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Query: UMLS:C0019829 (
Hodgkin's disease
)
30,247
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Sixty patients treated for
Hodgkin's disease
by radio + chemotherapy and remaining in complete remission with a median follow-up of 26 months answered a questionnaire dealing with their quality of life during and after treatment. Their main request was to be better informed about their disease, treatment and its side effects. Therapeutic toxicity is mainly due to chemotherapy and is digestive in nature (
nausea and vomiting
) symptoms. The majority of patients complained of disturbances in their personal and professional lives. It is concluded that more complete knowledge of all patients' disorders may help doctors to improve treatment planning in order that the patient's quality of life be less disturbed.
...
PMID:[Quality of life during and following radiochemotherapy for Hodgkin's disease. Evaluation of 60 patients]. 665 48
Malignant diseases of the lymphoreticular system can become manifest within the gastrointestinal tract, either isolated, involving solitary organs, in generalized form, or as diffuse polyposis. The ratio of primary to secondary lymphomas is quoted as being 1:2 to 1:3. The clinical picture is characterized by their spread. Abdominal pain, loss of weight, anorexia,
nausea and vomiting
, including even gastrointestinal hemorrhage, are the most frequently observed symptoms. The involvement of the gastrointestinal tract in
Hodgkin
's and non-
Hodgkin
lymphomas of, on average, some 10%, is confirmed in our own material over the past 7 years. From a total of 580 malignant lymphomas, 47 cases were confirmed, endoscopically and bioptically, to have gastrointestinal involvement, primary lymphomas accounting for 1/3, secondary for 2/3. Gastric lymphomas accounted for 59.6%, small-bowel lymphomas for 25.5%, a large-bowel involvement was seen in 14.9%. The centrocytic-centroblastic and lymphoblastic lymphomas predominate.
...
PMID:[Gastrointestinal manifestation of malignant systemic diseases]. 668 18
Eighteen children with
Hodgkin disease
(16 previously untreated; two relapsed) were treated with MOPP chemotherapy (nitrogen mustard, vincristine, prednisone, procarbazine) only. Ten had clinical stage I and II disease, four had stage III, and four had stage IV. In ten patients, the clinical stage was confirmed by staging laparotomy. Six courses of MOPP were given to eight stage I and II patients and two stage IV patients. Between 7 and 12 courses were given to two stage I and II, and six stage III and IV patients. Dose reduction of 75-50% was required in 13% and delay of treatment in 22% of the first six courses of MOPP. Hematologic toxicity, minor and major viral infections, and
nausea and vomiting
were the major complications. Complete remission (CR) was obtained in 17 patients. Of these 17, there has been one death in CR, and one relapse. Sixteen patients have discontinued treatment and have been observed off treatment for 8 months to 7.5 years. The actuarial disease-free survival with a median follow-up of 28 months is 80% and overall survival is 92%.
...
PMID:Results of treatment of 18 children with Hodgkin disease with MOPP chemotherapy as the only treatment modality. 668 53
Rosenberg et al discovered in the coordination complexes of platinum a new, novel type of potential antitumor agent. Cisplatin [cis-dichlorodiammine platinum (II)4 proved active against a variety of rodent tumors and acted synergistically when combined with other chemotherapeutic agents. Initial clinical tests by Hill et al in 1971, showed cisplatin to be active against malignant lymphoma,
Hodgkin's disease
, and certain other malignancies. Significant nephrotoxicity, nausea, and vomiting were noted. Since then, cisplatin has been tested alone and in combination chemotherapy and has proven an efficacious anticancer agent in squamous cell carcinoma of head and neck, ovarian carcinoma, disseminated testicular cancer, and others. Its therapeutic value was acknowledged when approved in 1978 by the U.S. FDA for treatment of the latter cancer. The current clinical literature indicates clearly that the full potential of this drug has not yet been realized. Hydration and diuresis have served to mitigate much of the nephrotoxicity, while significant strides toward amelioration of the
nausea and vomiting
have also been achieved. Literally, thousands of chemically-related congeners have been synthesized, and many have shown marked potency against rodent tumors. Very few, however, have been evaluated clinically, vis-a-vis malonato trans(-)-1,2-diaminocyclohexane platinum(II); this appears a most promising and fertile area of future investigation.
...
