Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0019693 (HIV)
170,526 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

High-grade non-Hodgkins B-cell lymphoma is one of the principle malignancies that occurs in individuals infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1). Immunoblastic lymphomas that arise in immunosuppressed transplant patients have been described as both monoclonal and polyclonal, and occur in association with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infection. To test whether polyclonal lymphoma occurred in patients with AIDS we studied tumors from multiple sites in three patients who died with widespread AIDS-associated large cell or large cell immunoblastic lymphoma. All biopsy specimens contained invasive lymphoma. Tumor cells were mature IgM-positive immunoblasts by immunohistochemical analysis, with the same B-cell phenotype observed in all tumor sites. Only a minority of sites from all patients analyzed were monoclonal as measured by immunoglobulin gene rearrangements, with one case having several foci of monoclonal disease with other histologically identical metastases showing no evidence of monoclonal proliferation. Similar to the transplant-associated polyclonal B-cell proliferations. EBV gene sequences were present in multiple sites from one autopsy. In the other two autopsies, polyclonal B-cell proliferations occurred in the absence of EBV involvement except at one site, where a minor clone of EBV-infected cells was found. In contrast to HIV-associated Burkitt's lymphoma, no c-myc rearrangements were found at any site. These studies describe the occurrence of polyclonal lymphoma in AIDS and suggest that EBV-negative polyclonal lymphoma may be a distinct disease entity unique to HIV-infected individuals.
...
PMID:AIDS-associated polyclonal lymphoma: identification of a new HIV-associated disease process. 184 89

The clinicopathologic features of 45 human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected patients (mainly intravenous drug users [IVDU]) with lymphoid neoplasias seen from September 1984 through July 1990 at an Italian cancer center are reviewed. Thirty-five had systemic non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL), and ten had Hodgkin's disease (HD). Histologically, 27 NHL cases were intermediate grade (five cases) or high grade (22 cases, 14 of the small noncleaved cell type), according to the Working Formulation. Eight NHL cases, including four anaplastic large cell (ALC) BerH2 (CD30)-positive lymphomas, were in the miscellaneous group. Immunohistologic and/or gene rearrangement analysis showed the B-cell origin of 20 of the 24 NHL cases studied. At presentation, 71% of NHL patients had advanced stages (Stage III or IV), and 85% had extranodal disease (predominantly gastrointestinal tract and marrow). Of the 23 patients evaluable for treatment, only seven had a complete clinical response after lymphoma therapy; the median survival of 34 evaluable patients was 22 months after the diagnosis of NHL. Fifteen patients died; most deaths were attributable to progressive lymphoma and opportunistic infections. As with NHL, advanced disease, extranodal involvement, aggressive histologic findings, and poor response to therapy were also observed in patients with HD. This study shows that lymphoid neoplasias occurring in Italian IVDU with HIV infection and those previously reported in North American homosexual men with HIV infection share similar clinicopathologic features. However, some features such as the absence of history of Kaposi's sarcoma at diagnosis, the lack of detection of primary brain and rectal NHL, and the occurrence of B-cell ALC BerH2 (CD30)-positive NHL were observed uniquely in this series of patients.
...
PMID:A clinicopathologic study of lymphoid neoplasias associated with human immunodeficiency virus infection in Italy. 185 83

Forty-one HIV-positive homosexual men (mean age 39.8 [23-72] years) with malignant lymphomas were examined with the object of exploring the clinical and pathological spectrum of HIV-associated lymphomas in Central Europe, and their therapeutic aspects. There were 33 patients with non-Hodgkin lymphoma of high malignancy and four with non-Hodgkin lymphoma of low malignancy; four further patients suffered from Hodgkin's disease. 27 patients died during the period of observation. The mean survival period after diagnosis was 5.5 months. It depended on the stage reached by the lymphoma at the time of diagnosis: 11.8 months in stage I, 10.6 months in stage II, 7 months in stage III, 3.3 months in stage IV and 1.3 months in patients with primary involvement of the central nervous system by the lymphoma. Eight out of nine patients with highly malignant non-Hodgkin lymphoma in stage I or II attained complete and lasting remissions after chemotherapy or irradiation. However, only minimal prolongation of life was achieved in the 16 patients with lymphomas in stages III or IV. The response rate among all patients treated (complete and partial remissions) was 75%; 45% achieved complete remission. Hodgkin's disease responded well to standard therapy, but the disease rapidly recurred in every case.
...
PMID:[HIV-associated lymphomas]. 185 44

