Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0019621 (Langerhans cell histiocytosis)
3,250 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The clinical characteristics of 31 patients (pts.) (17 boys, 14 girls, median age 12 11/12 years) with large cell anaplastic lymphoma (LCAL) have been evaluated. 17 of these pts. had originally been diagnosed as suffering from "malignant histiocytosis" ("MH") and were therefore included in the DAL-Histiocytosis X 83 study. Another 14 pts. with Ki-1 lymphomas were enrolled in the BFM-NHL therapy studies. According to Murphyclassification 24 pts. (77%) had stage III or IV disease and in general presented in a severe condition. The lymphatic system was involved in 28 pts., 8 pts. (26%) had skin infiltration. With regard to lymphoma involvement of lung, bones and bone-marrow were unexpectedly frequent. CNS involvement was seen in just one pt. Despite rather heterogeneous therapy approaches (ALL-schedules, DAL-HX 83 protocol for treatment of "MH", combination of B-NHL-BFM and AML-BFM schedules, CHOP, BFM protocols for B-NHL) 30 out of 31 pts. achieved clinical remission (CR). The only nonresponder died during bone marrow transplantation of septicemia. 4 pts. relapsed during therapy. 3 of them died, 1 during a BMT. 1 pt. achieved 2nd CR with a BFM-B-NHL protocol. 3 pts. experienced a late relapse, 1 died, 1 2nd CR was achieved, the third pt. is still alive after 2 further relapses disease-free for 3 years. 23 pts. (74%, 13 out of 14 of BFM-NHL therapy study, 10 out of 17 of DAL-HX 83 study, 1 pt. after BMT) are in 1st CR with a median observation time of 2 9/12 years (range 5/12 to 17 9/12 years).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Large cell anaplastic lymphoma in children--clinical experiences with a newly defined histologic entity]. 255 Jun 98

Langerhans' cell histiocytosis (LCH) is an uncommon disorder of childhood, formerly referred to histiocytosis X. A significant proportion of children with disseminated disease may undergo progression to a fatal outcome despite chemotherapy with single or multiple agents. Only six cases of LCH treated with BMT have been reported in the literature, including two cases of autologous BMT. Of them, only one was less than 14 years of age. We describe a 4-year-old child whose disseminated, refractory Langerhans' cell histiocytosis was not controlled by front-line monotherapy with etoposide, nor by rescue treatment with combined chemotherapy (vinblastine and etoposide) and immunotherapy (steroids and cyclosporine). Due to the high risk of fatal progressive disease, he underwent bone marrow transplantation from his HLA-identical sister who was heterozigous for beta-thalassemia. On day 24 after transplantation marrow reconstitution was evident, with WBC count 2.3 x 10(9)/L, neutrophil count > 0.5 x 10(9)/L, and platelet count 72 x 10(9)/L. Engraftment was demonstrated by PCR DNA analysis. The patient was discharged on day 25. After transplantation he experienced fever for 11 days and developed signs of grade I cutaneous and intestinal graft-versus-host disease, that was treated with methylprednisolone from days 11 to day 68 (1 mg/kg/day for 18 days, then tapered). He became transfusion independent on day 24; the hemoglobin value was 7.5 g/dL on day 54 and has remained > 10 g/dL since day 200. Features of heterozygous beta-thalassemia have been evident since then. Bone marrow aspirate was normal on days 25 and 94. At the time of this writing he remains in excellent condition, disease and treatment free, 25 months after transplantation. Although limited, current experience suggests that bone marrow transplantation has the potential to cure refractory Langerhans' cell histiocytosis.
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PMID:Bone marrow transplantation for refractory Langerhans' cell histiocytosis. 895 63

The occurrence of Langerhans cell histiocytosis (LCH) and acute leukemia in one individual has rarely been observed. Despite few exceptions, two distinct patterns of association appear evident: acute lymphoblastic leukemia preceding LCH and LCH preceding acute nonlymphoblastic leukemia (ANLL). The latency of ANLL after the diagnosis of LCH is suggestive of a therapy-related process. This report describes two new cases in whom ANLL was diagnosed 7 years 8 months and 5 years 8 months after the start of initial treatment of disseminated recurrent LCH. Morphology showed blasts from FAB-type M4/M5 in the first patient, who died due to progression of leukemia. The second patient showed myelodysplastic syndrome (refractory anemia with excess of blasts in transformation; RAEB-t) and is now in remission from leukemia 3 years 11 months after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. The review of a total of 26 patients with ANLL after LCH suggests that the disease has a poor prognosis and allogeneic BMT seems to be the treatment of choice.
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PMID:Occurrence of acute nonlymphoblastic leukemia in two girls after treatment of recurrent, disseminated Langerhans cell histiocytosis. 1032 16