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Query: UMLS:C0019829 (
Hodgkin's disease
)
30,247
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Lymphocyte response to PHA was depressed in 9 of 14 cases of
Hodgkin's disease
(HD) and in 4 of 14 cases of lung carcinoma (LC). This
depression
was caused in one-third of the HD cases and in one-half of the LC cases by an excess of prostaglandin synthesis.
...
PMID:Suppressor cells in Hodgkin's disease and lung carcinoma. 645 11
The mechanism of the
depression
of cell-mediated immunity (CMI) in patients with
Hodgkin's disease
(HD) and lung carcinoma (LC) was investigated before any treatment. In 9 patients out of 14 with HD and in 4 patients out of 14 with LD, a depressed lymphocyte reactivity to phytohaemagglutinin (PHA) was observed. In 3 out of 9 patients with HD and in 2 out of 4 patients with LC who exhibited a depressed lymphocyte response to PHA, suppression caused by adherent cells and mediated by prostaglandins was evidenced. No relationship was found between this mechanism of suppression and
depression
of CMI in vivo as judged by skin tests to common recall antigens.
...
PMID:Role of adherent suppressor cells in the depression of cell-mediated immunity in Hodgkin's disease and lung carcinoma. 645 31
In vitro and in vivo studies utilizing a combination of leukocyte interferon-alpha (IFN) and chlorambucil (CLB) were done to investigate possible synergism between a biological response modifier and a chemotherapy drug. In vitro studies utilized a human myeloid leukemia cell line (K-562) pretreated with IFN and then exposed to CLB. The combination resulted in significant
depression
of cell growth compared with use of IFN or CLB alone. In vivo studies involved eight heavily pretreated patients given 6 million units IFN for 5 days followed by oral CLB (16 mg/m2) for 5 days repeated every 4 weeks. Three myeloma patients had reduction in immunoglobulins and experienced clinical responses. Three of four patients with
Hodgkin's disease
responded after relatively short periods of treatment. One patient with a diffuse lymphocytic lymphoma had a complete unmaintained remission lasting 6 months. Toxicity was minimal, with mild fever, nausea, and vomiting. These preliminary studies suggest that IFN may be a biological response modifier when used in combination with a cytotoxic agent.
...
PMID:Leukocyte interferon as a possible biological response modifier in lymphoproliferative disorders resistant to standard therapy. 651 61
The immunoglobulin-synthesizing activities of peripheral blood mononuclear cells from 57 untreated patients with
Hodgkin's disease
and 47 normal subjects were compared. Cumulative amounts of IgM and IgG synthesized and secreted by unstimulated and pokeweed mitogen-stimulated cells over a 7-d period were determined in a solid-phase radioimmunoassay. Synthesis of IgM in unstimulated cultures and of both IgM and IgG in cultures stimulated with pokeweed mitogen was markedly reduced in patients with
Hodgkin's disease
, whereas the mean level of the spontaneous IgG synthesis was enhanced. The degree and frequency of in vitro abnormalities were not influenced by disease stage or histology.
Depression
of pokeweed mitogen-induced immunoglobulin synthesis did not correlate with excessive number of monocytes and it was unaffected by removal of phagocytic cells or addition to the cultures of monocytes from normal individuals. On the other hand, monocytes isolated from blood of patients with
Hodgkin's disease
were even more effective than normal monocytes in supporting pokeweed mitogen-induced immunoglobulin synthesis by normal phagocyte-depleted mononuclear cells. Synthesis of both IgM and IgG induced by pokeweed mitogen remained subnormal after addition to patient B cell cultures of autologous irradiated T cells or allogeneic normal T lymphocytes. T cells from patients with
Hodgkin's disease
appeared at least as effective as normal T cells in helping pokeweed mitogen-induced immunoglobulin production by normal B cells. However, when normal T cells were co-cultured with B cells from patients with
Hodgkin's disease
, spontaneous IgG synthesis declined, whereas the addition of patient T cells to normal B cells resulted in an increase of spontaneous IgG synthesis. In patients showing
depression
of pokeweed mitogen-induced immunoglobulin synthesis the lymphoproliferative response and immunoglobulin synthesis stimulated by Staphylococcus aureus bacteria of the Cowan first strain, a T cell independent B cell mitogen, were also markedly reduced. These studies demonstrate impairment of immunoglobulin synthesis by cultured lymphocytes from untreated patients with
Hodgkin's disease
after stimulation with polyclonal B cell activators and suggest that the in vitro abnormalities may be, at least in part, the result of a preexisting in vivo activation of lymphocytes in
Hodgkin's disease
patients.