While B-cell lymphomas are frequently found in AIDS patients, reports on oral manifestations are rare. Among a group of 465 HIV-infected patients 5 presented with primary oral manifestations of a malignant B-cell lymphoma. The primary site of manifestation was the maxilla in 3 cases and the mandible in 2 cases. Based on the histological and immunohistochemical examination the tumors were differentiated as Burkitt's lymphoma (n = 1), as anaplastic large cell (ALC) lymphoma of the B-cell type (n = 1), as high-grade non-Hodgkin's lymphoma not classifiable according to the Kiel classification (n = 1), as immunoblastic-plasmoblastic lymphoma (n = 1), and as centroblastic lymphoma (n = 1). Serum samples were negative for HTLV-I antibodies in 5/5 cases.
...
PMID:Oral manifestations of AIDS-associated non-Hodgkin's lymphomas. 189 Mar 20

We have retrospectively analyzed the characteristics of 24 adult patients affected with non-endemic Burkitt's lymphoma (BL) and Burkitt cell acute leukemia (L3 ALL). The median age of the entire group was 29 years with a male preponderance (75%). Median LDH value was 580 mU/mL. Test for HIV-antibodies was carried-out in 16 patients; 5 of them (21%) showed HIV positive. CNS was involved in 25% of patients at diagnosis. In all cases studied for karyotype, the t(8;14) translocation was evident. As to therapy, 5 patients were not evaluable for early death, 12 were given an intensive ALL program, 5 a cyclic chemotherapy and 2 a new protocol alternating high-dose cyclophosphamide, high-dose cytarabine with mitoxantrone and the CHOP regimen. The overall complete remission rate was 42%; among 7 remitters, 4 have relapsed so far within a median time of 6 months. Three of 13 (23%) patients with lymphoma presentation are long remitters and may be cured; all cases had stage II disease and low LDH at diagnosis (less than 250 mU/mL). No patients with Burkitt's leukemia survive. CNS disease (8 cases) and septic shock (6 cases) were the most frequent terminal events. In our experience, the prognosis of advanced stage BL and L3 ALL in adults does remain dismal; the high prevalence of CNS disease and HIV-positivity may have contributed to the poor outcome.
...
PMID:Burkitt's lymphoma/leukemia: a clinicopathologic study on 24 adult patients. 189 Aug 73

The prevalence of dermatologic problems during the course of human immunodeficiency virus infection makes knowledge of these skin manifestations imperative to all practicing dermatologists. Detection of early infection is encouraged as effective therapy now exists both to delay the progression of human immunodeficiency virus-induced immunodeficiency and to prevent opportunistic infections. Skin manifestations of human immunodeficiency virus infection discussed in this article include the following groups: neoplastic, ie, Kaposi's sarcoma, lymphoma, and squamous cell carcinoma; infectious, ie, viral, bacterial, fungal, protozoal, and arthropod infestations; and a miscellaneous group including papulosquamous, papular, vascular, autoimmune, oral, and drug-related skin disorders.
...
PMID:Cutaneous manifestations of human immunodeficiency virus infection. Part I. 189 8

The case of a 31 year old man who had been intravenous drug abuser for years is reported. He was studied because of abdominal pain, jaundice, a weight loss of 10 kg, and the presence of a subclavicular mass. Biopsy of the mass demonstrated a high-grade B-cell non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, and the patient was classified in group IV-D of the human immunodeficiency virus infection because he had HIV serum antibodies and a reduced CD4/CD8 lymphocyte ratio. Although lymphoma had a good response to chemotherapy, persistent cholestasis led to liver and biliary evaluation. Sclerosing cholangitis and papillary stenosis were found. He has been followed for two years, without evidence of any secondary infectious disease associated to the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome.
...
PMID:[Sclerosing cholangitis, papillary stenosis and B-cell lymphoma in a patient with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome]. 189 85

