Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0018133 (graft-versus-host disease)
18,032 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Octreotide inhibits intestinal motility and secretions of the gastro-intestinal tract and pancreas and mediators of diarrhoea and so is very useful in managing refractory diarrhoea. It is safe and effective in 75-80% of the 10-20% of cancer chemotherapy patients who develop severe diarrhoea, and is useful in the management of persistent diarrhoea associated with neuroendocrine tumours, particularly VIPoma and carcinoid tumours, congenital microvillus atrophy, some patients with the short bowel syndrome (giving them a reduced need for intravenous fluids), and AIDS-related diarrhoea that does not respond to antibiotics or conventional anti-diarrhoeal drugs. Some studies suggest a 50% effectiveness in graft-versus-host disease. Preliminary studies suggest that octreotide is also of value in persistent diarrhoea caused by neuromuscular disorders of the gut, particularly diabetes mellitus and systemic sclerosis, suggesting that it may have wider application in the future. Octreotide may prove useful as a tool for studying the pathogenesis of diarrhoea of diverse aetiologies, particularly those associated with disturbances of intestinal motility, such as irritable bowel syndrome.
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PMID:The role of somatostatin analogues in the treatment of refractory diarrhoea. 881 86

Octreotide appears to have a major therapeutic effect in the management of diarrhoea related to cancer therapy. This effect is seen in the acute diarrhoea following radiation therapy and chemotherapy, and also in late radiation enteritis. As well as providing improved symptom control, early treatment can prevent potentially important morbidity in patients who are vulnerable to infection and fluid loss. Patients who suffer diarrhoea as a complication of AIDS, graft-versus-host disease and tumour-related diarrhoea can also obtain major benefit from treatment with octreotide. It should be considered as a first-line treatment in patients for whom diarrhoea may be a serious complication.
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PMID:Octreotide in the management of treatment-related diarrhoea. 882 80

Cytomegalovirus (CMV) is a major pathogen in transplant recipients and AIDS patients, and the virus may also play a role in allograft rejection. Previous work from this laboratory demonstrated increased cell surface expression of the adhesion molecules ICAM-1 (CD54) and LFA-3 (CD58) following CMV infection in vitro. We investigated whether the induction of adhesion molecules by CMV was a direct viral effect or secondary to cytokine induction. Cytokines known to up-regulate ICAM-1, such as TNFalpha or IL-1beta, were not detected in the supernatants of infected fibroblasts, and neutralizing antibodies against these cytokines did not abrogate the induction of either ICAM-1 or LFA-3 by CMV. Infected cell supernatants had increased levels of IL-6, IL-8 and IFNbeta however, the addition of recombinant forms of these cytokines did not affect adhesion molecule expression. Neither virus-free infected cell supernatants nor UV-inactivated virus up-regulated adhesion molecules, demonstrating that the induction of ICAM-1 and LFA-3 by CMV was a direct effect requiring infectious virus. Effective antiviral treatment with ganciclovir or foscarnet accentuated rather than abrogated the up-regulation of adhesion molecules, suggesting that CMV immediate early/early gene expression, which is not blocked by such treatment, was responsible for the adhesion molecule induction. Thus, despite effective antiviral therapy in the transplant recipient, CMV infected cells may continue to provide a focus of proinflammatory activity, which could contribute to immunopathology and/or accentuate graft rejection or graft-versus-host disease in vivo.
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PMID:Cytomegalovirus induced up-regulation of LFA-3 (CD58) and ICAM-1 (CD54) is a direct viral effect that is not prevented by ganciclovir or foscarnet treatment. 890 Mar 10

A case of disseminated superficial porokeratosis (DSP) is reported in a black man 5 years after autologous bone marrow transplantation (BMT) for acute promyelocytic leukemia. Porokeratosis is a rare hyperkeratotic disorder arising from clonal keratinocytes with a high potential to develop squamous cell carcinoma. Inherited forms are classical but recent observations of acquired porokeratosis have been reported in immunocompromized patients (AIDS, immune disorders, immune suppressive drugs or organ transplantation). Two cases of DSP have been reported after allogeneic BMT in patients treated for chronic GVHD. Our case is the first one after autologous BMT, in a black man, on no immunosuppressive drug at the time of diagnosis of DSP. Hematopoietic and immune reconstitution was apparently complete. The cancer-prone character of porokeratosis could be favored by total body irradiation used in conditioning regimen. Thus, porokeratosis has to be associated with other late effects after BMT such as HCV seropositivity, cataract and infertility that were observed in this patient.
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PMID:Disseminated superficial porokeratosis after autologous bone marrow transplantation. 901 35

This chapter reviews the most common diseases of the liver that are associated immunodeficiencies resulting from AIDS, chemotherapy and radiation, and bone marrow and solid organ transplantation. Conditions described include liver disease, infection, venoocclusive disease, graft versus host disease, and others.
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PMID:Liver disease in the immunocompromised patient. 942 Aug 98

