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

We have investigated seven cases of large cell lymphomas (LCL) developing simultaneously or metachronously to nodular lymphocyte-predominant Hodgkin's disease (nodular paragranuloma, NP) for the presence of EBV and the chromosomal translocation t(14;18) by use of the polymerase chain reaction (PCR). The expression of the bcl-2 oncogene product in these cases and in five cases of progressive transformation of germinal centres as a potential precursor of NP was detected immunohistochemically with the monoclonal antibodies bcl-2-100 and bcl-2-124. All cases investigated were negative for EBV genomic material. The chromosomal translocation t(14;18) was also absent. Expression of the bcl-2 oncogene could be detected only in one case of nodular paragranuloma and in an unrelated case of LCL. Hence, LCL developing out of NP differ from other germinal center derived high-grade lymphomas.
...
PMID:[Bcl-2 in potentials precursors of nodular paragranuloma and its dedifferentiated variant (large cell B-lymphoma)]. 128 52

Twenty patients with orbital lymphomas were treated and followed over a 14-year period. Ten of these patients had well-differentiated lymphocytic lymphoma (WDL), and all of them were clinical stage IE. Five patients had nodular poorly differentiated lymphocytic lymphomas (NPDL), three patients had diffuse histiocytic lymphomas (DHL), one had nodular mixed-cell lymphoma, and one had diffused mixed-cell lymphoma. The patients with WDL received local radiation therapy, and all of them entered completed remissions. The projected survival at 10 years was 100% for these patients. The patients with low-grade lymphomas with advanced disease were treated with chlorambucil and prednisone or cytoxan and vincristine. The patients with high-grade lymphomas received treatment with methotrexate, cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, bleomycin, dexamethasone (mBACOD) or cyclophosphamide, vincristine, methotrexate, cytosine arabinoside, leucovorin (COMLA). The overall survival estimate for all patients was 63% at 10 years. The disease-free survival was 49% at 10 years. The patients with high-grade lymphomas had a poor prognosis, with no survivors after 4 years. This study suggests that patients with WDL usually present with localized disease to the involved orbit, and have an excellent prognosis with radiation therapy alone. Patients with high-grade orbital non-Hodgkin's lymphomas have a poor outcome despite use of aggressive combination chemotherapy regimens.
...
PMID:Treatment and prognosis of orbital non-Hodgkin's lymphomas. 137 64

This brief review of non-Hodgkin's lymphomas emphasizes aspects of clinical research which have led to important improvements in the management of patients, and examines research questions with relevance for the future. In the intermediate- and high-grade lymphomas, strategies to intensify drug regimens have proved successful in raising rates of curative outcome. With the introduction of growth factors and peripheral stem cell transfusion to support nadir cytopenias it becomes possible to further develop dose-intense regimens. Identification and selection of poor prognostic subsets is key to the further application of these approaches, since the therapeutic ratio may be narrow and up to 50% of patients may be cured with less toxic regimens. In the low-grade lymphomas where a curative outcome is less certain, the application of intensive therapy has proved more controversial and results remain preliminary. Nevertheless, durable remissions appear achievable in advanced-stage CR patients utilizing low-dose consolidative irradiation or autologous transplantation. In contrast to intermediate- and high-grade lymphomas where intensive therapy is often reserved for responding poor-risk presentations, in low-grade lymphoma intensive therapy and consolidation is most successfully applied to good-risk patients.
...
PMID:Management of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. 138 Mar 42

