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Query: UMLS:C0019829 (
Hodgkin's disease
)
30,247
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
EBV proteins present in the malignant
Hodgkin
Reed-Sternberg (HR-S) cells of about 40% of patients with
Hodgkin's Disease
(HD) provide targets for immunotherapy with virus-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL). However,
Hodgkin
tumors use multiple strategies to avoid CTL, including down-regulation of immunodominant EBV antigens, and secretion of cytokines and chemokines such as TGF-beta, that inhibit the activation of CTL and professional antigen-presenting cells (APC). To be effective against this tumor, CTL must resist some or all of these strategies. Thirteen patients with multiply-relapsed HD received EBV-specific CTL, generated ex vivo using the autologous EBV-transformed B cells (LCL) as stimulator cells. After CTL infusion, EBV-specific immunity increased, virus load decreased, CTL homed to sites of malignancy and persisted for up to ten months. Clinically, CTL produced resolution of B symptoms and mixed tumor responses including one complete remission of
residual disease
remaining after autologous bone marrow transplant. However, no complete remission of bulky disease was achieved. Although LMP2-specific CTL activity could be detected in some of the infused CTL lines, they were present in low frequency. In pre-clinical studies, LMP1 and LMP2-specific CTL could be produced by stimulating PBMC from patients and normal donors with autologous dendritic cells expressing LMP1 or LMP2 from adenoviral vectors. Further, CTL could be rendered resistant to the devastating effects of TGF-beta by transduction with a retrovirus vector expressing a dominant-negative TGF-beta receptor, while transgenic IL-12 could increase the expression of Th1 and decrease that of Th2 cytokines. Future clinical studies will test the efficacy of CTL with improved antigen-specificity and resistance to
Hodgkin
immune evasion strategies.
...
PMID:Immunotherapy for Hodgkin's disease. 1261 Oct 71
The indolent non-
Hodgkin
's lymphomas are theoretically curable through allogeneic haematopoietic stem cell transplantation (allo-HSCT). The applicability of standard conditioning allo-HSCT is, however, restricted by its toxicity. Recently, reduced-intensity conditioning regimens have demonstrated efficacy with significantly reduced early morbidity and mortality. We examined the safety and efficacy of rituximab-BEAM-CAMPATH as reduced-intensity conditioning for allo-HSCT in follicular lymphomas. Minimal
residual disease
was assessed by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for bcl-2/IgH translocations, and chimerism by X,Y-FISH or PCR amplification of short tandem repeat sequences. At a median follow-up of 521 days (371-719), four of five patients were alive and three were in complete molecular remission. Three patients required pre-emptive treatment for CMV reactivation. One succumbed to a perforated viscus and one had slowly progressive disease. A graft-versus-lymphoma effect was demonstrable and quantitative PCR for bcl-2/IgH may allow better accuracy in scheduling post-allograft rituximab and/or donor lymphocyte infusions. Although follow-up is short, reduced-intensity allo-HSCT with BEAM-CAMPATH conditioning appears to be safe, effective in inducing a molecular remission and is potentially curative. Further recruitment and much longer follow-up will be necessary to determine if this impacts favourably upon disease-free and overall survival.
...
PMID:Reduced-intensity rituximab-BEAM-CAMPATH allogeneic haematopoietic stem cell transplantation for follicular lymphoma is feasible and induces durable molecular remissions. 1269 20
The purpose of this prospective phase II trial was to investigate the safety and efficacy of a modified baseline BEACOPP (bleomycin, etoposide, adriamycin, cyclophosphamide, vincristine, procarbazine, and prednisone) regimen in the treatment of intermediate and advanced stage
Hodgkin's disease
(HD). From October 1997 to November 2001, 51 consecutive, previously untreated patients with stage IIA (bulky), IIB, III, and IV disease were treated with a modified baseline BEACOPP regimen with the etoposide administered i.v. on day 1 and orally at a dose of 100 mg/m2, on days 2 and 3. Each patient was scheduled to receive eight courses of BEACOPP with consolidation radiotherapy to bulky (> or =5 cm) or
residual disease
. There were 25 males and 26 females with a median age of 32 yr (16-65 yr); 80.3% of the patients had nodular sclerosis HD, 41% had bulky disease (> or =5 cm), 10 were in stage IIA (bulky > or =10 cm), 15 in stage IIB, 19 in stage III, and seven in stage IV. Thirty-seven patients (72.5%) achieved a complete response and 17.6% partial response. No significant difference in overall response rate was observed between patients with: (i) 0-2 vs. > or =3 negative prognostic factors, (ii) in stage II vs. stages III/IV, LDH level, and bulky disease. With a median follow up period of 39.5 months, actuarial 3-yr survival rate is 82% and time to progression rate 72.5%. Treatment with this combination was well tolerated. Grades 3 and 4 leukopenia and neutropenia occured in 26% and 28% of the patients, respectively, whereas in 16.3% of the patients infection was observed. Support with granulocyte colony-stimulating factor was given to 59% of the patients. No case of secondary MDS/leukemia has been observed. The results of the present study demonstrate that the modified baseline BEACOPP regimen with radiotherapy used in our patients was well tolerated and effective therapy for intermediate and advanced stage HD. Further follow up time is required to evaluate long-term toxicity.