...
PMID:Abnormalities of in vitro immunoglobulin synthesis by peripheral blood lymphocytes from untreated patients with Hodgkin's disease. 660 50
An overdose of CCNU (600 mg over a 15-d period) was unintentionally ingested by a patient with advanced
Hodgkin's disease
subjected to combination chemotherapy. A severe bone marrow
depression
occurred 3 weeks after the start of the CCNU treatment. The nadir of the platelet count was reached after 4 weeks and that of the granulocyte count after 5 weeks. At the nadir of the white blood cell count, colony-forming cells (CFU-C) were found in significantly reduced numbers in the bone marrow, and were not found at all in the peripheral blood; the amount of colony-stimulating activity (CSA) produced by peripheral blood cells was reduced. However, the cells producing CSA recovered earlier than the CFU-C, and the CSA peak value was reached about 1 week before the peak value for CFU-C in the bone marrow. Thus, in vivo CSA-producing cells appeared to be more resistant to CCNU than were CFU-C, and their recovery appeared to be a prerequisite for the recovery of CFU-C and myelopoietic cells.
...
PMID:CCNU toxicity after an overdose in a patient with Hodgkin's disease. Effects on colony-forming cells (CFU-C) and colony-stimulating activity (CSA). 686 12
Serum IgE levels were evaluated in 119 untreated and 112 treated patients with
Hodgkin's disease
(HD). 38 of the nonatopic untreated patients showed significantly increased (> 300 IU/ml) IgE concentrations. No relationship could be found between increased IgE levels and depressed lymphocyte response to phytohemagglutinin (PHA) or the imbalance of TM and TG lymphocyte subsets. On the other hand, the mean level of suppressor activity elicitable from cells of untreated HD patients by concanavalin A preincubation did not differ significantly from that of healthy control subjects. In contrast, in treated patients, where there was a significant reduction in the number of circulating T lymphocytes, a further
depression
of the lymphocyte response to PHA, a more marked disproportion of TM and TG cell subsets and a noticeable fall in IgE concentration was found. These data suggest that increased IgE concentrations seen in untreated patients with HD are unrelated to the T-cell defects. They also suggest that hyperproduction of IgE is probably not invariably a consequence of a suppressor cell deficiency.
...
PMID:Hyperproduction of IgE and T-cell dysfunction in Hodgkin's disease. 696 58
While radiotherapy and antineoplastic chemotherapy often control malignancies they may, paradoxically, cause new cancers to develop as long-term complications. Although almost any type of neoplasm can occur, radiation-induced malignancies are most likely to affect the myelopoietic tissues and the thyroid gland. The former tissues are also most frequently involved by chemotherapy. The combination of intensive radiotherapy and intensive chemotherapy is particularly leukemogenic. Acute myeloid leukemia has occurred with increased frequency following treatment of
Hodgkin's disease
, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, multiple myeloma, ovarian cancer, polycythemia vera, carcinoma of the thyroid gland, and carcinoma of the breast. Radiation-induced malignancies usually occur in the field of irradiation. For example, radiotherapy for carcinoma of the cervix may be followed by the development of carcinomas of the endometrium, vagina, urinary bladder, colon , rectum, and anus, as well as mesotheliomas of the peritoneum and osteosarcomas of the pelvis. Tumors developing in an irradiated field include a substantial number of soft tissue sarcomas or osteosarcomas. There is a 20-fold increase of second cancers following treatment of childhood malignancies, mostly sarcomas of bone and soft tissues, but including leukemia, and carcinomas of the thyroid gland, skin, and breast. The latent period between radiotherapy and the appearance of a second cancer ranges from 2 years to several decades, often being 10-15 years. With chemotherapy the mean latent period is shorter, approximately 4 years. The mechanism of oncogenesis by radiotherapy or chemotherapy is poorly understood and probably involves a complex interplay of somatic mutation, co-oncogenic effects,
depression
of host immunity, stimulation of cellular proliferation, and genetic susceptibility. The danger of developing second malignancies following radiotherapy or chemotherapy emphasizes the need for lifelong follow-up of patients given these forms of treatment; particularly in those with a long life expectancy as are those treated for childhood neoplasms.
