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 following sera were tested for EB virus-specific IgA: serial sera from 61 cases of infectious mononucleosis (IM) and from 195 EBV IgG positive healthy students; single sera from each of 1469 persons of different ages, 63 cases of untreated Hodgkin's disease, and 22 neonates. EBV specific IgA was found in the sera from 88% of cases of IM, from 18.5% of EBV IgG positive healthy students, and in 13.5% of repeat samples from the same students three years later. The incidence of EBV IgA varied from 5 to 30% at different ages in single sera from EBV IgG positive persons aged 2 to 70 years. The higher percentages occurred in the age groups where recent sero-conversion rates were high. Fifteen percent of sera from cases of Hodgkin's disease were positive for EBV IgA, an incidence similar to that for healthy adults in the age group 25-45 years. None of the EBV IgG positive sera from neonates gave a positive reaction for EBV IGA.
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PMID:EB virus-specific IgA in serum of patients with infectious mononucleosis and of healthy people of different ages. 23 Feb 3

We reported the first case of angiotropic lymphoma diagnosed by adrenal biopsy in Japan. Immunohistochemical study and southern blot hybridization analysis proved it to be B-lymphocyte origin. A 61-year-old man with history of mild hypertension and diabetes mellitus was admitted to our department because of recurrent minor stroke. On admission, general physical findings were normal. Laboratory investigations showed an elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate and increased serum lactic dehydrogenase (LDH) level. The serial computed tomographic (CT) scan of the brain showed multifocal abnormal density lesions in bilateral hemispheres. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain demonstrated multiple lesions of increased signal intensity in the brainstem and bilateral hemispheres. A subsequent CT scan of the abdomen revealed swelling of bilateral adrenal glands. Adrenal biopsy was performed. Biopsy samples showed the intravascular proliferation of malignant lymphoma cells, non-Hodgkin, diffuse large cell type. These cells had the immunophenotype of a B cell lymphoma (reactive with the antileukocyte common antigen, anti-MB-1, anti-MB-2 and anti-MX-pan B, and unreactive with the anti-MT-1, anti-UCHL, anti-Ki, anti-kappa, anti-lambda and antifactor-VIII). Southern blot hybridization analysis showed monoclonal rearrangements of the immunoglobulin heavy-chain gene, which strongly suggested a B-lymphocyte origin. Thus, a diagnosis of angiotropic lymphoma was made. As soon as chemotherapy was begun, the patient fell into deep coma. A repeat CT scan of the brain was normal. His clinical status gradually deteriorated, and he died 18 months after his initial symptom. Autopsy, which was limited to the body, revealed characteristic systemic intravascular stagnation of lymphoma cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[A case of angiotropic lymphoma diagnosed by adrenal biopsy]. 129 Nov 69

A 46-year-old man presented with eyelid swelling and choroidal folds in the right eye. These symptoms were rapidly exacerbated, but inflammatory findings were not observed. MRI tomography confirmed the presence of an orbital tumor compressing the eyeball. In 67Ga scintigram, a hot spot was recognized only at the right orbital region. This orbital tumor was removed subtotally. It was diagnosed histologically as non-Hodgkin malignant lymphoma (diffuse medium cell-type) and stained on paraffin sections, using monoclonal antibodies immunohistochemically. Anti-LCA, anti-MT-1, anti-UCHL-1 antibodies were positive, and anti-MB-1 antibody was negative. The clinical stage was IE in the Ann-Arbor classification. He was treated by radiation and chemotherapy, but died because of opportunistic infection after 6 months. This is, so far as we know, the first case in Japan diagnosed as primary orbital T-cell type malignant lymphoma immunohistochemically.
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PMID:[A case of primary orbital T-cell lymphoma]. 147 81