Infection of foetal or embryonic brain cells and cell lines from human astrocytomas and gliomas with HIV1 derived from T-lymphoma cultures leads to the expression of HIV in about 1 to 2% of the cells in culture. Single-cell cloning of astrocytoma cells shortly after infection resulted in the establishment of persistently HIV1-infected cell lines. These cultures were characterized by low production of virus and moderate intra- and extracellular expression of structural proteins. However, high expression of the nef regulatory protein was found. The virus could be rescued by cocultivation with T cells and primary macrophages giving rise to typical syncytia formation. In contrast to infection with HIV-infected T-lymphoma lines, cocultivation with HIV1-infected primary macrophages or monocytic cell lines induced a reduction in the growth of astrocytes and failed to induce productive infection. These in vitro observations support the hypothesis that astrocytes and glial cells may be a reservoir for HIV in the central nervous system and that macrophages may not carry the virus to the brain, but rather may be infected in the brain after having penetrated the blood-brain barrier.
...
PMID:Target cells for HIV in the central nervous system: macrophages or glial cells? 189 38

In an attempt to determine factors predictive of survival in patients seropositive for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) with acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS)-related lymphoma, the authors studied 60 such patients, all of whom were treated with curative intent. Eleven patients presented with lymphoma primary to the brain (P-CNS); the remaining 49 had systemic AIDS-related lymphoma. Patients with P-CNS lymphoma had more severe underlying HIV-related disease than did patients with systemic lymphoma as evidenced by a higher incidence of AIDS before the diagnosis of lymphoma (73% versus 37%; P = 0.04), and lower median number of CD-4-positive lymphocytes in peripheral blood at diagnosis of lymphoma (30/dl versus 189/dl; P = 0.005). Median survival of such patients was 2.5 months versus 6.0 months for patients with systemic lymphoma (P = 0.04). Forty patients with systemic AIDS-related lymphoma have died; three factors were strongly associated with shorter survival: (1) Karnofsky performance status (KPS) of less than 70% (multivariate relative survival risk [RSR] = 3.1); (2) history of AIDS before the diagnosis of lymphoma (multivariate RSR = 3.0 for opportunistic infection plus Kaposi's sarcoma); and (3) bone marrow involvement (RSR = 3.1)). All three factors (KPS of less than 70%, prior AIDS diagnosis, and marrow involvement) were associated with early demise attributed to AIDS, whereas death attributed to lymphoma per se was associated with only two factors (KPS of less than 70% and marrow involvement). In the absence of all three risk factors, a "good prognosis" group of 17 patients was defined, with a median survival of 11.3 months; the median survival of the remaining patients ("poor prognosis") was 4.0 months (P = 0.0002). Attainment of complete response to therapy (CR) was strongly related to prolonged survival in the patients in the good prognosis group (17.8 months in patients with CR versus 5.0 months in those with less than CR); however, such meaningful prolongation of survival was not seen in patients with poor prognosis who attained CR (6.3 months versus 3.4 months). The patients with poor prognosis may be unable to tolerate the insult of multiagent chemotherapy, experiencing low CR rates (25%) and death caused by lymphoma and AIDS. However, patients in either prognostic category who attained CR remained at risk for dying of AIDS while the lymphoma was in remission. Thus, it is apparent that meaningful prolongation of survival in the patient with AIDS-related lymphoma will require not only effective antineoplastic intervention, but also control of the underlying HIV infection. In addition, future therapeutic trials should stratify patients based upon the prognostic factors defined here in an attempt to clarify the results obtained.
...
PMID:Human immunodeficiency virus-related lymphoma. Prognostic factors predictive of survival. 768 56

A retrospective review of the neuroimaging procedures of 84 patients with the diagnosis of AIDS was performed. Both computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) procedures were evaluated for the presence of atrophy, enhancing lesions and focal non-enhancing lesions. The imaging findings in several infectious conditions (toxoplasmosis, cytomegalovirus, papovavirus, HIV virus, tuberculosis and histoplasmosis) are described. Intracranial lymphoma, another complication of AIDS, also is discussed.
...
PMID:Neuroimaging of AIDS. 194 Feb 89


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>