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Query: UMLS:C0019693 (HIV)
170,526 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Between January-June 1989, researchers evaluated 473 admissions and 100 deaths at the Pulmonary Medicine Service at the University Hospital in Abidjan, Ivory Coast to determine prevalence of HIV-1 and HIV-2 infections, to look at death rates in relation to HIV status, and to examine the pulmonary pathology associated with these infections compared with deaths in HIV negative patients. HIV-1 seroprevalence was 38%, HIV-2 4%, and dual HIV reactive 14%. The death rate for the entire sample was 21%. It was higher in HIV seropositive patients than HIV seronegative patients (27% vs. 14%; relative risk=1.95 times). HIV seropositive patients regardless of HIV group essentially died from the same diseases: 40% from pulmonary tuberculosis (disseminated nonreactive multibacillary pattern), 34% from nonspecific pneumonia, 8% from Pneumocystis pneumonia, 6% from Kaposi's sarcoma, and 4% from lung cancer. Among only HIV-1 seropositive cases, Pneumocystis carinii was the cause of death in only 95 of cases. The leading causes of death for HIV seronegative patients included lung cancer (64%), nonspecific pneumonia (28%), and pulmonary tuberculosis (4%). Researchers should be pressed to develop more sensitive means to diagnosis tuberculosis as well as prophylaxis against reactivation of tuberculosis among HIV seropositive people in Africa. Since Pneumocystis carinii infection is uncommon among HIV seropositive people in Africa, prophylaxis for it is not needed.
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PMID:Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia. An uncommon cause of death in African patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. 131 14

Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) seropositive individuals suffer from a depletion of T4+ T cells and have elevated plasma glutamate levels. Glutamate is also elevated in cancer patients, and several authors have shown that elevated extracellular glutamate levels inhibit competitively the membrane transport of cystine and cause a decrease of intracellular cystine. We, therefore, tested the hypothesis that high glutamate and/or low cystine levels may generally be associated with low lymphocyte reactivity or low T4+ counts. In three independent studies we tested (i) serum amino acid levels (AAL) versus T4+ counts in healthy individuals, (ii) plasma AAL versus lymphocyte responses in healthy individuals, and (iii) plasma AAL versus T4+ counts in HIV-1 seropositive individuals. When the individuals in each study were divided into four subgroups as defined by median glutamate and cystine levels, the results showed that persons with a combination of low glutamate and high cystine level (LGHC subgroups) had the highest mean T4+ count or highest lymphocyte reactivity. Moreover, the LGHC subgroup in a study of lung cancer patients had a much longer mean survival time than the other three subgroups. In HIV-1 infected patients, hyperglutamataemia is associated with hypocystinaemia and hypocysteinaemia. Azidodeoxythymidine (AZT) treated HIV patients had, on average, lower glutamate levels than patients without AZT.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:T4+ cell numbers are correlated with plasma glutamate and cystine levels: association of hyperglutamataemia with immunodeficiency in diseases with different aetiologies. 134 32

Lung cancer infrequently may be associated with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. This retrospective case-control study was undertaken to determine if there were differences in age, sex, and stage distribution and in survival between HIV-positive and HIV-indeterminate lung cancer patients. We compared 19 patients with both pathologically verified lung cancer and HIV infection proved by serologic study with lung cancer patients with an indeterminate HIV status. All 19 HIV-positive lung cancer patients were men. This was significantly (p = 0.004) different from the 69 percent male preponderance in 1,335 HIV-indeterminate lung cancer patients. Median ages of HIV-positive and HIV-indeterminate patients were 48 and 61 years, respectively. HIV-positive patients were significantly (p = 0.0139) younger. Stage distribution was similar in both groups. Histologic features and smoking were not significantly different between the two groups. Survival data that were available in 16 HIV-positive patients were compared with 32 HIV-indeterminate control subjects matched for stage, age, sex, and race. The median survival was three months in the HIV-positive group and ten months in the HIV-indeterminate cohort. The survival was significantly different (p = 0.002). There were no one-year survivors in HIV-positive lung cancer patients.
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PMID:Lung cancer in patients with human immunodeficiency virus infection compared with historic control subjects. 133 37