P53 is a tumour suppressor gene, located in the short arm of chromosome 17, which encodes for a nuclear protein involved in the control of cellular growth, regulating the entry of the cell into the S-phase. P53 mutations have been identified in a progressively increasing number of human malignancies. Nuclear p53 protein is usually present in non-tumour cells in minute concentrations, due to its short half-life. In contrast, tumours with p53 mRNA mutations show a higher nuclear protein concentration, detectable by immunohistological techniques, due to stabilization by complexing with other proteins such as heat-shock protein or wild-type p53 protein. Levels of nuclear p53 protein detected by immunohistochemistry with the monoclonal antibody PAb 1801 were measured with the aid of an image analysis system in 83 non-Hodgkin's lymphomas (NHLs) and 13 cases of Hodgkin's disease, as well as in 14 cases of normal thymus, reactive tonsils, and lymphadenitis. High levels of p53 protein (greater than 5 per cent of the cells) were present only in high-grade lymphomas (in the proportion 13/55), with a peak incidence in Burkitt's lymphoma (5/8 cases). Lower levels (less than 5 per cent) of p53 protein were detected in low-grade B- and T-cell lymphomas, as well as in most of the cases of Hodgkin's disease, where p53 protein was selectively present in Hodgkin and Reed-Sternberg cells. In 5/14 reactive tonsils or lymph nodes, occasional p53-positive cells were identified. These results suggest a relationship between levels of p53 protein and the aggressiveness of NHL.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:P53 protein expression in lymphomas and reactive lymphoid tissue. 138 24

p53 is a tumor suppressor gene that commonly undergoes mutations in human tumors, including lymphomas. Because p53 mutations are not restricted to a single locus, immunohistochemistry is useful to detect p53 expression and correlate this finding with lymphoma phenotype. Cryostat sections from 125 cases of lymphoma were analyzed for p53 expression using three different monoclonal antibodies (pAb 421, 1801, 240) which react with human cellular p53 and a common conformational epitope on mutant p53. A control antibody (pAb 246) reacts only with wild type p53 of murine origin and was negative in all cases. Tissue from 29 cases of lymphoid hyperplasia, including six from human immunodeficiency virus-positive (HIV+) patients, were negative for p53. p53 was predominantly localized in nuclei of high-grade lymphomas, including 14 of 46 cases of B cell immunoblastic lymphomas and two of five T cell immunoblastic lymphomas. p53 expression was relatively common in lymphomas from HIV+ patients, and unusual in intermediate and low-grade lymphomas of follicular center cell type. Low-grade lymphoma of small lymphocytic type disclosed p53+ large cells (paraimmunoblasts) that may play a role in tumor progression in this lymphoma subtype. p53 was also strongly expressed in the nuclei of Reed Sternberg cells from 19 of 37 cases of Hodgkin's disease, including six cases of mixed cellularity, and 13 cases of nodular sclerosing type. Immunohistochemical staining is a rapid method to identify p53 expression in lymphomas.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical analysis of p53 expression in malignant lymphomas. 146 98

There have been considerable advances in the management of patients with lymphoma over the past three decades. In Hodgkin's disease, there was a major break-through in the late 1960s with the development of the MOPP combination regimen. Using this and other more recent combinations, remission rates of up to 80 pc may be achieved overall with many patients having durable remissions. In non-Hodgkin's lymphoma there have been few advances in therapy of the indolent low-grade varieties which remain largely incurable. In the aggressive high-grade lymphomas, some subtypes have proved highly responsive to intensive cytotoxic programmes, giving remission rates and relapse-free survival rates of 70-80 pc. Certain categories, however, such as lymphoblastic lymphoma, remain a problem. Bone marrow transplantation and biological response modifiers have been important recent developments. The search for treatment strategies that improve survival and have relatively low toxicity is a continuing challenge.
...
PMID:Advances in lymphoma treatment. 151 19

Non-Hodgkin's lymphomas are an increasing problem in the AIDS population. They are generally aggressive, high-grade lymphomas and more commonly present at extranodal sites, particularly the central nervous system. Although chemo- and radiosensitive, the duration of response is generally short lived. Spontaneous remission of non-Hodgkin's lymphomas has been reported in immunocompetent individuals, but has not been reported in HIV disease. We would like to report the first such case.
...
PMID:The spontaneous regression of lymphoma in AIDS. 158 41

