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)

The Pediatric Oncology Group compared two regimens that employed involved field radiotherapy 3,500 rad and either MOPP + Bleo or A-COPP chemotherapy, given in a sandwich fashion, as treatments for stage III Hodgkin's disease in children under the age of 18 years. Eighty-four surgically staged children from the United States and Mexico who had been randomly assigned to treatment during the period from July 1976 through October 1982 were evaluated. Unfavorable disease characteristics were distributed equally between the treatment groups. The percentages of children achieving complete remission by regimen were 84% for MOPP + Bleo and 92% for A-COPP. For those continuing in complete remission, the percentages were 71% for MOPP + Bleo and 72% for A-COPP. For those surviving 9 years, the percentage was 84% for MOPP + Bleo and 85% for A-COPP. The presence of low abdominal disease at diagnosis did not adversely influence response to therapy or survival. All deaths among MOPP + Bleo cases occurred within 4 years of study entry; 3 late deaths in A-COPP cases at 8-10 years were due to osteosarcoma, cardiopathy, and recurrent Hodgkin's disease. The preferred treatment regimen for future use cannot be determined until the cardiotoxicity of Adriamycin is eliminated by the development of drug delivery techniques that reduce cardiotoxicity or anthracycline congeners that are not cardiotoxic.
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PMID:Comparative effectiveness of two combined modality regimens in the treatment of surgical stage III Hodgkin's disease in children. An 8-year follow-up study by the Pediatric Oncology Group. 178 72

Primary diagnostic lymph node biopsies from 317 patients with Hodgkin's disease pathologic stage (PS) I or II in the prospective randomised trial of the Danish National Hodgkin Study and from 174 patients with Hodgkin's disease stage III or IV examined and treated at the Finsen Institute, Copenhagen, Denmark, were reviewed. The original diagnosis of Hodgkin's disease was made during the period 1971-1983 and was a result of a consensus among three members of a panel of pathologists. In the current study, the histological material was re-examined in order to critically consider and exclude cases which are not histologically diagnostic but microscopically bear resemblance to Hodgkin's disease, to obtain a uniform subclassification in accordance with recent new points of the Rye classification, to examine possible changes in incidence over the course of time and to examine the NS subclassification according to the BNLI proposals. Two cases (0.4%) were reclassified as not being Hodgkin's disease, and 489 cases (99.6%) were reclassified as Hodgkin's disease in the subgroups: LP 7.5% (16.7%), NS 65.1% (54.7%), MC 21.9% (26.4%) and LD 1.2% (1.2%) (the numerals in brackets state the original subgroups). In 9.7% of the cases, the subclass could not be assessed, because the biopsies were too small for subclassification. The difference between the original and the present subclassification could be explained partly by a change in the criteria for the different subgroups and partly by interobserver disagreement. In the histologically reclassified material, the Rye classification lost its prognostic significance. It was not possible to demonstrate a gradual change over the course of time in the relative number of cases in each subgroup.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Changes over the course of time in histological subclassification of Hodgkin's disease in Denmark. 202 54

Female patients with Hodgkin's disease who undergo staging laparotomy frequently have oophoropexy performed to preserve both fertility and hormone production. Because of recent changes in therapy favoring systemic chemotherapy rather than total nodal irradiation for patients with stage III Hodgkin's disease, the need for oophoropexy may be less than previously described. Thirty-nine women of childbearing age underwent laparotomy at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, from 1970 to 1984. Twenty-seven patients underwent oophoropexy. Only three of these patients would have needed this procedure based on their subsequent therapy. Two patients required additional gynecologic surgery because of complications related to the oophoropexy. The success rate in preservation of menstrual function and fertility is also discussed. We review the previous experience with oophoropexy and suggest an alternative approach to the routine use of this procedure.
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PMID:Oophoropexy and the management of Hodgkin's disease. A reevaluation of the risks and benefits. 294 53