...
PMID:Treatment of intermediate and advanced stage Hodgkin's disease with modified baseline BEACOPP regimen: a Hellenic Co-operative Oncology Group Study. 1295 Feb 34
To determine the outcome of patients with chemosensitive relapsed or primary refractory
Hodgkin's disease
(HD) or aggressive non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) whose disease progresses after autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT), we reviewed the records of 82 patients with HD and 139 patients with NHL transplanted between 1993 and 2000. Disease progression occurred in 25 patients with HD and 66 patients with NHL, with median times to progression (TTP) of 3.8 and 5.1 months, respectively. Median survival times following ASCT failure were 26 and 7.7 months for patients with HD and NHL, respectively. The second-line international prognostic index (sIPI) and the TTP (before or after 3 months from ASCT) independently were predictive of survival for NHL patients. In addition, treatment with rituximab for patients with B cell NHL was associated with improved survival (median 28.6 vs 4.1 months, P=0.003), independent of the sIPI and TTP. Prognostic factors for patients with HD were not identified. Only two patients, one of whom was among six patients who received second autologous transplants, remain disease-free. The uniformly poor outcome associated with disease progression after ASCT should prompt efforts to assess the feasibility and utility of detecting and treating post transplant
residual disease
during a minimal disease state, before overt progression.
...
PMID:Progressive disease following autologous transplantation in patients with chemosensitive relapsed or primary refractory Hodgkin's disease or aggressive non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. 1313 Mar 14
While increasing numbers of elderly patients are expected to require chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy in the future, the application of standard-dose chemotherapy in unselected cohorts of older patients usually results in a higher rate of life-threatening myelosuppression and treatment-related deaths compared to young individuals treated with the same chemotherapy regimens. The biologic mechanisms underlying reduced tolerance to chemotherapy of the hemopoietic system in older individuals are still poorly understood. Unveiling such mechanisms therefore represents a fundamental issue to ameliorate chemotherapy strategies for older cancer patients. Current evidence suggests that aging-related bone marrow changes are rather subtle and most probably irrelevant for the hemopoietic function of normal older individuals. These changes, however, may become clinically evident under conditions of severe hemopoietic stress such as the administration of repeated courses of chemo-radiotherapy. The mechanisms underlying age-dependent decline in the hematopoietic reserve are not fully clarified and probably involve age-associated changes in the stem and progenitor cells compartments which may ultimately lead to a reduced ability of recovery from hematologic stress. Age-related changes in endogenous anti-tumor immune responses also need to be accounted for in the aim of managing
residual disease
in elderly cancer patients treated with effective chemo-radiotherapy. Since dendritic cells (DCs) generated from older individuals appear fully functional, dendritic cell-based immunotherapy may represent an important tool to treat
residual disease
in aged cancer patients. While it is clearly established that primary prophylaxis with hemopoietic growth factors currently enables a large fraction of older cancer patients to receive appropriate chemotherapy, innovative strategies in the use of such growth factors may allow time-intensification of standard-dose chemotherapy for treating chemosensitive tumors, i.e. non-
Hodgkin
's lymphomas (NHLs), occurring in older individuals.
...
