Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0015672 (fatigue)
51,768 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

As part of a multicenter trial 12 patients with myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) were treated with 14-day-cycles of recombinant human granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (rhGM-CSF; 250 micrograms/m2 day s.c.). In addition, all patients received 20 mg/m2/day s.c. cytosine-arabinoside (Ara-C) 12 h after GM-CSF except for patients suffering from refractory anemia (RA) according to FAB classification. Courses were repeated after 4 weeks. In 11 evaluable patients, results according to FAB-classified MDS were as follows: RA, 1/2 response (R), 1/2 stable disease (SD); RAEB, 2/3 R, 1/3 SD; RAEB-T, 1/6 CR, 1/6 PR, 2/6 R, 2/6 progression; CMML, 1/2 SD. In 2 patients with RAEB-T, overt acute myeloid leukemia was observed 2 and 10 weeks after initiation of treatment. With few exceptions, treatment resulted in a prompt increase in granulocytes and eosinophiles. This was associated with improvement of infectious complications. Increases in red cells and platelets occurred variably and was apparently associated with responses of the underlying disease. Dose limiting side effects consisted of fever, severe fatigue and dolent local reactions at the site of GM-CSF injection. In addition, nausea and diarrhoea occurred frequently. Less often, respiratory and cardiovascular side effects were encountered. In summary, GM-CSF +/- Ara-C in MDS results in objective remission with manageable toxicity. Conceivably, this regimen will serve as a base for future treatment strategies against MDS.
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PMID:Recombinant human granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor and low-dose cytosine-arabinoside in the treatment of patients with myelodysplastic syndromes. A phase II study. 218 22

The genes for a number of growth factors that stimulate human hematopoietic and lymphoid cells in vitro have recently been cloned and recombinant molecules provided for clinical trials. For three of these (erythropoietin, G-CSF, and GM-CSF), phase I and II studies have been completed and promising results have been obtained. Of particular relevance to the field of bone marrow transplantation (BMT) has been the finding that G-CSF and GM-CSF could shorten the period of neutropenia in patients treated with chemotherapy, including regimens requiring BMT support. Doses of up to 240 micrograms/m2 of GM-CSF have been well tolerated and have increased the peripheral blood neutrophil count in a dose-dependent manner. At higher doses, eosinophils and monocytes were also increased. A continuous infusion over at least 2 h was found to be superior to bolus administration in terms of both efficacy and reduced side effects. These have usually been mild, but bone pain, headache, fatigue and elevated temperature have been encountered. The rise in neutrophil numbers shortly after initiating treatment with GM-CSF is probably due to neutrophil demargination. After a few days increased bone marrow cellularity has also been noted. In addition to these effects on cell numbers, enhancement of granulocyte and monocyte functions has been documented. However, a major concern with the use of G-CSF and GM-CSF in cancer patients, particularly those with hematopoietic malignancies, is the potential of these molecules to stimulate malignant cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Colony stimulating factors. 245 88

We administered granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor (GM-CSF) to patients with aplastic anemia and myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS), as a phase III trial. The GM-CSF was given by 3 hrs intravenous drip infusion daily for at least fourteen days. Twenty-five patients with aplastic anemia and nineteen patients with MDS were evaluable for efficacy. Peripheral blood granulocyte counts, especially neutrophil counts and eosinophil counts, increased markedly by the administration of GM-CSF in each disease. Fifteen patients with MDS and nineteen patients with aplastic anemia responded to the GM-CSF. Dose-related increase of granulocytes were seen in patients with MDS, but no relation was seen in patients with aplastic anemia. Adverse effects were observed in some patients and flu-like syndrome including fever, general fatigue and anorexia were seen most commonly but were transient. Our results showed that GM-CSF is a potent stimulator of hematopoiesis in patients with aplastic anemia and MDS.
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PMID:[Clinical study of GM-CSF in patients with aplastic anemia and myelodysplastic syndrome. (CSF39-300 Study Group)]. 829 27