...
PMID:Second neoplasms following radiotherapy or chemotherapy for cancer. 708 Nov 42
This study compared psychologic function, especially
depression
, in patients with advanced cancer and in sociodemographically matched, physically healthy patients who had recently attempted suicide. A companion study examined self-report of depressive symptoms; the present study relied on a semistructured interview technique. Eighty patients who were hospitalized on a research oncology ward for treatment of disseminated cancer, acute leukemia, Stage IV
Hodgkin's disease
, or myeloma were compared by means of the Current and Past Psychopathology Scales (CAPPS) to 80 patients hospitalized on a psychiatric unit for attempted suicide. Interviewer ratings yielded scores on eight scales characterizing each patient's psychologic adjustment during the past month and 18 scales characterizing adjustment prior to the present illness (cancer or suicide attempt). Results showed that by both self-report and observer report, cancer patients wee less depressed and anxious in the past month than the psychiatric group. Approximately one-third on the cancer patients were significantly depressed, depending on the measure used; one-seventh had experienced some suicidal ideation. Cancer patients were better adjusted in the past than the comparison group; however, the cancer patients who were presently most depressed were those who had a prior history of
depression
and had shown a tendency to brood. Among cancer patients who died during the study period, no correlation between severity of
depression
and nearness to death could be found. Findings supported use of denial of dysphoric emotions by the cancer patients, but little denial of the diagnosis or the need to accept treatment. Despite stress of advanced illness and threat to life, cancer patient's reality testing and social role performance were superior to that of the suicide attempters, and on the average they had less disturbance of affect and cognition.
...
PMID:Comparative studies of psychological function in patients with advanced cancer. II. Interviewer-rated current and past psychological symptoms. 725 36
Between 1975 and 1978, 51 patients with favorable histology non-
Hodgkin
's lymphomas, pathologic stage III-IV, were treated prospectively on a randomized treatment protocol. Treatment options were single alkylating agent chemotherapy, combination chemotherapy with cyclophosphamide, vincristine, and prednisone (CVP), or fractionated whole body irradiation followed by low dose involved field irradiation. The median follow-up interval in this group of patients is not 41 mo. Actuarial survival is excellent, 84% at 4 yr for the entire group, with similar survival observed for each of the three treatment options. Initial complete remission rates (64%, 88%, and 71%) were not significantly different in the three treatment arms. Frequent relapse after initial remission induction was noted, however, with a freedom from relapse at 4 yr of only 25%. The toxicities of the three therapies were acceptable. Acute complications of therapy were most numerous in the group of patients treated with CVP; however, long-term hematologic
depression
was most commonly observed in patients treated with whole body irradiation. In general, hematologic complications were more frequent among patients who had marrow involvement and intact spleens at the time of initial therapy. The relationship of this study to other clinical trials in the management of patients with advanced stage favorable histology lymphomas and its implications for future clinical trials are discussed.
...
PMID:The treatment of advanced stage favorable histology non-Hodgkin's lymphoma: a preliminary report of a randomized trial comparing single agent chemotherapy, combination chemotherapy, and whole body irradiation. 725 38
The finding of general symptoms in
Hodgkin's disease
is accepted as bad prognostic sign and expression of disease activity. Results of clinical and histological classification analysis indicate the possibility of different interpretation of the presence and absence of symptoms in generalized disease. Asymptomatic generalized disease can be prognostically more serious than that of symptomatic one as it may express immunological tolerance of the tumor or acquired
depression
of defensive mechanisms. This conclusion is supported by preliminary data on survival of our patients in given classification groups.
...
PMID:Interpretation of clinical symptoms in Hodgkin's disease. 726 7
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