A study was conducted to evaluate the usefulness of paraffin-immunohistochemistry for histopathological classification of non-Hodgkin's malignant lymphomas (NHML). the phenotypes of lymphoma cells and other cells were examined using 11 monoclonal and 3 polyclonal antibodies by the ABC method on paraffin-embedded tissue sections of 226 cases of NHML, comprising 94 B-cell lymphomas (B-ML) and 132 T-cell lymphomas (T-ML). In 219 NHML cases (96.8%), lymphoma cells reacted with more than one of these antibodies. A set of MB-1, Mx-pan B, L26, LN-1, LN-2 and anti-immunoglobulin light chain antibodies characterized each subtype of B-MLs, categorized according to the Kiel classification. Mantle-zone lymphoma (MzML) was added as one subtype. L26 stained the largest number of B-MLs (82.8%). B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia (B-CLL) was labeled most frequently by MB-1. MzML was characterized by reactivity of lymphoma cells with LN-2 and by the appearance of monoclonal immunoglobulin light chain along the cell membrane. Follicle center cell lymphomas were stained by LN-1 and LN-2, although a small number of proliferating cells were labeled by LN-1 in B-CLL, MzML and the immunocytoma lymphoplasmacytic/cytoid variant. MT-1 and/or UCHL-1 showed various degrees of reactivity with the cell membranes of lymphoma cells in 94.8% of T-MLs. Among the T-cell pleomorphic lymphomas of Suchi and Lennert, the adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma type, defined by stippled heterochromatin distribution and peculiar huge cells, reacted selectively (p less than 0.05) with anti-phosphokinase C antibody. Anaplastic large cell T-ML reacted with a set of Ber H2, LN-2 and Leu M1. In T-zone lymphomas without hyperplastic follicles, angioimmunoblastic lymphadenopathy with dysproteinemia-type T-ML, lymphoepithelioid cell lymphomas and some pleomorphic lymphomas comprising clear large lymphoma cells, there were many intermingling B cells, and their constitution varied. In some lymphoblastic lymphomas of both the T cell and B-cell type, phenotypes of T cells and B cells were expressed. Consequently, it was shown that paraffin immunohistochemistry was useful for the practical histopathological diagnosis of NHML even in the area where human T-cell leukemia virus type 1 is endemic.
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PMID:Paraffin-immunohistochemical analysis of 226 non-Hodgkin's malignant lymphomas in the endemic area of human T-cell leukemia virus type 1. 186 99

A panel of antibodies reactive in routinely fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue sections was compared with a panel of antibodies reactive in frozen sections for the immunophenotyping of cutaneous lymphoproliferative disorders. Three T cell-associated markers (UCHL1, MT-1, MT-2, six B cell-associated markers (MB-1, MB-2, LN-1, LN-2, L-26, 4KB5), immunoglobulin heavy and light chains, anti-LCA antibody, two markers for Reed-Sternberg cells (Ber-H2, Leu-M1), one marker for macrophages (Mac-387) and anti-S-100 protein antibody were tested on normal skin, inflammatory skin diseases, and cutaneous lymphomas and pseudolymphomas. On the basis of the results in frozen sections, 12 inflammatory T cell diseases, 14 T cell lymphomas and pseudolymphomas, and 10 B cell lymphomas and pseudolymphomas were identified. In addition, two cases of specific skin infiltrates of Hodgkin's disease have been examined. Among T cell markers, the greatest sensitivity was exhibited by UCHL1, which stained all but one specimen of T cell infiltrate; it was negative in one specimen of mycosis fungoides that progressed into a T-immunoblastic lymphoma. The combined use of MB-2, LN-2, and 4KB5 identified all B cell proliferations. LN-1 marked germinal centers in all cases of follicular lymphoma and pseudolymphoma. Ber-H2 stained the Reed-Sternberg cells in both cases of Hodgkin's disease and the large cells in the histiocytic type of lymphomatoid papulosis. Mac-387 and anti-S-100 protein antibody recognized macrophages and T-zone histiocytes (Langerhans cells and interdigitating cells), respectively. A panel of antibodies reactive in routinely fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue sections is proposed that facilitates the identification of most B and T cell infiltrates in the skin.
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PMID:Immunophenotyping of cutaneous lymphoid infiltrates in frozen and paraffin-embedded tissue sections: a comparative study. 217