143 patients with Hodgkin's disease stage III (65 PS III, 78 CS III) were treated with radiotherapy alone (33 patients), combination chemotherapy alone (56 patients), or radiotherapy plus combination chemotherapy (54 patients). They were followed till death or from 7 to 191 months. Prognostic factors including treatment, peripheral + intrathoracic tumour burden (assessed by combining tumour size in each involved region with number of involved regions), intraabdominal tumour burden (assessed by combining size of lymphographically involved lymph nodes in each region with number of lymphographically involved regions), histologic subtype, B-symptoms, number of involved regions, mediastinal involvement, pretreatment ESR, sex, age, laparotomy, and substage were examined in multivariate analysis. With regard to disease-free survival, total tumour burden (intraabdominal and peripheral + intrathoracic) emerged as the only pre-treatment factor of independent prognostic significance. With regard to overall survival the only factor of independent significance apart from age turned out to be intraabdominal tumour burden. The results of the present study thus support recently published findings regarding early stage disease to the effect that tumour burden is the single most important prognostic factor in Hodgkin's disease.
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PMID:Prognostic factors in Hodgkin's disease stage III with special reference to tumour burden. 340 91

This is a retrospective analysis of 120 patients with pathologically stage IIIA and IIIB Hodgkin's disease treated from April 1969 to December 1982. The median follow-up was 108 months. Treatment consisted of radiation therapy (RT) alone in 54 patients and combined radiation therapy and MOPP (nitrogen mustard, vincristine, procarbazine, prednisone) chemotherapy (CMT) in 66 patients. Stage III patients treated with CMT have an improved actuarial 12-year survival as compared with patients treated with RT alone with MOPP reserved for relapse (80% v 64%; P = .026). The 12-year actuarial freedom from first relapse by treatment for stage III patients is 83% and 40%, respectively (P less than .0001). Improved survivals following combined modality therapy are seen for the following subgroups of stage III patients: stage III2, 66% (CMT) v 44% (total nodal irradiation; TNI), P = .04; stage III1, 97% (CMT) v 73% (TNI), P = .05; stage III mixed cellularity or lymphocyte depletion histology, 94% (CMT) v 65% (TNI), P = .007; and stage III extensive splenic involvement, 77% (CMT) v 58% (TNI), P = .02. These survival differences are not seen in patients with nodular sclerosis or lymphocyte predominance histology or in patients with minimal splenic involvement. These data indicate that the initial use of CMT in stage III Hodgkin's disease results in an improved survival as compared with initial treatment with RT with MOPP reserved for relapse. Patients with limited Stage IIIA disease may still be candidates for radiation therapy alone.
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PMID:Stage III Hodgkin's disease: improved survival with combined modality therapy as compared with radiation therapy alone. 383 44

The clinical significance of anatomic substage was assessed in 130 patients with Hodgkin's disease in pathologic stage III-A: stage III1-A includes involvement of spleen, or splenic, celiac, or portal nodes, or any combination of these; stage III2-A includes involvement of para-aortic, iliac, or mesenteric nodes, with or without upper abdominal involvement. Median follow-up was 58 months. Both 5-year disease-free survival, 74% versus 46%, and 5-year survival, 94% versus 65%, were better (P less than 0.001) in stage III1-A than in stage III2-A. In stage III1-A, 5-year disease-free survival was better in patients receiving radiotherapy and chemotherapy than in patients receiving radiotherapy alone as initial treatment, 96% versus 63%, P less than 0.003; however, 5-year survival rates in P = 0.22. For stage III2-A, both 5-year disease-free survival, 76% versus 32%, P less than 0.001, and 5-year survival, 84% versus 56%, P less than 0.03, were superior with radiotherapy-chemotherapy. Consideration of anatomic substage may aid therapeutic planning for stage III Hodgkin's disease.
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PMID:Anatomic substages of stage III-A Hodgkin's disease. A collaborative study. 735 20

We report on a woman in whom the fortuitous diagnosis of a non-Hodgkin lymphoma of the breast was made. She had been treated 20 years earlier elsewhere for Hodgkin's disease stage III. The remarkable association of an extranodal lymphoma with a previously treated Hodgkin's disease is discussed.
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PMID:A non-hodgkin-lymphoma of the breast, occurring 20 years after the treatment of a hodgkins-disease. 2159 28