PMID:Aging and the hemopoietic system. 1456 15
Our purpose was to evaluate the role of MRI in distinguishing fibrous from active residual masses in treated
Hodgkin's disease
. Forty patients with residual mediastinal mass larger than 1.5 cm underwent MRI 1, 3, 6, and 12 months after the end of cycles of prescribed chemotherapy or combined chemoradiotherapy. The MRI examinations were performed on a 0.5 and a 1.5 T systems, using T(1) before and after gadolinium injection and T(2)-weighted sequences. Each time the residual mass was evaluated in size and signal intensity on spin echo (SE) T(2)-weighted images and on SE T(1)-weighted images after contrast medium. Low signal intensity and low contrast enhancement were considered signs of inactive residues; homogeneous high signal intensity and high contrast enhancement were indicative of active
residual disease
; heterogeneous signal intensity and heterogeneous contrast enhancement were indicative of partial remission or necrotic/inflammatory phenomena. MR showed high diagnostic accuracy in the evaluation of
Hodgkin
's mediastinal residues after treatment, if performed at least 6 months after the end of therapy, reaching the highest sensitivity and specificity values at 12 month follow-up (considering the three parameters-T(2) signal intensity, contrast-enhancement, and size-all together). If we consider the single parameters individually, we can observe that size variation remains the more valuable parameter to predict or to exclude a relapse. MR diagnostic accuracy at the 6-month follow-up was lower due to the higher incidence of inhomogeneous pattern. The accuracy of MR performed at 1 and at 3 months after the end of therapy was not satisfying. This represents a clinical problem because the most important clinical decisions have to be taken just in this early post-treatment phase.
...
PMID:MRI characterization of residual mediastinal masses in Hodgkin's disease: long-term follow-up. 1497 92
Mantle cell lymphoma is non-
Hodgkin
's B-cell lymphoma characterized by the t(11;14)(q13;q32) translocation. Peripheral blood involvement of mantle cell lymphoma is usually associated with a poor prognosis and therefore, its identification is clinically important. In this study, we performed cyclin D1/IgH-probe fusion fluorescence in situ hybridization analysis on 223 peripheral blood samples: 185 from 125 mantle cell lymphoma patients, and 38 normal controls. The cutoff values for the test were established using normal controls. Flow cytometry on peripheral blood and corresponding bone marrow samples was used to evaluate this test. In all, 26% of the 185 peripheral blood samples and 27% of the 161 corresponding bone marrow samples were flow cytometry positive for mantle cell lymphoma. The mean numbers of single and- double-fusion signals and the mean number of CD5/CD19-positive cells, absolute blood lymphocyte count, and white blood cell count were significantly higher in peripheral blood and corresponding bone marrow samples with mantle cell lymphoma-positive flow cytometry. Double-fusion signals were more specific than single-fusion ones. Fluorescence in situ hybridization was far more likely to be positive for mantle cell lymphoma when the peripheral blood and the corresponding bone marrow samples had positive flow cytometry results or morphology (P<0.01). Our study indicates that cyclin D1/IgH-fusion fluorescence in situ hybridization analysis could be used to determine the presence and character of circulating mantle cell lymphoma cells in peripheral blood, thus enhancing our ability to evaluate leukemic mantle cell lymphoma and minimum
residual disease
.
...
PMID:Evaluation of peripheral blood involvement of mantle cell lymphoma by fluorescence in situ hybridization in comparison with immunophenotypic and morphologic findings. 1500 94
We retrospectively analysed toxicities and clinical results of 61
Hodgkin's lymphoma
patients treated with chlorambucil, vinblastine, procarbazine, doxorubicin, bleomycin, vincristine and etoposide (ChlVPP/ABVVP), delivered in a weekly alternate schedule. Of 61 patients, 33 were in stages III-IV, 21 in stage IIB and seven in stage IIA with bulky disease or extranodal presentation. ChlVPP/ABVVP was administered for 6-8 cycles. Involved field radiotherapy (IFRT) (30-35 Gy) was delivered to 31 patients with
residual disease
after chemotherapy or bulky disease at diagnosis. Of 61 patients, 58 (95%) achieved complete clinical or radiological remission after chemotherapy and IFRT. With a median follow-up of 60 months, 5-year overall survival, relapse- and event-free survival were 78.8% (95% CI 68.2-91.1%), 81% (95% CI 70.6-92.2%) and 71.9% (95% CI 68.2-82.2%) respectively. Grades 3-4 neutropenia was the most relevant haematological toxicity and occurred in 82% of patients. Non-haematological toxicities were mild and reversible. No toxic deaths were recorded. One patient developed secondary acute myeloid leukaemia 1 year after ChlVPP/ABVVP. Due to the retrospective nature of this study, no definitive conclusions could be drawn about the clinical activity of ChlVPP/ABVVP. Nonetheless, clinical results seem better than those reported with standard regimens [ABVD (doxorubicin, bleomycin, vincristine, dacarbazine), MOPP (methotrexate, vincristine, procarbazine, prednisone), MOPP/ABVD] and as good as those reported using standard or escalated BEACOPP (bleomycin, etoposide, doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide, vincristine, procarbazine and prednisone), with a lower degree of haematological and non-haematological toxicity. Long-term results of the ongoing randomized trial, comparing ABVD versus high-dose intensity weekly regimens will be useful to confirm our results.
