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)

Twenty-one patients with advanced non-Hodgkin's lymphoma or Hodgkin's disease who had failed to be cured with standard therapy were the subjects of this clinical trial. The patients received cytarabine (3 g/m2 at 12-hour intervals for six or eight doses), cyclophosphamide (90 mg/kg once), and total-body irradiation (one 900-cGy fraction or five 250-cGy fractions). Bone marrow was aspirated and cryopreserved before treatment and reinfused after the completion of radiotherapy. Eighteen patients (86%) had objective response and 12 (57%) achieved complete response. Three patients remain in continuous complete remission for 566+, 604+, and 1035+ days after marrow infusion. Six complete responders had tumor recurrence. One of these patients developed a localized lymphoma of another histology that was successfully treated with local radiotherapy and the patient is currently well 1004+ days after marrow infusion. Another relapsing patient responded to a brief course of salvage chemotherapy and is in remission at 1271+ days. Three of the complete responders died from infectious complications. This regimen was associated with significant toxicity. Six patients died from sepsis during the period of aplasia and three others died from interstitial pneumonia 42-105 days after marrow infusion. Although this regimen demonstrated a high level of antitumor activity, the value of adding high-dose cytarabine to the combination of cyclophosphamide and total-body irradiation remains unclear and would require a randomized clinical trial to demonstrate.
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PMID:Trial of high-dose cytarabine, cyclophosphamide, total-body irradiation, and autologous marrow transplantation for refractory lymphoma. 352 47

An autopsy case of Hodgkin's disease accompanied with thymoma is reported. The patient died of acute interstitial pneumonitis 9 years after the development of lymphadenopathy. On post-mortem examination thymoma was recognized. We believe that the present case is a very rare Hodgkin's disease complicating thymoma. The occurrence of second neoplasia in Hodgkin's disease is also discussed.
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PMID:Hodgkin's disease accompanied with thymoma. 368 30

A case of a 69-year-old man admitted with procarbazine pneumonitis and a review of the literature are presented. The patient completed a second course of MOPP chemotherapy for Hodgkin's disease three days before admission. He presented with a recent onset of fever, chills, anorexia, and malaise. Chest radiography indicated diffuse bilateral interstitial pneumonitis, and pulmonary function studies revealed restrictive lung disease. Attempts to identify an infectious etiology, including open lung biopsy, were negative, and empirical antibiotic therapy was ineffective. The diagnosis was drug-induced hypersensitivity reaction, most likely due to procarbazine. Corticosteroid therapy was instituted with gradual improvement. Six other cases of pneumonitis associated with procarbazine therapy are briefly reviewed, and the use of pulmonary function tests to identify the type and degree of injury and monitor therapy is discussed.
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PMID:Acute pneumonitis associated with MOPP chemotherapy of Hodgkin's disease. 610 Dec 51

We report here sensitive and specific measurement of immune responses of patients with certain kinds of carcinoma toward the physically and chemically well defined T antigen isolated from healthy human erythrocytes. Over 90% of adenocarcinoma tissues tested possess T-specific immunoreactive structures as determined with human antisera, in contrast to healthy tissues and benign lesions. Adenocarcinoma patients recognize the carcinoma-associated T antigen as foreign. Delayed-type skin hypersensitivity reaction to T antigen (DTHR-T) was positive in all 25 lung adenocarcinoma patients tested, in 88% of 101 patients with ductal, in 43% of 30 patients with lobular or tubular breast carcinoma and in 9/9 patients with adenocarcinoma of body cavities. Patients of all Stages reacted positively. All 7 patients with small cell lung carcinoma and 3/5 with malignant melanoma had a positive DTHR-T. None of 17 patients with malignant brain tumors, leukemia or Hodgkin's disease, sarcoma or thyroid carcinoma reacted. The DTHR-T was specific in that all 77 healthy persons and 48/49 with other diseases, including 23/24 with non-cancer lung disease were negative; one patient with organizing interstitial pneumonitis was positive. This points to a possible source of false positive reactions. 91% of 149 patients with histologically benign breast disease had a negative DTHR-T; the histology of some of the positive ones was reexamined, 2 proved to have carcinoma in situ.
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PMID:Patients' immune response to breast and lung carcinoma-associated Thomsen-Friedenreich (T) specificity. 617 52

