Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0019829 (Hodgkin's disease)
30,247 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In a study of 157 patients with lymphoid malignancy, the phenotype of the tumour cells was correlated with the histological classification of the tumour using the Rappaport and the Kiel classifications. The markers used included E, Fc gamma, Fc micron (IgM) and C3d rosetting, estimation of SIg and CyIg, and tests for the expression of HTLA, Ia and ALL. Repeat biopsy specimens were studied in 23 of these patients. The phenotypic features of lymphoblastic malignancy indicated B-cell, T-cell and ALL-positive null-cell tumours in this group. Immunoblastic lymphomas were predominantly of non-capping B-cell type, but T-cell immunoblastic lymphoma occurred in 2 patients. Immunoblastic lymphomas of receptor-silent cells occur, and are ALL- and HTLA-negative. In the category of diffuse, poorly differentiated lymphocytic lymphomas, most cases are of centroblastic and centrocytic tumour of diffuse type, but pure centrocytic tumours and centroblastic tumours occur. The dominant phenotype in this group is of B cells expressing C3d receptors. Nodular poorly differentiated lymphocytic lymphomas (Rappaport) are classified as centroblastic and centrocytic follicular (Kiel) and most express SIg+ C3d+ phenotype. The frequency of this phenotype appeared the same in both diffuse and nodular poorly differentiated lymphocytic neoplasms. The Rappaport group of diffuse well-differentiated lymphocytic lymphoma includes 2 Kiel categories, malignant lymphoma lymphocytic, and malignant lymphoma lymphoplasmacytoid. Cells of the former tumour were considered to be immature B cells resembling those seen in CLL, and characteristically expressing SIg weakly, with a high frequency of single kappa light chain. Cells of the latter tumour are by contrast mature, and are related to the centroblastic and centrocytic follicular tumour by their histogenesis and phenotypic features. Repeat biopsy examinations indicate that T-cell predominance occurs in the prodromal phase of B-cell-predominant tumours of SIg+ C3d+ phenotype. It is concluded that non-Hodgkin lymphoma can be divided into 2 categories: (1) tumours of immature immunologically incompetent cells of lymphoblastic histology and with phenotypic features akin to T, B and Null-cell ALL, and (2) tumours of differentiated lymphocytes expressing the phenotypic features of B lymphocytes, with maturation arrested at one of several stages of an antigen-dependent immune response.
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PMID:Surface phenotyping, histology and the nature of non-Hodgkin lymphoma in 157 patients. 31

Infection with Histoplasma capsulatum in 58 patients whose immune responses were suppressed (Immunosuppressed patients) (16 from the present series and 42 described previously) was analyzed. The most common underlying diseases were Hodgkin's disease (29 per cent), chronic lymphocytic leukemia (19 per cent) and acute lymphocytic leukemia (17 per cent). Sixty-three per cent of the patients had received cytotoxic drugs, and 57 per cent had taken corticosteroids. Widely disseminated infection occurred in 88 per cent of the patients, with predominant involvement of lungs and organs of the reticuloendothelial system. Localized pulmonary infection was present in the remaining patients. The most useful diagnostic method was bone marrow biopsy with microscopic examination for the intracellular yeast form of H. capsulatum. Biopsy of oral lesions, lung, liver and lymph node also proved diagnostically helpful. Growth of H. capsulatum in culture was frequently too slow to be beneficial in diagnosing histoplasmosis in ill patients. Serologic methods were of little diagnostic help in this population of immunosuppressed patients. The response to amphotericin B therapy was excellent (6.7 per cent mortality rate) in those patients in whom the diagnosis was established early and in whom a full course of antifungal therapy could be given. In contrast, the mortality rate in patients who received no antifungal therapy or less than 1 g of amphotericin B was 100 per cent.
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PMID:Histoplasmosis in immunosuppressed patients. 35 45

