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)

Forty-three patients with hematopoietic disease were treated with intensive chemotherapy and radiotherapy, followed by allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT) from 28 HLA-identical and 10 one to two antigen haploidentical sibling donors and autologous BMT (5 cases). Of these cases, there were 21 with acute nonlymphocytic leukemia (ANLL), 5 with acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL), 6 with chronic myelocytic leukemia (CML), 2 with Hodgkin's disease (HD), 8 with severe-form aplastic anemia (SAA) and 1 with thalassemia. Complications of BMT were evaluated including acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD), interstitial pneumonia (IP), veno-occlusive liver disease (VOD), abnormalities of liver function (LF), and alteration of hepatitis B virus (HBV) markers. In thirty-three patients who were followed up for more than 3 months, we found that the incidence of moderate to severe acute GVHD (9.1%) and IP (two cases, 4.7%) were low. No VOD occurred in our series. During the follow-up period, 27 out of 35 patients (77%) had high alanine aminotransferase (ALT)/aspartate aminotransferase (AST) levels, even up to 1000 U/liter; however, only one patient succumbed to a hepatitis-related complication. Previous hepatic damage from HBV infection before BMT does not appear to increase the risk of posttransplant morbidity and mortality.
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PMID:Complications of bone marrow transplantation in Chinese. 232 72

Twenty three patients with Hodgkin's disease were treated with BCNU (carmustine), etoposide, and cyclophosphamide at doses of 450-600 mg/m2, 1500-2000 mg/m2, and 120 mg/kg respectively. Bone marrow refrigerated at 4 degrees C for 2-5 days or cryopreserved at -80 degrees C was used to reconstitute bone marrow function. The median age was 28 (range 16-48), and the median Karnofsky performance status was 70. Nineteen patients had progressive disease while on chemotherapy. The median number of prior regimens was three (1-7), and the median number of prior chemotherapy drugs was 10 (range 4-12). Ten patients had received at least two of the drugs used in this study and four had had all three. Indicator lesions included lung (10), peripheral lymph nodes (9), retroperitoneal nodes (8), liver (3), and chest wall masses (2). Ten patients achieved a complete remission (43.5%; 95% confidence limits 23-64%), and five patients had a partial remission (21.7%; 95% confidence limits 5-39%). The median duration of complete remission was 6 months (range 2-13+ months). Responses were shorter in duration for patients with primary refractory disease. Liver function abnormalities were noted in nine (39%) cases. Post transplant, the recovery time was 18 days (range 11-43) for WBC and 24 days (11-77) for platelets. Two patients died of septic episodes while neutropenic. The median number of RBC units used was seven (range 1-45). Ten patients had evidence of pulmonary dysfunction. In seven patients there was symptomatic improvement with steroid therapy, but three patients who were not treated with steroids died as a result of interstitial pneumonia. Future programs should consider bone marrow transplantation in patients with Hodgkin's disease earlier in the course of disease, at the time of minimal residual disease, and employ newer, potentially less toxic drugs.
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PMID:High-dose, potentially myeloablative chemotherapy and autologous bone marrow transplantation for patients with advanced Hodgkin's disease. 264 73

From 1979 to 1988, 82 allogeneic and 2 syngeneic bone marrow transplants (BMT) were performed in 78 patients (age range 13-49 years) with the following diagnoses: acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) (21 patients); acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) (15 patients); chronic myelocytic leukemia in chronic, accelerated, or blastic phase (CML-CP, AP or BC) (25 patients); myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) (1 patient); multiple myeloma (MM) (1 patient); Hodgkin's disease (HD) (1 patient); diffuse poorly differentiated lymphoma (DPDL) (1 patient); aplastic anemia (AA) (13 patients). Univariant analyses were carried out to determine factors of importance in predicting outcome. AML patients receiving transplants in remission had 12/19 (63%) survivors. Only one of seven ALL patients receiving transplants in remission survives free of disease, and none of eight patients receiving transplants in relapse survived. Six ALL patients relapsed. In CML, 6 of 16 (40%) patients receiving transplants in CP survive; two of nine patients (22%) in AP or BC survive. Of the 13 aplastic anemias, 8 (62%) survive. Graft-vs.-host disease (GVHD) was evaluated in 75 patients, 24 of 33 (73%) who developed GVHD died, compared to 24 of 44 (55%) who did not develop GVHD. Of the 30 patients given the combination of methotrexate (MTX) plus cyclosporine (CSP), only 23% developed GVHD, compared to 58% of those not given the combination. Interstitial pneumonia (IP) occurred in 16 patients and was fatal in 15. The introduction of daily acyclovir and weekly intravenous gamma globulin in 1985 was associated with little reduction in the frequency of IP (from 20% to 18%). However, survival increased from 21% to 47%.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Factors affecting survival in allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. 265 45