PMID:Organo-platinum complexes as antitumor agents (review). 675 Dec 11
Eighty-one patients with a variety of refractory disseminated malignant neoplasms have been treated in the first multiple fixed-dose phase I trial of recombinant leukocyte A interferon (IFL-rA). Each patient received IFL-rA by intramuscular injection, three times weekly for 28 days. Dosages were escalated in different patients from 1 to 136 x 10(6) units per injection. The toxic reactions seen with IFL-rA resembled those of nonrecombinant leukocyte interferon and included fever, chills, fatigue, anorexia, myalgia, headache, occasional
nausea and vomiting
, and dose-dependent reversible leukopenia and hepatic transaminase elevations. The pharmacokinetics of IFL-rA were also comparable with nonrecombinant leukocyte interferon. Objective evidence of antitumor activity was seen in non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, chronic lymphocytic leukemia,
Hodgkin's disease
, breast cancer, and melanoma, indicating that IFL-rA, the first genetically engineered biological response modifier available for testing in cancer patients, is biologically active in vivo.
...
PMID:A multiple-dose phase I trial of recombinant leukocyte A interferon in cancer patients. 675 47
Twenty-two patients with malignant lymphoma and its allied diseases, consisting of 6 with
Hodgkin's disease
, 10 with non-
Hodgkin
's's diffuse lymphoma, 4 with leukemic lymphosarcoma and 2 with immunoblastic lymphadenopathy, were entered into this study. The treatment schedule was intravenous drip infusion of the drug, at a dose of 2.3 to 5.4 mg/kg (150 mg to 300 mg/day), for consecutive 4 to 14 days. The total dose given ranged from 1050 to 2500 mg. Four of the 6 patients with
Hodgkin's disease
and 5 of the 10 patients with non-
Hodgkin
's diffuse lymphoma showed a good response. The response started from 3 to 7 days after beginning of BH-AC administration and remission induced by BH-AC persisted for 4 weeks. Clinical toxicities such as anorexia,
nausea and vomiting
were very mild, but hematological toxicities such as thrombocytopenia, leukopenia, and anemia were frequent especially in the patients who were totally given more than 2100 mg. This study suggested that malignant lymphoma responded definitely to single administration of BH-AC and that BH-AC might be a new useful drug for multi-combined chemotherapy of malignant lymphoma.
...
PMID:[Treatment of malignant lymphoma with single administration of BH-AC (N4-behenoyl-1-beta-D-arabinofuranosylcytosine]. 676 8
Liblomycin (NK313) is a bleomycin analog that has proved to be associated with less pulmonary toxicity and with more potent antitumor activity than bleomycin in animal tumors. In a phase I study, pulmonary toxicity was not observed, whereas myelosuppression was the dose-limiting factor. The maximum tolerated dose was 140 mg/m2 given once a week for 4 weeks. In the present phase II study, patients with malignant lymphomas received liblomycin at 80 or 100 mg/m2 by intravenous infusion over 15 min once a week for 4 weeks. A total of 39 patients were entered, and 31 [4 with
Hodgkin's disease
(HD) and 27 with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL)] were evaluable. The median age of the patients was 52 years (range, 22-74 years), and their performance status ranged from 0 to 3. In all, 28 of the patients had a history of intensive anticancer chemotherapy. Responses were evaluated according to WHO criteria. We obtained 1 complete remission and 9 partial remissions (PRs), for an overall response rate of 37%, in the 27 patients with NHL, whereas 1 PR was achieved in the 4 patients with HD. In all, 9 PRs (32.1%) were obtained in patients who had been exposed to prior chemotherapy, including 4 PRs (33.3%) in 12 patients who had previously been treated with bleomycin. Myelosuppression and
nausea and vomiting
were the major toxicities, which occurred in about 50% of the patients, and myelosuppression was severe in two patients treated at a dose of 100 mg/m2. We concluded that liblomycin demonstrated significant antitumor activity against malignant lymphomas.
...