The autopsies of seven patients with disseminated varicella were reviewed. Six patients had acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and the seventh had Hodgkin's disease. All the patients were on chemotherapy at the time of commencement of their varicella rash, and at autopsy only the patient with Hodgkin's disease had residual tumor. The typical anatomic lesion of varicella was one of focal necrosis (often hemorrhagic) with eosinophilic intranuclear (Cowdry type-A) inclusions. In fatal disseminated varicella the complications most commonly encountered at autopsy were interstitial pneumonitis, hepatitis, necrotizing splenitis and lymphadenitis, esophagitis, enteritis, colitis, and pancreatitis. The most significant of these complications appears to be the interstitial pneumonitis, as the major cause of death is respiratory failure.
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PMID:Disseminated varicella at autopsy in children with cancer. 632 Oct 8

Eight adult patients with refractory Hodgkin's disease (HD) and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) were treated with high-dose combination chemotherapy (cyclophosphamide, BCNU and VP-16) or with cyclophosphamide and fractionated whole-body irradiation (TBI), followed by bone marrow transplant (BMT). Six patients received autologous and two patients allogeneic BMT. Five patients achieved complete remissions, and three of them (two with undifferentiated lymphoma, one with lymphoblastic lymphoma) are alive and free of disease 4-18+ months after BMT. The other two complete responders died of opportunistic infections 2 and 5 months, respectively, after BMT. One patient with HD achieved partial remission and is alive 18+ months after BMT. Two patients were considered failures: one developed leptomeningeal disease 24 days after BMT, and the other died of progressive lymphoma 7 months after BMT. Engraftment and prompt hematologic recovery occurred in all patients. The major toxicity included two fatal infections and one case of diffuse idiopathic interstitial pneumonitis. High-dose chemotherapy with or without TBI followed by BMT appears to produce a high response rate and, although associated with toxicity, it demonstrates the potential for salvaging patients with refractory lymphoma who otherwise would have a dismal prognosis.
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PMID:High-dose chemoradiotherapy and bone marrow transplantation in patients with refractory lymphoma. 635 79

The toxic effects of high-dose busulfan (16 mg/kg) and cyclophosphamide (200 mg/kg) with autologous or syngeneic bone marrow rescue were evaluated in 19 patients (11 with acute myelocytic leukemia, one with acute lymphocytic leukemia, one with acute myelofibrosis, two with chronic myelocytic leukemia, one with Hodgkin's disease, and three with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma). Their mean age was 26 years (range, 6-50); nine patients had syngeneic and ten had autologous bone marrow rescue (six of whom had in vitro bone marrow incubation with 4-hydroperoxycyclophosphamide). Severe myelosuppression was expected and was seen in all patients; leukocyte and platelet count recovery occurred at a median of 19 days (range, 11-59) and 30 days (range, 20-89), respectively. Nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea were frequent but readily managed with vigorous medical therapy. Stomatitis was severe in 14 patients. Skin, renal, cardiac, pulmonary, and CNS complications directly attributable to drug-related toxic effects were transient and non-life-threatening. Hepatic function abnormalities were common but tended to be transient. Most patients tolerated high-dose busulfan and cyclophosphamide with manageable side effects. Hepatic veno-occlusive disease was fatal in two patients, while diffuse interstitial pneumonitis with disseminated herpes virus infection was fatal in three patients with lymphoma. All patients treated in relapse or without previous therapy had a complete tumor response. Further studies with this regimen should be pursued.
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PMID:Preliminary results of high-dose busulfan and cyclophosphamide with syngeneic or autologous bone marrow rescue. 637 4

The purpose of this trial was to evaluate the efficacy and the tolerance of high-dose therapy with autologous stem cell transplantation as part of front-line therapy in Hodgkin's disease for patients with both adverse prognostic factors: high tumor burden at presentation and slow response to initial chemotherapy. In a prospective one-center study, 20 consecutive patients with slow response (tumor reduction < 75%) (16 pts) or refractory (4 pts) to 3-4 courses of conventional HD chemotherapy received high-dose therapy followed with autologous bone marrow (14 pts) or peripheral blood stem cell (6 pts) transplantation. They were 13 males, 7 females, median age 26 years (8-45). At the time of initial diagnosis, all but one of the patients had B symptoms, all had high-risk HD defined as Ann Arbor stage IV (7 pts) or large mediastinal involvement (LMI = tumor/thorax > 0.45 at T5-T6) (6 pts) or both stage IV+LMI (7 pts). Median time between diagnosis and autotransplantation was 5 months. Intensive therapy consisted of either CBV (cyclophosphamide 1.5 g/m2 x 4, BCNU 300 mg/m2, etoposide 200 mg/m2 x 3) (12 pts) or cyclophosphamide 120 mg/kg + 12 Gy total body irradiation for 8 patients with diffuse bone or lung involvement. For pts treated with CBV, 40 Gy involved field radio-therapy was performed after hematological recovery. Median duration of neutropenia was 16 days (9-21). Neither veno-occlusive disease, nor interstitial pneumonitis nor toxic death were observed. Seventeen pts are alive with no progression of the disease (16/16 in partial response after initial chemotherapy, 1/4 with refractory disease).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Early intensive therapy with autotransplantation for high-risk Hodgkin's disease. 751 54