The impact of prolonged antifungal therapy on the development of resistance was examined in 61 patients with oropharyngeal thrush. Fifty-nine patients had symptomatic human immunodeficiency virus infection, one had lung cancer, and one had metastatic prostate cancer. Cultures of pharyngeal samples from all patients were positive for yeasts and included 57 (93.4%) Candida albicans, 3 (4.9%) Candida glabrata, and 1 (1.6%) Candida krusii. Of 61 patients, 32 (52.5%) were receiving or had recently received antifungal therapy. Clotrimazole was the most commonly prescribed azole, followed by ketoconazole and fluconazole. Two patients had received amphotericin B therapy and one had received flucytosine. The duration of therapy with clotrimazole, ketoconazole, and fluconazole ranged from 3 to 240, 14 to 44, and 7 to 138 days, respectively. There was no overall difference in the susceptibilities of the clinical isolates from treated and untreated patients to amphotericin B, nystatin, flucytosine, clotrimazole, ketoconazole, and fluconazole. A.C. albicans isolate from one patient who had clinically failed on ketoconazole, fluconazole, and amphotericin B was resistant to these drugs. The lack of difference in the susceptibility pattern indicates that clinically significant emergence of resistance does not occur in those patients who receive prolonged antifungal therapy.
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PMID:Development of resistance in candida isolates from patients receiving prolonged antifungal therapy. 180 2

The Italian Cooperative Group on AIDS-related tumors has collected 435 cases of HIV-associated tumors since December 1986. The following conclusions can be drawn from this IVDA-based series: (1) at least 15% of AIDS cases are associated with tumors; (2) the number of malignant lymphomas (high-grade non-Hodgkin's lymphoma [NHL], Hodgkin's disease [HD] is comparable to that of Kaposi's sarcoma (KS) (188 vs. 198); (3) KS among AIDS patients is less common than in countries where homosexual men are the main group affected by AIDS. However, KS also affects intravenous drug abusers (IVDA) almost exclusively males, with characteristics similar to those observed among homosexual men; (4) HD is associated with an aggressive course; (5) anal and oral primary tumors as well as oral and anal involvement of NHL are very rare; (6) testicular cancers occur in patients mainly with early HIV infection, without adversely affecting the dosage of radiotherapy and chemotherapy; (7) cervical cancer successfully treated with conization suggests that PAP test screening in young IVDA women is warranted; (8) lung cancer occurs in a young age group with rapid progression and death.
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PMID:Characterization of AIDS-associated tumors in Italy: report of 435 cases of an IVDA-based series. 220 42

Between December 1986 and December 1988, the Italian Cooperative Group on AIDS-Related Tumours documented 49 HIV-related tumours other than malignant lymphomas (ML) and Kaposi's sarcomas (KS), predominantly among HIV-infected intravenous drug abusers (IVDA). Of 12 germinal testicular tumours collected, six were seminomas, two of which were pure embryonal and the other four embryonal mixed. Cervical carcinoma was observed in nine IVDAs (intraepithelial in eight and advanced, with rapid progression, in one). Lung cancer associated with HIV infection was reported in eight patients, of whom four had an adenocarcinoma, two a small cell carcinoma, one an epidermoid carcinoma and one a mesothelioma. All patients with non-small-cell-lung cancer (SCLC) were at stage III, while those with SCLC and mesothelioma had limited disease. Five out of eight presented with limited disease at onset. The median age was low; lung cancer occurred predominantly in young adults, of whom all but one were smokers. Three patients could not be treated; four died while on treatment because of progression of the neoplasia and one died of an overdose. Acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) was diagnosed in five patients. The immunophenotype was always Burkitt-like (L3), and acute myeloblastic leukaemia (M2) was diagnosed in one. Of the central nervous system (CNS) tumours, two cases of glioblastoma and one of medulloblastoma were described. Two cases of young adults with multiple myeloma and two cases of colorectal carcinoma were also reported. One case of chronic lymphocytic leukaemia, one anorectal carcinoma, one oral carcinoma, one pancreatic carcinoma, one thymoma, one kidney carcinoma, one malignant melanoma and thyroid carcinoma were also found.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Unusual malignant tumours in 49 patients with HIV infection. 250 49