Recent progress of molecular biology and gene technology has developed a novel approach of clinical treatment. Several recombinant cytokines are already applied to clinical field. In this symposium, I introduced clinical application of some cytokines including GM-CSF, interleukin (IL)-1 and IL-3. The clinical benefits of IL-1 are; 1) IL-1 has an anti-tumor effect especially on cutaneous lymphoma and brain tumors, and 2) IL-1 has a function as hematopoietic growth factor for very immature hematopoietic stem cells. In the clinical Phase I/II study, IL-1 has been shown to have anti-tumor effect on cutaneous T-lymphoma via immune mechanisms. The side effects of IL-1 were variable including fever, fatigue, skin redness and so on, but they were all tolerable. The clinical phase studies of GM-CSF and IL-3 are now on going. The preliminary studies show that GM-CSF has granulo-poietic activity but not thrombo-poietic activity, and that IL-3 has multi-hematopoietic activity. These cytokines may be useful for treatment of disorders of hematopoietic stem cells such as aplastic anemia and myelodysplastic syndrome. The side effects of both cytokines are resemble, but all are tolerable.
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PMID:[Clinical application of new cytokines]. 835 Apr 99

Neutropenic pediatric patients with solid tumors and malignant lymphomas were treated with recombinant granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor (rh-GM-CSF). Eleven patients, including seven lympho-reticular malignancies, two Ewing's sarcoma and one patient in each group with the diagnosis of nasopharyngeal rhabdomyosarcoma, malignant mesenchymal tumor, entered the study. Six were females and five were males, the mean age was 10.4 yr, the range was 4 to 21 years. rh-GM-CSF was given at the dose of 5 micrograms/kg s.c. daily, starting either on the day following the last day of cytotoxic chemotherapy or when ANC < 1000/ml was determined. All patients received rh-GM-CSF for a total of seven days. Hematopoietic recovery occurred in all children except one. The response to rh-GM-CSF was achieved in a mean time of 7.4 days. Tolerance to rh-GM-CSF treatment was good. Adverse events were documented as fever, nausea, vomiting, fatigue, chills and itching. Sagittal sinus thrombosis developed in one patient 5 days following the completion of chemotherapy and rh-GM-CSF cycle. In conclusion, rh-GM-CSF can be applied during the intensive chemotherapy schedules of pediatric cancer patients.
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PMID:Granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor (rh-GM-CSF) in the treatment of chemotherapy-induced neutropenia. 859 35

We reported previously that the addition of recombinant Escherichia coli human granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor (GM-CSF) to a 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) and leucovorin (LV) regimen seemed to ameliorate diarrhea and permit increased 5-FU dose intensity (J. L. Grem et al., J. Clin. Oncol., 12: 560-568, 1994). We then tested the effect of GM-CSF given with a more toxic regimen of 5-FU/LV/IFN-alpha (IFN alpha-2a). Thirty-one patients with a good performance status and no prior chemotherapy for systemic disease received IFN alpha(-2a (5 MU/m2 s.c., days 1-7), 5-FU (370 mg/m2 i.v., days 2-6), LV (500 mg/m2 i.v., days 2-6), and GM-CSF (Saccharomyces cerevisiae 250 microg/m2 s.c., days 7-18) every 3 weeks. Toxicities and 5-FU dose intensity were compared with that observed in our prior Phase II trial with 5-FU/LV/IFN alpha-2a (J. L. Grem et al., J. Clin. Oncol., 11: 1737-1745, 1993). In comparison with the prior Phase II study, the WBC and granulocyte nadirs in the present trial were significantly higher. When trends in toxicity grades for all cycles were compared, stratifying for 5-FU dose, the incidence and severity of mucositis, skin rash, WBC toxicity, and granulocyte toxicity were significantly lower in the present trial, whereas nausea/vomiting and fatigue were significantly worse. The delivered 5-FU dose intensity for all cycles of therapy appeared to be significantly higher in the present trial. Six of 28 evaluable patients had a partial response (21.4%), and 13 (46%) had stable disease for > or =12 weeks. Despite treatment-related toxicity, patient quality of life did not worsen during the study. No correlation was observed between thymidylate synthase content in primary tumor specimens and response, time to treatment failure, or survival. The addition of GM-CSF appeared to decrease the severity of leukopenia, granulocytopenia, mucositis, and skin rash when compared with our prior experience with this regimen of 5-FU/LV/IFN alpha-2a, at the cost of greater nausea/vomiting and fatigue. The potential impact of increased 5-FU dose intensity on clinical response, however, remains to be determined.
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PMID:A pilot study of interferon alpha-2a, fluorouracil, and leucovorin given with granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor in advanced gastrointestinal adenocarcinoma. 1049 10