As pathologists, we are most concerned about overcalling reactive changes in the lung as carcinoma and the fact that malignant processes may be misinterpreted as benign processes in the lung is less well recognized. This review covers five such lesions. Well-differentiated adenocarcinomas, especially bronchioloalveolar carcinomas, are frequently undercalled, particularly in small biopsy and cytology specimens. In such cases, one must pay particular attention to the uniformity and monotony of the epithelium even though it may be extremely well differentiated. Spindle cell carcinomas may have necrosis and cavitation, interstitial growth, and a reactive fibroblastic reaction, and thus be mistaken as organizing inflammatory processes. Careful attention to the atypical cytological features, prominent vascular invasion, and getting immunohistochemical supports helps in recognizing them. Lymphoid lesions of the lung present a number of problems; small lymphocytic lymphomas and Hodgkin's disease are often misinterpreted as inflammatory processes. Intravascular lymphomatosis in the lung may be misinterpreted as an interstitial pneumonia if one does not appreciate the atypical lymphoid cells within the capillaries. The desmoplastic variant of sarcomatous mesothelioma may be extremely difficult to diagnose, because large portions of the tumors are composed of bland-appearing fibrous tissue. A case of desmoplastic mesothelioma presenting predominantly as a mediastinal mass is discussed, and problems in differential diagnosis are outlined. Angiosarcomas are rare tumors, but an appreciable percentage of them present as pulmonary metastases which may be interpreted as pulmonary hemorrhage or organizing infarction. The clinical and radiographic pattern, usually mimicking metastatic disease, and the fact that atypical spindle cells occlude small pulmonary arteries with surrounding alveolar hemorrhage are clues to the recognition of these lesions.
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PMID:Malignancies in the lung and pleura mimicking benign processes. 777 Jun 73

Eight-five consecutive patients with relapsed or refractory Hodgkin's disease (HD) underwent high-dose chemotherapy or chemo/radiotherapy followed by autologous bone marrow (ABMT) and/or peripheral blood stem cell (PBSC) transplantation. Two preparative regimens were used. Twenty-two patients (26%) without prior radiation received fractionated total body irradiation (FTBI) 1,200 Gy in combination with high-dose etoposide (VP-16) 60 mg/kg and cyclophosphamide (CTX) 100 mg/kg. Sixty-three patients (74%) with prior radiotherapy received carmustine (BCNU) 450 mg/m2 instead of FTBI. The median age was 32 years (range, 16 to 56). The median number of prior chemotherapy regimens was three (range, 1 to 7). Forty-three patients (51%) received transplants in first relapse or second complete remission (CR), whereas 33 (39%) received transplants after second or subsequent relapse. All relapsed patients, except one, received conventional salvage chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy in an attempt to reduce tumor bulk before transplant. At the time of analysis in April 1994, fifty-seven patients (67%) are alive, including 44 (52%) in continuous CR, with a median follow-up for the surviving patients of 28 months (range, 7 to 66). Thirty patients (35%) relapsed at a median of 9 months (range, 1 to 43). Eleven patients (13%) died of transplant-related complications including veno-occlusive disease of the liver (VOD) in five, acute and late interstitial pneumonitis in three, graft failure in one, cerebral hemorrhage in one, and therapy-induced myelodysplasia (MDS)/acute leukemia in one patient. At a median follow-up of 25 months (range, 0.6 to 66), the cumulative probability of 2-year overall and disease-free survival (DFS) of all 85 patients is 75% (95% confidence interval [CI] 64% to 84%) and 58% (95% CI 47% to 69%), respectively. Three independent prognostic variables were identified by univariate analysis: number of prior chemotherapy regimens, prior radiotherapy, and extranodal disease at ABMT. Multivariate stepwise Cox regression identified the number of prior chemotherapy regimens as the only significant prognostic factor predicting for both relapse and DFS. There were no significant differences in the outcome of the treatment between the two preparative regimens. Our results confirm that high-dose therapy and ABMT is an effective therapy for patients with relapsed or refractory HD. Earlier transplantation is recommended before the development of drug resistance and end organ damage that results from repeated attempts of salvage therapy.
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PMID:High-dose chemotherapy with or without total body irradiation followed by autologous bone marrow and/or peripheral blood stem cell transplantation for patients with relapsed and refractory Hodgkin's disease: results in 85 patients with analysis of prognostic factors. 785 68


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