PMID:Phase II study of NK313 in malignant lymphomas: an NK313 Malignant Lymphoma Study Group trial. 768 Sep 66
We reviewed our upper endoscopy (esophagogastroduodenoscopy, EGD) experience in a group of 65 consecutive patients receiving carmustine (BCNU) 600 mg/m2, cisplatin 200 mg/m2, VP-16 2400 mg/m2, and autologous bone marrow transplantation (BMT) for relapsed or refractory non-Hodgkin's lymphoma or
Hodgkin's disease
. Forty-one patients (33 with chest irradiation) underwent 48 EGDs for the following symptoms: upper gastrointestinal bleeding (melena and/or hematemesis) (12/48); persistent
nausea and vomiting
(7/48); odynophagia (25/48); and dysphagia (14/48). All patients who had dysphagia or odynophagia had endoscopic evidence of severe esophagitis, with confluent erosions or ulcerations. Gastrointestinal bleeding, which presented as melena or hematemesis, was caused by severe esophagitis in 11 of 12 patients. Yeasts were detected in 11/42 histological, or cytological specimens and were isolated in 4/26 cultures. No bleeding or infectious complications occurred in any patient as a result of the EGD procedure. We conclude that severe esophagitis documented by EGD is common in lymphoma patients receiving autologous BMT. Use of EGD, however, did not affect the decision to initiate empirical therapy with amphotericin B for persistent fever.
...
PMID:Role of upper endoscopy in evaluation of upper gastrointestinal symptoms in patients undergoing bone marrow transplantation. 791 3
To explore the augmentation of cyclosporin-induced graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) in autologous bone marrow transplantation (BMT), we conducted a phase I dose escalation trial of interferon (IFN)-alpha 2a. A dose of either 1 or 3 x 10(6) units of IFN-alpha 2a was given by daily sc injection starting on day 0 of BMT and continuing for 28 days. Cyclosporine (CYA) was also started on day 0 of BMT at a dose of 1 mg/kg/day for 28 days. We enrolled 22 patients (median age 43 years, range 19-55 years, male/female ratio = 9/13) which included 11 patients with lymphoma, 5 patients with
Hodgkin's disease
, 4 patients with AML and 1 patient each with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and myeloma. Patients were divided into four groups: two control groups received either CYA or IFN-alpha 2a alone and the other two groups received IFN-alpha 2a at a dose of either 1 x 10(6) or 3 x 10(6) units/day sc concomitantly with CYA for 28 days. IFN-alpha 2a treatment was terminated early in 5 patients: 2 patients receiving IFN-alpha 2a at a dose of 3 x 10(6) units/day developed intractable fatigue,
nausea and vomiting
and 3 other patients had life-threatening transplant-related complications not related to IFN-alpha 2a (1 patient receiving 3 x 10(6) units/day, and 2 receiving 1 x 10(6) units/day). These patients were considered not evaluable. Of the 17 evaluable patients, all 13 who received IFN-alpha 2a developed GVHD regardless of whether they received CYA whereas only 2 of the 4 patients who received CYA alone developed detectable GVHD.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Phase I study of alpha-interferon augmentation of cyclosporine-induced graft versus host disease in recipients of autologous bone marrow transplantation. 805 15
The objective of this phase-I study was to establish the maximum tolerable dose of recombinant human interleukin-3 (rhIL-3) after salvage chemotherapy in patients with malignant lymphoma. Twenty-one patients with relapsed
Hodgkin's disease
or intermediate/high-grade non-Hodgkin's lymphoma received rhIL-3 after the second cycle of DHAP chemotherapy (cisplatin, cytosine-arabinoside, dexamethasone). Cycles 1 and 3 were given without rhIL-3. The rhIL-3 was administered as a continuous intravenous infusion for 10 days starting 48 h after chemotherapy in cycle 2. Five different dose levels of rhIL-3 (0.25, 1.0, 2.5, 5.0, and 10.0 micrograms/kg/day) were sequentially tested. At the three lowest dose levels one double-blinded placebo was included for every four patients per dose level. Low-grade fever occurred in 15/21 patients, unrelated to the dose of rhIL-3.
Nausea and vomiting
(grade 1-2) occurred in seven patients. Headache was dose related, with 3/4 patients at a dose of 10 micrograms/kg/day experiencing troublesome grade-2 headache precluding further dose escalation. Facial flushing developed in 3/8 patients at the highest dose levels of rhIL-3. There was a significant increase in eosinophil count during rhIL-3 (p = 0.03 cycle 2 vs cycle 1 and p = 0.002 cycle 2 vs cycle 3) without accompanying clinical signs of symptoms. No increase in basophil count was observed. There were no increased plasma levels of interleukin-6 or macrophage colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF) during rhIL-3. We conclude that rhIL-3 can be safely administered as a continuous intravenous infusion for 10 days after DHAP chemotherapy. Dose-limiting side effects, especially headache, occur at a dose of 10 micrograms/kg/day.
...
PMID:The tolerability of continuous intravenous infusion of interleukin-3 after DHAP chemotherapy in patients with relapsed malignant lymphoma. A phase-I study. 821 38
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