...
PMID:ChlVPP/ABVVP, a first line 'hybrid' combination chemotherapy for advanced Hodgkin's lymphoma: a retrospective analysis. 1514 73
Previous work suggested that interleukin (IL)-2 can be used for eradicating
residual disease
in autologous grafts and for preventing recurrence. We report a phase II study of autologous peripheral blood stem cell transplantation with in vitro IL-2 incubation of peripheral blood stem cells and posttransplantation IL-2 in patients with recurrent or refractory non-
Hodgkin lymphoma
. Salvage chemotherapy consisted of ifosfamide and etoposide. Responding patients underwent autologous peripheral blood stem cell transplantation. IL-2-incubated stem cells were infused on day 0. IL-2 1 mIU/m2 was given from day 1 until day 28. Four monthly maintenance cycles of IL-2 4 mIU/m2 subcutaneously twice daily days 1 to 5 and days 8 to 11 were administered thereafter. Eighty-four evaluable patients were enrolled, and 60 proceeded to transplantation, of which 56 received IL-2-incubated stem cells. The average received dose of posttransplantation IL-2 was 30% to 50% of planned. Only 42 patients received maintenance IL-2. The average received maintenance dose of IL-2 was also approximately 30% of planned. Most dose reductions were due to toxicity or patient refusal. Three-year survival and progression-free survival for all registered patients were 43% (95% confidence interval [CI], 33%-53%) and 31% (95% CI, 21%-41%), respectively. For the 60 patients undergoing transplantation, they were 59% (95% CI, 46%-72%) and 44% (95% CI, 31%-57%), respectively. There was no relation between the dose of IL-2 received and outcome. Survival and disease-free survival of the study group were similar to those of a previous study cohort that received unmanipulated stem cells and no systemic IL-2. Administration of IL-2-incubated peripheral blood stem cells and intensive posttransplantation IL-2 was associated with considerable but rapidly reversible toxicity. No effect on long-term outcome was observed.
...
PMID:Phase II study of autologous transplantation with interleukin-2-incubated peripheral blood stem cells and posttransplantation interleukin-2 in relapsed or refractory non-Hodgkin lymphoma. 1514 92
The purpose of this report is to determine the value of a central specialist radiologic review and to determine the image quality of computed tomography (CT) in
Hodgkin disease
. The HD12 protocol is a multicenter prospective randomized trial of the GHSG for advanced stages of
Hodgkin disease
. The indication and effectiveness of additional radiotherapy (30 Gy), in the area of initial bulky disease and of
residual disease
, following intensive chemotherapy using the BEACOPP schema (bleomycin, etoposide, adriamycin, cyclophosphamide, vincristine, procarbazine, prednisone), is to be investigated. A multidisciplinary panel of radiation oncologists, radiologists, and medical oncologists reviews, blinded to treatment arms, the diagnostic imaging with comparison to the documentation forms. For patients with poor response to chemotherapy, the panel recommends radiotherapy independent of the randomization. This procedure guarantees that patients with a poor response to chemotherapy receive additional radiotherapy. Furthermore, the panel evaluates the quality of CT examinations in this multicenter study. Since July 1999, a total of 2607 CT of 371 patients have been evaluated. Helical CT showed significantly higher contrast enhancement and imaging quality than conventional CT (P < 0.001). CT from university hospitals was assessed as superior to that from other institutions (P < 0.001). Compared with the written disease documentation by the study centers, the panel assessed different extensions of disease in 814 of 2607 CT (31%), resulting in a change of stage in 17 of 371 patients (5%). After chemotherapy, 167 of 371 patients (45%) showed
residual disease
(>1.5 cm), and for 53 of 371 patients (14%) the panel recommended additional radiotherapy independent of the randomization arm. Patients with
Hodgkin disease
receive high-quality CT imaging. A central independent multidisciplinary panel markedly improves quality assurance for these study patients.
...
PMID:The HD12 panel of the German Hodgkin Lymphoma Study Group (GHSG): a quality assurance program based on a multidisciplinary panel reviewing all patients' imaging. 1517 Jan 48
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