Since 1981 there has been a constant rise in the incidence of squamous cell carcinoma of the oral cavity and the anorectum among homosexual men in the United States. In addition, lung cancer, testicular cancer, chronic lymphocytic leukemia, malignant melanoma, basal cell carcinoma, cervical cancer, and multiple myeloma have been recently reported in persons at risk for AIDS with HIV infection, with some peculiar clinicopathological features, including age, histological type, and clinical aggressiveness. Within the GICAT (Gruppo Italiano Cooperativo AIDS & Tumori) framework, we have identified four cases of testicular cancer, two cases of leukemia, and 1 case each of cervical cancer, carcinoma of the oral cavity, lung cancer, brain tumor, and multiple myeloma in persons at risk for AIDS, mainly i.v. drug abusers, with HIV infection, diagnosed in different Italian institutions. Work is in progress in order to collect histological and clinical data on these tumors. Although these data are preliminary and are not indicative of an actual increase in the incidence of malignancies other than malignant lymphomas and Kaposi's sarcoma in the AIDS setting, clinicians should be aware of the possible association of these tumors with HIV infection.
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PMID:Malignant tumors other than lymphoma and Kaposi's sarcoma in association with HIV infection. 318 Jan 32

The role of the Tuscany population-based Cancer Registry (TCR) in the assessment of cancer incidence in AIDS patients, and the completeness of cancer reporting to the Italian AIDS surveillance system (RAIDS) was evaluated through a linkage between the TCR and the RAIDS in the period 1985-90. In the Province of Florence, the incidence of Kaposi's sarcoma in AIDS cases was underestimated by 24% (95% CI; 9.8%-47%; 6/25 cases) by RAIDS in comparison with the TCR. Of kaposi's sarcomas unknown to RAIDS, 2 were incident at the time of AIDS diagnosis ("truly" unreported cases) and 4 were late manifestations of AIDS. Moreover, 1 non-Hodgkin lymphoma unknown to RAIDS and 10 other malignancies (4 lung cancers) were identified through the TCR. In AIDS patients, the incidence of lung cancer was 95-fold (99% CI, 16-310) the expected one on the basis of age-sex-specific incidence rates in the general population of the same area. Altogether, about 25% of AIDS cases developed a cancer during HIV infection. In spite of the small size of the present study, the results confirm the role of population-based cancer registries in the assessment of the occurrence of malignancies in AIDS patients.
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PMID:Linkage between AIDS surveillance system and population-based cancer registry data in Italy: a pilot study in Florence, 1985-90. 757 Oct 22

Esophageal stricture is an uncommon complication in HIV-negative patients treated with radiation to the chest for lung cancer. There have been a number of recent reports on the association of cancer and HIV-positive patients, as well as a greater sensitivity to radiation therapy of the mucous membranes in HIV/AIDS patients. This article reflects a review of the literature on the risk of major complications and morbidity of the esophagus in HIV+/AIDS patients whose chests are treated with radiation for lung cancer. Included is a report of a previously unpublished case of an early and severe esophageal reaction to radiation therapy in an AIDS patient.
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PMID:Heightened sensitivity of the esophagus to radiation in a patient with AIDS. 773 93

Bronchogenic carcinoma is a cause of parenchymal or hilar masses with or without mediastinal adenopathy in HIV-seropositive smokers. Lung cancer can occur earlier than the more commonly recognized opportunistic infections and in patients not known to be HIV seropositive. Tumor cell types do not differ markedly from those expected in HIV-seronegative young lung cancer patients, but are often poorly differentiated; patients with high-grade malignancies fare poorly independent of their degree of immunocompromise at diagnosis. Computed tomography (CT) scans not only add important information with regard to disease distribution and preferred means of diagnosis, but also result in the detection of new sites of disease with respect to the plain radiography in many patients. Because lung cancer often occurs before the diagnosis of AIDS, the association may not be suspected in some cases; poorly differentiated, rapidly growing tumors in young smokers may raise the suspicion of underlying HIV infection.
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PMID:Bronchogenic carcinoma in 13 patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV): clinical and radiographic findings. 776 38


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