The biodistribution, toxicity, and therapeutic potential of anti-CD37 monoclonal antibody (MoAb) MB-1 labeled with iodine 131 (131I) was evaluated in ten patients with advanced-, low- or intermediate-grade non-Hodgkin's lymphomas who failed conventional treatment. Sequential dosimetric studies were performed with escalating amounts of antibody MB-1 (0.5, 2.5, 10 mg/kg) trace-labeled with 5 to 10 mCi 131I. Serial tumor biopsies and gamma camera imaging showed that the 10 mg/kg MoAb dose yielded the best MoAb biodistribution in the ten patients studied. Biodistribution studies in the five patients with splenomegaly and tumor burdens greater than 1 kg indicated that not all tumor sites would receive more radiation than normal organs, and these patients were therefore not treated with high-dose radioimmunotherapy. The other five patients did not have splenomegaly and had tumor burdens less than 0.5 kg; all five patients in this group showed preferential localization and retention of MoAb at tumor sites. Four of these patients have been treated with 131I (232 to 608 mCi) conjugated to anti-CD37 MoAb MB-1, delivering 850 to 4,260 Gy to tumor sites. Each of these four patients attained a complete tumor remission (lasting 4, 6, 11+, and 8+ months). A fifth patient, whose tumor did not express the CD37 antigen, was treated with 131I-labeled anti-CD20 MoAb 1F5 and achieved a partial response. Myelosuppression occurred 3 to 5 weeks after treatment in all cases, but there were no other significant acute toxicities. Normal B cells were transiently depleted from the bloodstream, but immunoglobulin (Ig) levels were not affected, and no serious infections occurred. Two patients required reinfusion of previously stored autologous, purged bone marrow. Two patients developed asymptomatic hypothyroidism 1 year after therapy. The tolerable toxicity and encouraging efficacy warrant further dose escalation in this phase I trial.
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PMID:Treatment of refractory non-Hodgkin's lymphoma with radiolabeled MB-1 (anti-CD37) antibody. 266 88

Recent evidence indicates that membrane-bound immunoglobulin on B lymphocytes is associated with a molecule which comprises the products of the mb-1 and B29 genes. This molecule is a highly specific marker for B-cells, presumably because of its central functional role in antigen triggering, and has recently been clustered as CD79a at the 5th Leucocyte Workshop. Recently there has been controversy surrounding reports of B-cell antigen expression by Reed-Sternberg and related cells, and we have therefore studied 108 cases of Hodgkin's disease immunohistochemically using a novel antibody which detects mb-1 protein in paraffin sections. The results were compared with those achieved using antibody L26 to detect CD20. The mb-1 protein was present in the neoplastic cells in all 14 cases of lymphocyte predominance Hodgkin's disease studied, and CD20 immunoreactivity was also found in seven of the eight cases of this subtype studied. Of the non-lymphocyte predominance cases, 20% (19/94) expressed mb-1 and 30% (20/67) CD20 in the Reed-Sternberg cells, but the cells positive for either of these two markers usually constituted only a very small proportion of the neoplastic population. However, in occasional cases (one of 94 for mb-1 and five of 67 for CD20), more than 50% of the neoplastic cells expressed one or both B-cell antigens. These results confirm the B-cell origin of the neoplastic cells in lymphocyte predominance Hodgkin's disease, but they also indicate that, contrary to our previous study, mb-1 expression may occasionally be found in what appears, on histological grounds, to be other types of Hodgkin's disease.
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PMID:The expression of the B-cell marker mb-1 (CD79a) in Hodgkin's disease. 752 Apr 11