The monoclonal antibody, 4F2, which reacts with an antigen expressed by activated and proliferating cells, was applied to frozen sections of nine reactive lymphoid lesions, 146 B-cell non-Hodgkin's lymphomas (NHL), and six plasmacytic neoplasms. In reactive cases, the 4F2 antigen was expressed by germinal center cells and interfollicular immunoblasts, the activated or proliferating lymphoid cells, and histiocytes. In the malignant cases, the 4F2 antigen was expressed by 94 (64%) B-cell NHL and all six plasma cell tumors. The incidence of positivity and intensity of expression loosely correlated with the three morphologic grades of NHL identified in the Working Formulation. Approximately one half of all low-grade lymphomas, two thirds of intermediate-grade lymphomas, and all high-grade lymphomas were 4F2 positive. Similarly, the mean intensity of 4F2 antigen expression increased with higher grade. However, for certain histologic subtypes, 4F2 antigen expression did not correlate with morphologic grade. For example, in the intermediate-grade category less than one half of diffuse small cleaved cell lymphomas were 4F2 positive, and expression was weak, similar to that of low-grade lymphomas. In contrast, all other histologic subtypes of lymphoma in the intermediate-grade category were strongly 4F2 positive. Expression of 4F2 antigen also correlated with plasmacytoid differentiation. Seventy-three percent of plasmacytoid small lymphocytic lymphomas (compared with 31% of cases of non-plasmacytoid small lymphocytic lymphoma/chronic lymphocytic leukemia) and all plasma cell neoplasms expressed the 4F2 antigen, the latter cases strongly.
...
PMID:Expression of the activation antigen, 4F2, by non-Hodgkin's lymphomas of B-cell phenotype. 191 36

Many of the advances in the management of non-Hodgkin's lymphomas have been based on more precise understanding of the various cell types that constitute these disorders. During the past year, we have seen some dramatic changes in the therapeutic approach to low-grade lymphomas. Until recently, the usual approach to these disorders was a purely palliative one, but a number of publications from the past year describe a more intensive approach with the goal of developing a curative modality. The use of combination chemotherapy in addition to radiation therapy for the early Ann Arbor stages as well as the use of high-dose chemotherapy with bone marrow transplantation in patients with high-risk factors has been reported recently. In the area of intermediate-grade lymphomas, most of the recent publications have described prognostic factors associated with various chemotherapy protocols. One of the most interesting recent developments is related to the dose-intensity issue. A consensus appears to be developing in regard to the correlation of dose intensity with clinical outcome. Despite the fact that new third-generation regimens have been associated with cures in 50% to 66% of the patients, a significant fraction of patients require salvage chemotherapy. Some of the new salvage regimens are discussed, as is the use of calcium channel blockers to reverse multiple-drug resistance. Finally, management of the high-grade lymphomas, specifically the small noncleaved cell type, has been associated with a cure rate in the range of 50% in two recently published studies. Patients who are human immunodeficiency virus-positive with small noncleaved cell lymphoma can be cured of their underlying malignancy, but many of them later develop complications of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, to which they usually succumb.
...
PMID:Treatment of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. 175 77

Although dramatic progress has been made in the treatment of advanced non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, a majority of patients eventually die from this disease. Improvements in histopathology, staging techniques, immunophenotyping, and knowledge of prognostic factors have improved our ability to choose appropriate treatment. Most low-grade lymphomas can be effectively palliated for many years, but eventually convert to large-cell lymphomas or become resistant to chemotherapy. Intermediate-grade lymphomas, especially diffuse large-cell lymphomas, may be cured in 30% to 60% of the cases with aggressive combination chemotherapy. The high-grade lymphomas require treatment similar to regimens designed to treat acute lymphocytic leukemia, including central nervous system (CNS) prophylaxis. Non-Hodgkin's lymphomas are becoming more common in patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), and may be effectively controlled before the immunodeficiency becomes too severe. All patients with high-grade lymphoma and others at high risk should be tested for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Patients who relapse may be salvaged with chemotherapy, and their diseases are potentially curable with autologous or allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. New treatments using monoclonal antibodies, biological response modifiers, and growth factors, should improve palliation and survival.
...
PMID:Treatment of advanced non-Hodgkin's lymphoma in adults. 184 59


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