Thalidomide (N-alpha-phthalimidoglutarimide) was used widely as a hypnotic/sedative agent in the late 1950s and the early 1960s, but had to be withdrawn from the market because of its severe teratogenicity. In spite of this, there has been a resurgence of interest in the drug in recent years due to its potential usefulness for the treatment of various diseases, including acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) and graft-versus-host disease (GVHD). The effectiveness of the drug in these diseases has been attributed to its specific inhibitory activity on tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) production. Because TNF-alpha, a cytokine mediating host defence and immune regulation, with a wide range of activities, has deleterious pathophysiological effects in various diseases, including AIDS, tumors, rheumatoid arthritis and diabetes, its production-regulators are attractive lead compounds for novel biological response modifiers. The regulatory effect of thalidomide on TNF-alpha production has been found to be bidirectional, depending on both the cell-type and the TNF-alpha production-inducer; i.e., thalidomide possesses both enhancing and inhibiting activities on TNF-alpha production. Structural modification of thalidomide aiming at the creation of superior TNF-alpha production-regulators has afforded a number of phenyl- and benzylphthalimide analogs possessing more potent activity than thalidomide itself. The structure-activity relationships of these analogs has been investigated. The bidirectional TNF-alpha production-regulating activity is electronic state- and enantio-dependent, and both pure inhibitors and pure enhancers of TNF-alpha production has been obtained. Further structural development of the phthalimide analogs has yielded potent non-steroidal androgen antagonists.
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PMID:Novel biological response modifiers derived from thalidomide. 956

Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1) associated immune deficiency has the characteristics of chronic graft versus host disease (GVHD) caused by human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class 2 incompatibility. The envelope glycoprotein fragment TKAKRRVVEREKR mimics HLA class 1 C molecules serologically, and also mimics an immune regulatory T cell epitope, in the region of amino acids 67 to 71, within the HLA DR beta chain. This beta chain alloepitopic region (between amino acids 67 to 80) furnishes peptides predicted to bind optimally to HLA class 1 B alleles. The hypothesis predicts that viral parameters, such as viral load, and clinical parameters, such as rate of progress to acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) and severity of the associated immune deficient state, are linked to the HLA B and HLA DR beta chain haplotype in infected patients. Immune suppression is caused by HLA class 1 B restricted CD8+ T cells which normally regulate HLA class 2 DR restricted antigen specific responses. The hypothesis further predicts the severity of immune deficiency to be linked to those HLA DR beta chain allotypes which express the amino-acid glutamine (Q) in position 70.
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PMID:How HIV-1 lentivirus causes immune deficiency disease. 1034 73

HIV induces disease only following chronic activation of the immune system. Other retroviruses such as the mouse mammary tumour virus (MMTV) activate a large percentage of T cells by encoding a superantigen (SAg). To date there is no evidence that HIV encodes a SAg. An alternative way to induce pan-activation of the immune system is by allogeneic stimulation, which occurs following transplantation. Here we extend previous work which demonstrated that HIVpg120 could bind peptides in a similar manner to HLA, by demonstrating that human antigen presenting cells (APCs) expressing gp120 (but not DR1) can present a DR1-restricted peptide to induce proliferation of a DR1-restricted peptide-specific T-cell line in a similar manner to the same peptide presented by a DR1 expressing APC. Our data provide strong support for the hypothesis that the HLA-like regions of gp120 encode functional properties shared with HLA, and could explain the extraordinary clinical and immunological similarities between AIDS and chronic graft versus host disease.
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PMID:HIV gp120 plus specific peptides are recognized in a similar manner to specific HLA plus peptide by HLA-restricted antigen-specific T-cell lines. 1073 64

Adenovirus infections have been reported in as many as one-fifth of bone marrow transplant (BMT) recipients and patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), and in a lesser, though still prominent, proportion of organ transplant recipients. The relative contributions of primary infections versus reactivations from latency in immunocompromised patients remain unclear. Compared with adult BMT recipients, pediatric BMT recipients appear to be infected by adenovirus more frequently and earlier in the post-transplant period. The diagnosis of adenovirus infection is complicated by the existence of > 40 viral serotypes, although certain subgroups are more likely to be involved in certain patient populations. Adenoviruses are responsible for a broad range of clinical diseases that may be associated with high mortality, including pneumonia, hepatitis, encephalitis, hemorrhagic cystitis, and gastroenteritis. The clinical and histopathologic features of adenovirus disease may resemble those of cytomegalovirus disease, potentially complicating the diagnosis. Risk factors for clinical adenovirus disease include the number of sites from which the virus is cultured and, in BMT recipients, the presence of moderate to severe acute graft-versus-host disease.
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PMID:Adenovirus infections in immunocompromised patients. 1086 46

The lung is one of the organs most severely affected by complications during the course of hematologic disorders. In the last years an impressive amount of progress has been made in clarifying the pathogenesis of lung diseases, particularly those occurring in conditions of severe immunosuppression such as bone marrow transplantion, acquired immunodeficiency syndrome or leukemia. Peculiar anatomical characteristics render the lung parenchyma highly susceptible to infections, but the clinical outcome is due not only to the injury induced by the pathogens but also to their interactions with inflammatory cells and particularly to the effects of a wide network of secreted cytokines. Polymorphonuclear cells, macrophages, lymphocytes and structural pulmonary cells (epithelial cells, interstitial cells) generate a variety of cytokines and growth factors which, in turn, may be responsible for the majority of the clinical effects in response to infections, such as those of Pneumocystis carinii and cytomegalovirus, but also to certain drugs or to radiation. The pathogenesis of graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) is still poorly understood, but animal models seem to demonstrate the involvement of a number of cytokines and growth factors, together with toxic effects induced by conditioning regimens.
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PMID:The lung as a target organ in patients with hematologic disorders. 1094 33


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