Prophylactic irradiation of the skull and intrathecal application of methotrexate has proven to be highly effective in preventing central nervous system disease in acute lymphoblastic leukemia or non-Hodgkin-lymphoma. Prophylactic treatment may be complicated by a somnolence syndrome occuring 4--8 weaks after the end of irradiation. The main features of this clinical entity are somnolence, lethargy, dullness, anorexia, headache, and vomiting. EEG frequently displays a distinct slowing of activity. All symptoms are reversible after 3--49 days. The syndrome clearly is consequence of skull irradiation. Its metabolic basis probably is transient disturbance of myelinization.
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PMID:[Non-leukemic disease of the central nervous system in children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia. I. Somnolence syndrome (author's transl)]. 36 88

VM-26, a semisynthetic podophyllotoxin, was tested for antitumor activity and clinical toxicity in 181 children. The drug was administered iv at weekly intervals, beginning at a dose of 130 mg/2/week. The dose was increased, as tolerated, after 3 and 6 weeks to 150 and 180 mg/m2/week, respectively. The only major toxicity was hematologic, with neutropenia predominating. Anaphylaxis occurred in one patient. The drug demonstrated significant activity in acute lymphocytic leukemia (four responses among 15 patients) and neuroblastoma (ten responses among 31 patients). Objective responses were also noted in one patient each with acute myelogenous leukemia, Hodgkin's disease, histiocytic lymphoma, Wilms' tumor, Ewing's sarcoma, undifferentiated carcinoma, and sacrococcygeal sarcoma. Further trials of VM-26 in these childhood malignancies are warranted.
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PMID:Phase II study of VM-26 in acute leukemia, neuroblastoma, and other refractory childhood malignancies: a report from the Children's Cancer Study Group. 38 Aug 3

Presentations of malignant lymphomas in the past did not have the benefit of modern developments in immunology and do not bear any relationship to our modern understanding of immunology. The malignant lymphomas in our immunologic approach are regarded as neoplasms of the immune system and involve principally the T- and B-cell systems and alterations in lymphocyte transformation. The cytologic types of our new classification are an attempt to identify specific functional subtypes of the T- and B-cell systems as defective expressions of their normal counterparts. The results of our multiparameter studies on large case series of non-Hodgkin's lymphomas and those of others have demonstrated that the malignant lymphomas for the most part mark as T- or B-cell types, with the exception of a rare lymphoma of true histiocytic type and the unmarked portion of acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL) of childhood. They have demonstrated the heterogeneity of the cytologic types of the past that possibly account for the diversity of their clinical manifestations and responses to therapy. The immunologic approach has permitted the identification of homogeneous cytologic types that are emerging as clinical morphologic immunologic entities.
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PMID:The immunologic approach to the pathology of malignant lymphomas. 38 77

Vindesine is a new vinca alkaloid with broad-spectrum antineoplastic activity in experimental tumor models. Phase-I studies have shown that a weekly dosage regimen of 3--4 mg/m2 IV produces manageable toxicity, with leukopenia and peripheral neuropathy being dose-limiting. Two hundred seventy-five patients have been enlisted in Phase-II trials at the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center. Major objective responses (complete and partial remissions) were seen in bronchogenic carcinomas, melanoma, testicular carcinoma, esophageal carcinoma, acute lymphocytic leukemia, malignant lymphoma (Hodgkin's and non-Hodgkin's) and Wilms' tumor. Patients with hematologic and germ cell neoplasms were treated on a daily administration schedule (1.0--1.3 mg/m2 IV for 5--7 days). Vindesine was well tolerated, with less than 5% of patients having a WBC nadir of less than 1000 cells/mm3 and with a platelet-sparing effect noted. Dose-related peripheral neuropathy occurred frequently and was generally mild to moderate in degree. Vindesine appears to be an active agent whose role will be further defined by completion of ongoing trials.
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PMID:Vindesine. A review of phase-II trials. 45 87

