24 hours combined with intrathecal MTX, followed by L-asparaginase. High-risk patients were treated in addition with high dose cyclophosphamide and ARA-C over 3 weeks. Standard risk patients received cranial irradiation with 18 Gy, high-risk patients with 24 Gy. Maintenance therapy was performed with 6-mercaptopurine and MTX orally. Immunologic phaenotyping revealed: c-ALL 73%, pre-T or T-ALL 15%, c/T-ALL 4% and undifferentiated leukemia (AUL) 8%. Only 1 patient was nonresponder, 7 patients died during induction therapy, 5 patients during continuous complete remission (CCR). 18 relapses occurred, 12 of which were systemic, 8 CNS and 2 testicular relapses. In the total group the 54 months probability of CCR is 0,68 +/- 0,05 (life-table-analysis), for the reduced group 0,75 +/- 0,05. In the reduced group the probability of CCR at 54 months for standard risk patients is 0,86 +/- 0,06; for high-risk patients 0,60 +/- 0,09; for patients with c-ALL 0,73 +/- 0,08; for patients with c/T-ALL 1,0 +/- 0,0; for patients with pre-T or T-ALL 0,58 +/- 0,2 and for patients with AUL 0,45 +/- 0,25. For the reduced group the CCR probability at 54 months in relation to the leukocytes (WBC) at diagnosis is in patients with WBC less than 25 X 10(3)/mm3: 0,80 +/- 0,06; for patients with WBC greater than 25 X 10(3)/mm3: 0,63 +/- 0,11.
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PMID:[The Munich study on the treatment of acute lymphoblastic leukemia in childhood (ALL 77-02)]. 389 49

Thirty patients with advanced acute leukemia and lymphoma were treated with the sequential combination of high dose ARA-C (HiDAC 3 gm/m2 infused i.v. over 3 h at 0, 12, 24, 36 h) and asparaginase (ASP 6.000 IU/m2 i.m. at hour 42). The sequence was given on day 1 and 8 irrespective of the degree of myelosuppression. Of 22 patients with leukemia there was only one who was absolutely refractory to therapy. Complete remission was induced in 3 patients with ANLL (30%) and in 3 with ALL (30%). Three patients became hypoplastic but recovered with blasts and 12 died from infection, complicated by intracranial hemorrhage in 3, during hypoplasia. Of 8 patients with lymphoma, 2 were clearly refractory to therapy, one died from sepsis and the remaining 5 all entered remission (2 CR + 3 PR, 62%). Activity of HiDAC/ASP against CNS disease is suggested by the clinical response seen in patients with overt meningeal or intracerebral involvement. Toxicity associated with HiDAC/ASP was mainly hematologic. All but one patient experienced hypoplasia and severe pancytopenia; documented infections and major hemorrhages occurred in 80 and 20% of patients respectively. We conclude that HiDAC/ASP is a regimen with definite activity against acute leukemia and lymphoma including CNS disease. Alternate treatment schedules should be explored in order to reduce marrow toxicity.
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PMID:Sequential combination of high dose ARA-C (HiDAC) and asparaginase (ASP) for the treatment of advanced acute leukemia and lymphoma. 647 2

Resistance of leukemia cells to cytosine arabinoside (ARA-C) may be due to any one or combination of biochemical processes, which in certain instances may be substantially reversed by an appropriate increase in ARA-C dosage. Based on these and other laboratory observations indicating pharmacologic synergy between sequential high-dose ARA-C and asparaginase (HiDAC----ASNase), a therapeutic program was developed for the treatment of patients with acute nonlymphocytic leukemia (ANLL) refractory to conventional doses of ARA-C, as well as patients with high risk ANLL and advanced acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL). Treatment consisted of 3-hr intravenous infusions of 3 g/sq m of ARA-C given at 12-hr intervals for 4 doses, followed by 6,000 IU/sq m ASNase given i.m. at hour 42. The same schedule was repeated on day 8. In 32 induction attempts, only 4 patients proved to be truly refractory, i.e., failed to achieve substantial leukemia cell cytoreduction. Complete remissions were achieved with HiDAC---- ASNase in 9 of 13 patients with refractory ANLL, 6 of 9 patients with antecedent hematologic disorders, and 3 of 10 patients with advanced ALL. These include 9 of 14 patients who had either failed induction or who had relapsed on active ARA-C therapy and 6 of 8 patients who had had no prior exposure to ARA-C. The median duration of unmaintained remission in ANLL was 5 mo. In a patient with central nervous system (CNS) leukemia, there was clearance of cerebral spinal fluid (CSF) blasts without intrathecal therapy, suggesting a role for HiDAC in CNS prophylaxis. In general, toxicity was tolerable and reversible. These data suggest that HiDAC----ASNase is an exceptionally effective and well tolerated regimen in leukemic patients with antecedent hematologic disorders and in those refractory to conventional doses of ARA-C.
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PMID:Treatment of poor risk acute leukemia with sequential high-dose ARA-C and asparaginase. 669 96

The goals of study NHL-BFM 90 for the therapy group Non-B NHL are to prospectively evaluate the dynamic of tumor regression and the persistence of a residual mass after induction therapy for its prognostic impact. Patients (pts) of stages I and II receive induction composed of prednisone, vincristine (VCR), daunorubicin, L-asparaginase (L-ASP), cyclophosphamide (CP), cytarabine (ARA-C), 6-mercaptopurine (6-MP) and intrathecally (i.th.) methotrexate (MTX), followed by consolidation (6-MP,MTX 5 g/m2 x 4, MTX i.th.), and maintenance up to 24 months. Pts of stages III and IV receive additionally reinduction (Dexamethasone, VCR, doxorubicin, L-ASP, CP, ARA-C, 6-thioguanine, MTX i.th.) and cranial irradiation. Pts with < 70% tumor regression at day 33 of induction receive an intensified chemotherapy. Pts with > 70% tumor regression at day 33 but a persistent mass at the end of induction have a surgical resection. Pts with a completely necrotic residual mass continue with consolidation therapy. Pts with active residual lymphoma receive an intensified chemotherapy. No local radiotherapy is given. From 4/1990 to 12/1992, 80 pts were registered; 71 pts are evaluable for response. The distribution of stages is as follows: 6, 1, 47, 17 pts of stage I, II, III, IV, respectively. The probability of event free survival at 3 years is 87 +/- 4% for the whole group (median observation time 21 months). 66 pts are evaluable for the dynamic of response.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[NHL-BFM 90 therapy study in treatment of malignant non-Hodgkin's lymphomas in children and adolescents. Part 2: An intermediate term analysis of the non-B-NHL therapy group. BFM Study group]. 796 19