Twenty-six patients with progressive Hodgkin's disease after conventional chemotherapy received intensive chemoradiotherapy and autologous bone marrow transplantation (ABMT); 19 also received additional involved-field radiotherapy. Twenty-one patients [81%, 95% confidence intervals (CI) 61% to 94%] attained complete (n = 18) or partial responses. Ten patients (38%, 95% CI 20% to 59%) are disease-free a median of 4.5 years later (range 3.5 to 7.0 years), including seven patients with continuous complete responses. The likelihood of overall response was not significantly influenced by any clinical or treatment variable examined. However, there was a trend favoring patients with higher Karnofsky scores, and higher scores were associated with attainment of complete responses (P = .06 and P = .02, respectively, Mann-Whitney U test). Both higher Karnofsky scores and shorter durations of disease before transplantation were associated with improved survival in a stepwise Cox multivariate analysis. The chief cause of failure was progression at sites previously involved with Hodgkin's disease. No patient relapsed in the marrow, and two of three patients with a history of marrow involvement with Hodgkin's disease achieved durable complete responses after transplantation. These data suggest that inadequate pretransplant conditioning, and not the reinoculation of occult tumor cells in the autologous marrow, caused most relapses. Fatal treatment-related toxicity occurred in six patients. Three patients died of idiopathic interstitial pneumonitis; each had previously received local mediastinal irradiation before intensive chemoradiotherapy. Intensive chemoradiotherapy and ABMT produces durable responses in some patients with Hodgkin's disease incurable with conventional therapy. Use of such therapies at the first sign of failure with conventional chemotherapy and development of more effective conditioning regimens should further improve results.
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PMID:Treatment of progressive Hodgkin's disease with intensive chemoradiotherapy and autologous bone marrow transplantation. 265

We report the results of a pilot study of dose intensification with autologous bone marrow support in patients with malignant lymphoma. Since January 1988 11 patients with malignant lymphoma have been treated by intensive chemoradiotherapy or combination chemotherapy followed by autologous bone marrow support. 6 of the patients had non-Hodgkin's lymphoma in first remission with unfavorable histology and/or unfavorable clinical prognostic factors, and 5 patients were in second or subsequent remission (2 non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, 3 Hodgkin's disease). Bone marrow harvest and cryopreservation of marrow cells were uneventful. 10 patients showed full hematologic recovery, while one patient with Hodgkin's disease died early of pneumocystis pneumonia. With the exception of one interstitial pneumonitis of unknown etiology, the clinical course during hospitalization was otherwise uncomplicated. The mean duration of hospital stay was 33 days. 2 patients relapsed after dose intensification, while the others are in continued remission (median 7 months, range 2-14 months).
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PMID:[High-dosage chemo-radiotherapy with autologous bone marrow transfusion in malignant lymphoma: indications and personal experience]. 266 31

Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia is one of these opportunistic infections that are so frequently observed in immunodepressed patients. The usual radiological image is one of interstitial pneumonia. We report the case of a misleading and unusual pseudotumoral form in a female patient with non-Hodgkin malignant lymphoma. The course of the pneumonia was favourable after cotrimoxazole therapy, partial surgical resection and prophylaxis of relapses by inhaled pentamidine.
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PMID:[Pseudotumoral pneumocystosis: one case and a review of the literature]. 268 66

The acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) is a devastating new disease caused by the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). This retrovirus causes profound immunoincompetence in its infected hosts, who are thereafter susceptible to develop myriad severe and relapsing protozoal, fungal, bacterial, viral, and arthropodal opportunistic infections, as well as unusual malignancies. The more than 50,000 patients who have developed AIDS in the United States have produced a sudden unexpected deluge of diagnostic dilemmas that are stressing laboratories of pathology everywhere. This paper describes the gross and microscopic pathology of the numerous complications in patients infected by HIV: (a) the prodromal AIDS-related complex with persistent generalized lymphadenopathy, (b) lymphoid infiltration of salivary gland and lung, including the complex of lymphoid interstitial pneumonitis-pulmonary lymphoid hyperplasia, (c) extranodal non-Hodgkin's lymphomas, (d) multifocal mucocutaneous and visceral Kaposi's sarcoma, (e) small cell undifferentiated (oat cell) carcinomas, (f) protozoal infections caused by Pneumocystis carinii, Toxoplasma gondii, Acanthamoeba, Cryptosporidium species (sp.), and Isospora belli, (g) the causes of chronic enteritis, (h) mycotic infections caused by Candida sp., Cryptococcus neoformans, Histoplasma capsulatum, Coccidioides immitis, and Sporothrix schenckii, (i) bacterial infections caused by Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare, M. tuberculosis, M. kansasii, Nocardia sp., Listeria monocytogenes, Legionella sp., Treponema pallidum, and others, (j) viral infections caused by cytomegalovirus, herpes simplex and zoster, polyomavirus (progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy), hepatitis B, molluscum contagiosum, and papillomavirus, (k) oral hairy leukoplakia, (l) subacute encephalopathy, and (m) Norwegian scabies.
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PMID:The pathology of AIDS. 283 78