Histamine is a classical, but still interesting inflammatory mediator. Many people have long believed that histamine is derived from mast cells or basophils alone. However, the histamine-forming enzyme, histidine decarboxylase (HDC), is induced in a variety of tissues in response (i) to gram-positive and gram-negative bacterial components (lipopolysaccharides, peptidoglycan, and enterotoxin A) and (ii) to various cytokines (IL-1, IL-3, IL-12, IL-18, TNF, G-CSF, and GM-CSF). HDC is induced even in mast-cell-deficient mice. The histamine newly formed via the induction of HDC is released immediately and may be involved in a variety of immune responses. Reviewing our work and that of Schayer and Kahlson, the pioneers in this field, lead us to the conclusion that nowadays we need to understand that histamine can be produced via the induction of HDC by a mechanism coupled with the cytokine network. We call this histamine "neohistamine", to distinguish it from the classical histamine derived from mast cells or basophils. Neohistamine is involved in physiological reactions, inflammation, immune responses and a variety of diseases such as periodontitis, muscle fatigue (or temporomandibular disorders), stress- or drug-induced gastric ulcers, rheumatoid arthritis, complications in diabetes, hepatitis, allograft rejection, allergic reactions, tumor growth, and inflammatory side effects of aminobisphosphonates.
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PMID:[Induction of histidine decarboxylase in inflammation and immune responses]. 1149 27

Granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF, sargramostim [Leukine]) is a powerful cytokine that is able to stimulate the generation of dendritic cells. Adjuvant treatment with continuous low-dose GM-CSF has been shown to prolong survival of stage III/IV melanoma patients. Data on continuous low-dose GM-CSF therapy in tumors other than prostate cancer are still lacking. This pilot trial was initiated in order to evaluate the efficacy and tolerability of continuous low-dose GM-CSF as salvage in various chemotherapy-refractory carcinomas. A total of 19 patients who had failed a median of 4 prior chemotherapies were included. Their malignancies included metastatic breast cancer, recurrent ovarian carcinoma, metastatic endometrial carcinoma, and recurrent squamous cell cancer of the cervix uteri. Continuous low-dose GM-CSF was delivered subcutaneously at a daily starting dose of 125 microg. GM-CSF was increased at 25-microg increments until a maximum of 250 microg was reached or when mild leukocytosis (10-20 g/L) was achieved, providing that the relative eosinophil count did not exceed 15%. Therapy was continued until progression or refusal by the patient. Toxicity was generally mild. Only one patient was withdrawn due to grade 3 fatigue. In three additional patients, temporary dose reduction was necessary because of grade 1 injection site reactions, which recovered spontaneously. Mild to moderate leukocytosis was obvious in 10 patients. Systemic hypersensitivity-like reactions did not occur and no patient required hospitalization for other life-threatening side effects. The objective response rate was 37%: 1 complete and 6 partial responses, 4 disease stabilizations, 8 progression of disease. Median response duration was 6 months. Notably, 6 of 7 responders but only 1 of 8 patients with disease progression developed leukocytosis during therapy. Therefore, we conclude that continuous low-dose GM-CSF has substantial activity in heavily pretreated patients with either metastatic breast cancer or female genital tract cancer. Achievement of mild leukocytosis seems to be a predictor of response.
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PMID:Continuous low-dose GM-CSF as salvage therapy in refractory recurrent breast or female genital tract carcinoma. 1593 97