Malignant cells from 49 children with lymphoid neoplasms other than Hodgkin disease were evaluated by surface marker and morphologic studies. We classified the patients into three groups: 36 patients (74%) with acute lymphocytic leukemia; 7 (14%) classified as convoluted lymphocytic lymphoma/leukemia; and 6 (12%) with small noncleaved follicular center cell lymphoma/leukemia. Diffuse marrow involvement was present at diagnosis in some patients in the latter two groups, but their clinical course was not characteristic of the patients with acute lymphocytic leukemia. Male predominance, poor prognosis, and high incidence of central nervous system disease characterized patients in the convoluted lymphocytic and follicular center cell lymphoma/leukemia groups. Clinical presentation in these two groups differed. Proliferations of convoluted lymphocytes were associated with mediastinal masses and proliferations of follicular center cells with intraabdominal tumors. The high incidence of CNS disease in children with neoplasms of convoluted lymphocytes and follicular center cells suggests that these processes have a predilection for the CNS and that patients with them may benefit from CNS prophylaxis.
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PMID:Childhood leukemia and lymphoma: correlation of clinical features with immunological and morphological studies. 52 22

Glycylproline p-nitroanilidase activity in serum of patients with acute lymphatic leukemia, lymphosarcoma and Hodgkin's disease, and of normal neonates (umbilical blood) was significantly lower than that of normal adult controls. In contrast, the enzyme activity of patients with myelocytic leukemias did not differ significantly from that of normal controls.
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PMID:Serum glycylproline p-nitroanilidase activity in blood cancers. 57 37

Anthracyclines, such as daunorubicin (DNR), rubidazone (RBD) and adriamycin (ADR) are intercalating drugs used in cancer chemotherapy. They inhibit synthesis of DNA and RNA, break DNA and inhibit mitochondrial oxidative chain. Their antitumoral experimental activities depend upon type of drug, tumor and route of administration. After i.v. administration, the drug is present in all tissues except central nervous system. Its disappearance from the plasma is biphasic with a long terminal half life, justifying intermittent chemotherapy. Anthracyclines metabolism occurs mainly in liver micrososomes, and 90% metabolites are excreted in the bile. The main toxicity is cardiac, as a congestive heart failure which appears when a cumulated drug dose is overcome. In man only, a few derivatives have been studied, compounds with activity and no cardiotoxicity are still in research. Action of malignancies depends on type of derivative. We use DNR since 1967, it is a remarkable active drug in induction treatment of AML, it is the only active drug on acute promyelocytic leukemia, and it increases number of remissions in all of adult patients and severe forms of children ALL. Adriamycin (ADR) is active on solid tumors (osteosarcoma, breast and thyroid cancers) and lymphomas. With rubidazone (RBD) we obtain 2/3 of remissions in acute monoblastic leukemia, and it is easier to use than DNR and equally active on AML. RBD is also active on severe cases of lymphomas (lymphosarcomas and Hodgkin's disease). A new compound DEA 14 DNR seems interesting: experimental antitumor activity is high (compared to DNR, RBD and ADR) and it appears to possess activity on solid tumors in man.
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PMID:[Survey of anthracyclines derivatives in haematology (author's transl)]. 67 74

In 38 patients with acute lymphocytic leukemia and Hodgkin's disease 60 episodes of infection were registered showing the unquestionable increased susceptibility to infections in these cases. In 90% of the patients the infectious focus was localized and the pulmonary showed to be the most frequent. The etiology of the infection was established in 53% of the episodes and the bacterial, both gram-positive as gram-negative, showed the greatest frequency. In the second place came viral infections (measles and chicken-pox). Finally, two pathogenic agents, unusual in children without cancer were seen: Candida albicans and Pneumocystis carinii. Treatment was given according to the etiological agent. When it was not determined, methycillin-gentamicin was given and if the problem was pulmonary and response was not obtained within 4 to 6 days, trimetoprim-sulfametoxazole was chosen. Five children died as direct consequence of infection (13% of the patients), 2 of them (5%) without tumoral activity at that moment.
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PMID:[Infections in children with cancer]. 68 26


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