Nine male patients with disseminated Hodgkin's disease who had relapsed and/or were refractory to two or more non-"cross-resistant" programs of combination chemotherapy (range, two to five previous programs; median, three) were admitted into a study of treatment with wide-field low-dose radiation therapy (2,000 cGy), to all lymph node bearing areas, the liver, the spleen, and in selected cases the lungs (1,000 cGy). Simultaneous with each course of radiation therapy, chemotherapy with BCNU and procarbazine given at 50% doses of a known program of chemotherapy (BOPP) with vincristine and prednisone was given. Treatment was completed in five patients. Three of these achieved a complete remission; the other two had a partial response. Of the other four, two died during treatment with interstitial pneumonitis (probably radiation induced), and two failed to respond. Remission durations were 18+, 38, and 44+ months. Pulmonary toxicity was severe; however, hematologic and other toxicities were acceptable. The incorporation of wide-field low-dose radiation should be considered in programs of rescue for patients with Hodgkin's disease who relapse or are refractory to standard combination chemotherapy.
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PMID:Wide-field radiation therapy plus simultaneous chemotherapy for refractory Hodgkin's disease. 291 82

A simple, rapid and effective technique using the IBM (Cobe)-2991 cell processor for the concentration of buffy coat cells from large volume marrow has been well adopted (n = 16). Only about one-eighth of the original volume was obtained while retaining more than 90% of the total nucleated cells to be cryopreserved in polyolefine bags with TC-199 culture medium and final 10% dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) (n = 9), processed by a computerized Nicool ST-20 (France) programmed freezer and stored in a vapor phase of liquid nitrogen at -196 degrees C. Stem cell assay by CFU-GM after thawing yielded a mean of 50.39 +/- 19.54% which has been satisfactory for clinical implementation. So far, three cases with hematological malignancies had been rescued by autologous cryopreserved marrow after supralethal doses of chemoradiotherapy. Two patients with acute nonlymphocytic leukemia transplanted in 1st remission as of Oct. 31 had been disease free for 178+ and 157+ days, respectively, after transplant which was taken at the corresponding age of 53 and 42 years. The other patient who was a victim of Hodgkin's disease, stage IV, and was transplanted in 3rd remission, expired on the 59th day because of the complication of idiopathic interstitial pneumonitis despite excellent granulocytopoietic reconstitution. The preliminary results are encouraging for further exploitation, especially for those who would otherwise be candidates for allogeneic bone marrow transplantation but are limited by age or lack of an HLA-identical sibling to serve as marrow donors.
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PMID:Bone marrow cryopreservation and clinical implications in autologous bone marrow transplantation. 305 72

Approximately half of conventional-chemotherapy-resistant, far-advanced Hodgkin's disease patients can be placed into remission with existing intensive therapy regimens and ABMT; these results are similar to those noted in less-heavily pretreated non-Hodgkin's lymphoma patients. While a few of these end-stage patients have prolonged remissions, failure frequently occurs in a pattern that suggests the inadequacy of the intensive regimens rather than reinoculation of malignant cells in the marrow autograft. The use of additional local radiotherapy may be helpful in selected patients, and more effective regimens may be developed in the future. However, treatment of less advanced disease is primarily indicated. Due to previous treatment features, patients with advanced Hodgkin's disease may have more morbidity and mortality than a similar group of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma patients. This problem can be minimized by better patient selection, earlier marrow storage and the avoidance of TBI-containing regimens in patients at high risk of interstitial pneumonitis. Routine marrow purging is unlikely to be required for Hodgkin's disease patients given ABMT. The use of intensive therapy and ABMT for the treatment of Hodgkin's disease is currently indicated most clearly for treatment of a patient in initial partial remission, early relapse from an initial chemotherapy-induced remission, or consolidation of a second remission reinduced by conventional therapy.
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PMID:Clinical studies of autologous bone marrow transplantation in Hodgkin's disease. 351 87


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