Immunomodulation with cytokines was used to improve the result of high-dose chemotherapy (HDC)/autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (AHST). We examined the use of IL-2 and growth factors for mobilization, ex vivo activation of peripheral blood stem cell (PBSC) and maintenance therapy after HDC/AHST in metastatic breast cancer. Eligible patients with metastatic breast cancer for HDC/AHST were assigned to 1 of 3 protocols for PBSC mobilization: G-CSF (group 1); IL-2 + G-CSF (group 2); or IL-2 + G-CSF + GM-CSF (group 3). HDC with cyclophosphamide, carmustine and thiotepa was given from day -7 to -5. PBSCs were treated ex vivo with IL-2 for 24 h and reinfused on day 0. Maintenance therapy included low-dose IL-2, followed by 2 courses of intermediate-dose IL-2. GM-CSF was given from day 1 until neutrophil recovery. Thirty-four patients (10 in group 1, 14 in group 2, and 10 in group 3) were included. Comparable numbers of CD34(+) cells were collected from all 3 groups; incremental increases of CD3(+) cells were collected from groups 1 to 2 and to 3 (p = 0.03). Major adverse effects from IL-2 were fever, hypotension and fatigue; no treatment-related mortality was seen. At a median follow-up of 790.5 days (range 150-2,722 days), median progression-free survival was 434 days and median overall survival was 1,432 days. Estimated 3-year progression-free and overall survival rates were 31 and 57%. Our study suggested that the use of IL-2 and growth factors immunomodulation with HDC/AHST was feasible with comparable survival rates.
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PMID:Interleukin-2 and granulocyte-macrophage-colony-stimulating factor immunomodulation with high-dose chemotherapy and autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation for patients with metastatic breast cancer. 1999 65

Sipuleucel-T (Provenge) (Sip-T) is first -in class as a therapeutic autologous vaccine approved for the treatment of men with asymptomatic or minimally symptomatic castrate-resistant metastatic prostate cancer. This product is the culmination of decades of basic immunological and prostate cancer investigations and 13 y of clinical trial investigations. Sip-T represents a paradigm shift in cancer therapeutics and represents the first approved autologous therapeutic cancer vaccine, which has demonstrated a survival benefit. The potential benefit of this product is the excellent risk to benefit ratio, which will allow for the combination of this approach with other more toxic therapies. The favorable risk to benefit will also afford the opportunity for trials investigating this product earlier in the disease state and in combination with local therapies. The ability to target more localized or lower volume disease will maximize the therapeutic benefit over a longer period of time. The novelty of the platform of this approach could be used to treat any cancer with a tumor-specific cell surface target. The main product of Sip-T is the re-infusion of a patient's antigen presenting cells from leukapheresis after ex-vivo exposure to a chimeric protein of human GM-CSF and PAP. In metastatic CRPC patients three infusions of these activated cells over a month lead to statistically significant 4.1 mo increase in median survival and a 22.5% reduction in risk of death. The main side effect from this re-infusion of activated immune cells is a "flu-like" syndrome that includes chills, fatigue, fevers, back pain, nausea, joints aches and headaches in decreasing order of frequency. Immune monitoring during the clinical trials also demonstrated a specific cellular and antibody immune response, suggesting the proposed mechanism of adoptive immunotherapy to PAP was behind this survival benefit. This product also serves as a proof of principle for targeted immunotherapy for others cancers with defined cell surface markers. In summary, the approval of Sip-T based on a survival benefit and very tolerable safety profile will 1) enhance our ability to care for men with advanced prostate cancer, 2) allow for further investigations of this approach in combination with others therapies with different mechanisms of action and non-overlapping toxicities, and 3) allow further investigations earlier in the course of the disease.
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PMID:Sipuleucel-T (Provenge) autologous vaccine approved for treatment of men with asymptomatic or minimally symptomatic castrate-resistant metastatic prostate cancer. 2283 54


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