Southern blot analysis of Hodgkin's disease (HD), although often compromised by the small number of abnormal cells present in the tissue, have tended to favor a B-cell derivation of the Hodgkin's and Reed-Sternberg (HRS) cells in cases of nodular sclerosis (NS) and mixed cellularity (MC) Hodgkin's disease. Eighteen frozen and 29 paraffin-embedded sections of lymph node specimens from 29 patients with pretreatment HD (22 NSHD and 7 MCHD) were studied by molecular analysis and immunohistochemistry to determine the phenotype of HRS cells. All cases were reviewed and showed typical morphology and CD45-, CD30+, CD15+, BLA.36+ HRS cells. In 11 of 29 (38%) cases, HRS cells were reactive with at least one B-cell marker (CD20, CD79a, MB2), 7 of 29 (24%) cases showed reactivity with the T-cell marker CD3, and 11 of 29 (38%) cases displayed a "null" phenotype. By using a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and consensus primers for the V and J regions of the immunoglobulin heavy chain (IgH) gene, the authors were able to detect B-cell clonality in 9 of 18 (50%) frozen samples of HD analyzed. IgH gene rearrangement was present in 8 of 15 (53%) NSHD and in 1 of 3 (33%) MCHD. In five of nine (56%) of these cases, HRS cells were reactive with at least one B-cell marker, whereas one case expressed the T-cell marker CD3. The other three cases with IgH gene rearrangement showed a "null" immunophenotype. IgH gene analysis was negative in all remaining CD3+ cases and in two other cases that expressed B-cell markers by immunohistology. Southern blotting failed to detect rearrangement of the T-cell receptor beta-chain gene and immunoglobulin heavy and light genes in any of these cases. The results show that PCR represents a specific and sensitive technique for the detection of IgH gene rearrangements in cases of Hodgkin's disease. The results also suggest a lymphoid B-cell derivation of HRS cells in a high proportion of the cases.
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PMID:Correlation between presence of clonal rearrangements of immunoglobulin heavy chain genes and B-cell antigen expression in Hodgkin's disease. 757 91

We describe four cases of Hodgkin's disease that presented histologically as purely follicular lesions. The Reed-Sternberg (RS) cells were of classic and lacunar type and had the phenotype of usual Hodgkin's disease (CD30 and CD15 positive) but also expressed B-cell antigens (CD20 and CD79a). In each case the follicles consisted principally of mantle-zone B cells, which enclosed the RS cells; the follicle centres were atrophic, usually eccentrically placed, and did not contain RS cells. Fifteen cases of typical nodular sclerosing Hodgkin's disease were reviewed in parallel. B-cell antigen expression by RS cells was found in 10 cases (66%), and RS cells were present in follicular mantles in 10 cases. These findings suggest that some RS cells may be derived from B cells in the follicular mantle.
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PMID:Follicular Hodgkin's disease. 757 92

The nature and frequency of occurrence of monocytoid B-lymphocytes (MBL) was examined in 118 cases of Hodgkin's disease. Monocytoid cells were present in six cases (5%), four nodular sclerosis and two mixed cellularity. These cells were CD20+, CD3-, CD45RO-, KP-1-, PGM1-, with occasional positive reaction for MB-1 and CD74, indicating their B-cell nature, i.e., MBL. The MBL were distributed in the periphery of the nodules of nodular sclerosis accompanying centrally located Reed-Sternberg cells, although Reed-Sternberg cells were observed in some MBL clusters. In the mixed cellularity, MBL were located in the para-follicular area occasionally adjoining the lymph follicles. Because previous studies suggested depressed immune function in autoimmune diseases, acquired immune deficiency syndrome, and older persons to be responsible for the occurrence of MBL, it is possible that in some patients development of foci of MBL under immunodeficient conditions progresses to Hodgkin's disease.
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PMID:Occurrence of monocytoid B-lymphocytes in Hodgkin's disease. 793 19


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