Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0019214 (hepatosplenomegaly)
4,408 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Rearrangements of the human trithorax gene (MLL, HRX, Htrx-1, All-1) were studied by Southern blotting in blast cells stored at presentation from 65 adults with de novo acute myelomonocytic (AML-M4) and acute monocytic leukemia (AML-M5). MLL rearrangements were demonstrated in 15 (23%) cases, including eight patients in whom karyotype analysis had failed to detect abnormalities of chromosome band 11q23. The patients with MLL rearrangements did not differ significantly from those with germline configurations in terms of the sex and age of the patients, the presence of lymphadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly, or central nervous system involvement, and the absolute blast count at diagnosis. Kaplan-Meier analysis of the treated patients demonstrated no difference in survival for patients with MLL rearrangements compared with those without rearrangements. Therefore, in contrast to infantile acute leukemia, in adults with AML-M4 and AML-M5, MLL rearrangements do not identify a subgroup of patients with different clinical features or prognosis.
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PMID:Prevalence and clinical correlations of MLL gene rearrangements in AML-M4/5. 794 33

We reviewed our 20-year experience with infant acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). Nine infants (4.2% of all ALL) were identified; all were < 6 months of age. White blood cell counts ranged from 42,000-1.6 million/microL, 6 of 8 had hepatosplenomegaly, and 6 of 9 (66.6%) had central nervous system disease. Of 7 with cytogenetic information, 6 (85.7%) had diploidy; the remaining child was 47, XY,+8,del(21)(q22). Four had the MLL-11q23 abnormality. All received chemotherapy. Four underwent stem cell transplantation. Survival was 67%, (15 months-21 years). Deaths occurred at 9 months, 15 months (graft vs. host), and 7 years (complications of small bowel transplantation). Only 1 undergoing stem cell transplantation died. There were no late recurrences or second malignancies. Despite extensive disease and age < 6 months at diagnosis (a poor prognostic feature), for ALL patients our 67% survival is at least as good as reported, although it is less favorable than childhood ALL.
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PMID:Infant acute lymphoblastic leukemia: a 20-year children's hospital experience. 1880 Feb 62

Leukaemia in neonates (infants <1 month) is rare, whereby neonatal acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) is more frequent than neonatal acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL). High mortality rates are observed, though AML has a better prognosis than ALL. Neonatal leukaemia is typically presented with hepatosplenomegaly, leukaemia cutis and/or hyperleucocytosis. Congenital infections should be ruled out before diagnosis. Rearrangement of the MLL gene is the most frequently occurring genetic aberration. Treatment includes intensive multi-agent chemotherapy, usually with age-related dose adjustments next to supportive care. Treatment intensification for ALL could be indicated in the future as the dismal prognosis is subject to high relapse rates in ALL.
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PMID:Diagnosis and management of neonatal leukaemia. 2251 Feb 98