Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0002895 (sickle cell disease)
11,747 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

According to the FAB classification, a patient (case 1) could not be diagnosed as MDS-RA, although she had clinical features of MDS, as compared with another patient (case 2) who was diagnosed as RAS and had abnormal karyotype (20q- and 5q-) of bone marrow (BM) cells. BM cells of the two patients were SCD (sister chromatid differentiation) negative. Rearrangement of c-erbB and c-erbA was found in the genome of the BM cells in both patients, when southern blot hybridization was performed with probe v-erbB+A. Therefore, case 1 could be diagnosed as preleukemia. During a period about 3 years of treatment with the drug stanozolol in case 1 there was good effect and successful reversion was obtained. She had then normal hematologic and cytogenetic patterns of BM and PB and the rearrangement of c-erbB of BM cells also disappeared. She has worked for two years since then. The mechanism of effective treatment and successful reversion was discussed briefly. Probe v-erbB was shown to be useful in investigation of gene diagnosis of preleukemia or MDS (shown elsewhere).
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PMID:[Gene diagnosis and successful reversion in a patient with preleukemia]. 130 46

Between February 1995 and August 1997, 11 children (eight males, three females) aged 4-16 years (median 7 years) underwent allogeneic PBPC transplantation for treatment of hematological disorders. Seven patients with acute leukemia (n = 5 ALL, n = 1 AML) or lymphoma (n = 1) received primary allogeneic PBPC transplantation, four patients received a second allotransplantation for graft failure (n = 1 AML, n = 1 sickle cell anemia) or disease recurrence (n = 1 ALL, n = 1 MDS). Five donors were HLA-identical siblings, five were 0-1 antigen mismatched family members and one was a matched unrelated donor. Donors received G-CSF 10-12 microg/kg/day for 3-7 days, and underwent one or two leukaphereses. The median cell yield per donor expressed per kg of recipient body weight was as follows: mononucleated cells 10.8 x 10(8)/kg (range 4.7-21.2); CD34+ cells 8.6 x 10(6)/kg (range 3.2-22); CD3+ cells 3.7 x 10(8)/kg (range 2.7-7.5). All patients achieved an ANC >0.5 x 10(9)/l after a median of 12 days (11-18). An unsupported platelet count >50 x 10(9)/l was reached 15 days (13-21) after PBPC transplantation; four patients failed to reach this threshold. Acute GVHD (aGVHD) grades II to IV occurred in eight (73%) patients: seven of them experienced grade III-IV aGVHD. Seven patients evaluable for chronic GVHD (cGVHD) were scored as absent in five, limited in one and extensive in one patient. As of September 1997, six patients (55 %) were alive between 60 and 938 days post-transplant (median follow-up 274 days); four patients with malignancy were alive in CR after primary allotransplantation, two patients were alive after a second PBPC transplant. Five patients have died with the main causes of death being aGVHD (n = 3), ARDS (n = 1), relapse of the underlying disease (n = 1). In conclusion, despite the limited number of patients, these preliminary results indicate that PBPC may be considered as an alternative to bone marrow for allografting also in children.
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PMID:Allogeneic transplantation of peripheral blood progenitor cells in children: experience of two pediatric centers. 998 87

The development of decitabine from its synthesis in 1964 to the submission of a registration file has been described. Although the unique DNA-demethylating capacity of decitabine is known for a long time, its application is under continuing investigation. The use of decitabine in MDS, AML, CML, stem cell transplant, sickle cell anemia and thalassemia looks promising. The epigenetic dose seems lower than the cytotoxic dose. Whereas most drugs have matured after 40 years, decitabine is only at the beginning of a new development phase in epigenesis.
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PMID:Decitabine: a historical review of the development of an epigenetic drug. 1622 Mar 11

Although blood transfusions are important for patients with hemoglobinopathies, chronic transfusions inevitably lead to iron overload as humans cannot actively remove excess iron. The cumulative effects of iron overload lead to significant morbidity and mortality, if untreated. Desferrioxamine (DFO) is the reference-standard iron chelator whose safety and efficacy profile has been established through many years of clinical use. DFO side effects are acceptable and manageable however the prolonged subcutaneous infusion regimen of 5-7 days per week is very demanding and results in poor adherence to therapy. Deferiprone (Ferriprox, L1) is a bidentate molecule, orally administrable three-times/day, licensed in Europe and in other regions but in the USA and Canada, for the treatment of iron overload in patients for whom DFO therapy is contraindicated or inadequate. Preliminary evidences suggest that Deferiprone may be more effective than DFO in chelating cardiac iron. The side effects include gastrointestinal symptoms, liver dysfunction, joint pain, neutropenia and agranulocytosis. A weekly assessment of white blood cell counts is recommended because of the risk of agranulocytosis. Deferasirox is a new, convenient, once-daily oral iron chelator that has demonstrated in various clinical trials good efficacy and acceptable safety profile in adult and pediatric patients affected by transfusion-dependent thalassemia major and by different chronic anemias (SCD, BDA, MDS). The long half-life of Deferasirox (16-18 hours) provides sustained 24 hr iron chelation coverage. The efficacy and safety profile have been evaluated in more than 1000 patients in clinical trials allowing FDA registration. Patient satisfaction with Deferasirox was superior than with DFO therapy.
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PMID:Current status in iron chelation in hemoglobinopathies. 1899 52