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)

In our BMT Unit, we have observed a high frequency of skin rash associated with fever and other clinical findings during engraftment of autologous BM and/or PBSC. Thirty patients with breast cancer and 12 patients with Hodgkin's or non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, treated with the same regimen, were analyzed retrospectively or prospectively to characterize the clinical syndrome, its frequency, and its clinical course, as well as to define the factors affecting its incidence. In patients developing skin rash, the median and range for time to onset of skin rash and for time to increase in WBC after reinfusion of stem cells were identical (8 days, range 5-13) and did not differ significantly (P = 0.533). Twenty-three patients (55%) had skin rash, 18 patients had fever. Other, less frequent manifestations include platelet transfusion refractoriness (PTR), diarrhea, diffuse alveolar hemorrhage, and autoimmune thrombocytopenia or hemolytic anemia. A higher proportion of breast cancer patients developed the syndrome in comparison to lymphoma patients (67% vs 25%, P = 0.051). Acute GVHD grade I-II was established histologically in six patients with the syndrome. Comparison of the incidence of the syndrome by different variables using Fisher's exact test revealed significance for disease category (P = 0.02) and number of previous treatment regimens (P = 0.002) as predictive factors for developing the autoaggression syndrome. In other words, patients with breast cancer and those with only one previous treatment regimen were more likely to develop the syndrome. This study suggests that an autoaggression GVHD-like syndrome accompanies the early phase of autologous engraftment and that a higher frequency of the syndrome might be seen in breast cancer patients undergoing high-dose chemotherapy and autologous stem cell transplantation.
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PMID:Increased frequency of autoaggression syndrome associated with autologous stem cell transplantation in breast cancer patients. 911 5

The relative benefit of allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (alloBMT) vs autologous BMT (autoBMT) for patients with relapsed or refractory Hodgkin's disease (HD) or non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) remains uncertain. Toxicity from graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) may diminish the potential benefits both of graft-versus-tumor activity and of receiving uncontaminated donor marrow stem cells. From 1987 to 1995, 27 adults (ages 18-60 years; median 36) underwent alloBMT for lymphoma after failure of standard chemotherapy. Twenty-one had NHL and six had HD (nodular sclerosis). Thirteen patients had primary refractory disease or chemotherapy-resistant relapses; two of these had relapsed after autoBMT. Three patients had untested relapses (one of them had relapsed after autoBMT), and 11 had chemotherapy-sensitive relapses. Twenty-four received HLA-matched bone marrow from a sibling (one twin); three received haploidentical marrow cells. Nine (33%) died from lymphoma. Eleven (41%) died of treatment-related causes. Opportunistic infections were a substantial problem leading to eight of these deaths (30%). Six patients (22%) survive free of lymphoma 17-70 months post-BMT (median, 56 months); four had had sensitive relapses, one had had a resistant relapse, and one had had nontested relapse. Three have chronic GVHD (limited in one; extensive in two). One HD patient who had relapsed after autoBMT remains in remission 19 months after alloBMT. No therapy-related myelodysplasia has been observed. We conclude that alloBMT has substantial morbidity in heavily pretreated lymphoma patients due to acute toxicity, infections and GVHD. However, 22% of our HD/NHL patients have had long-term disease-free survival.
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PMID:Allogeneic bone marrow transplantation for relapsed and refractory Hodgkin's disease and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. 933 51

Myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) is an uncommon but serious complication of patients who undergo autologous bone marrow transplantation (auto-BMT) for non-Hodgkin's lymphoma or Hodgkin's disease. Some patients exhibit an indolent course, but others succumb to aggressive disease. p53 overexpression is rare in de novo MDS but common in therapy-associated MDS. We used an immunostaining method to analyze expression of p53, the p53-associated tumor suppressor gene products, MDM2, p21waf1, retinoblastoma gene protein (pRB), and the antiapoptotic oncoprotein bcl-2 before and after BMT in BM specimens from eight patients with clonal karyotypic abnormalities characteristic of MDS. Staining was compared with findings in normal BM specimens and specimens from auto-BMT controls and patients with de novo MDS. p53 protein was found in three (75%) of four post-transplantation specimens from patients in whom a clinically aggressive form of MDS developed. In contrast, p53 was absent in all of the specimens from four patients with karyotypic evidence of MDS, but with indolent disease. bcl-2 protein was overexpressed by immature myeloid cells in seven of eight pre-BMT specimens. After BMT, it was predominantly found at low levels in cases positive for p53. MDM2 was present only after transplantation and was found with equal frequency in patients with indolent and aggressive MDS. We detected p21waf1 in only one aggressive post-BMT MDS specimen. pRB was normally expressed in all of the specimens. These data show that p53 and bcl-2 staining patterns in post-transplantation MDS are similar to those described in therapy-associated MDS. p53 positivity is associated with poor prognosis in auto-BMT patients with MDS. Expression of MDM2, p21waf1, and pRB in this group of patients is not helpful in predicting outcome.
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PMID:Expression of p53, MDM2, p21waf1, bcl-2, and retinoblastoma gene proteins in myelodysplastic syndrome after autologous bone marrow transplantation for lymphoma. 938 63

The use of allogeneic BMT in patients with relapsed non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) offers the advantage of tumor-free bone marrow and possibly a 'graft-versus-lymphoma effect' which may decrease the risk of recurrence. However, allogeneic BMT also poses an increased risk of death due to graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) which can be ameliorated by T cell depletion. We performed a retrospective review of 37 patients who underwent T cell-depleted allogeneic BMT for aggressive and indolent NHL between 1988 and 1996. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was used to identify indolent NHL patients with the BCL2/IgH translocation which served as a marker of residual disease. Sixteen of 37 patients (44%) are alive and progression-free with a median follow-up of 4.4 years (range 1-10.3). The incidence of grade 2-4 acute GVHD was 36% and extensive chronic GVHD developed in 12%. Patients with aggressive NHL have an overall PFS of 33% (12-54%); those with chemotherapy-resistant and sensitive disease have PFS of 17% (0-47%), and 40% (15-65%) respectively at 5 years. Patients with indolent histologies have overall PFS of 62% (37-86%); those with chemotherapy-resistant and sensitive disease have PFS of 55% (25-85%) and 80% (45-100%) respectively at 5 years. Eight patients with indolent disease had a BCL2/IgH translocation detectable by PCR. Five of these eight patients remain alive and progression free at a median of 6.5 years after BMT (range 2.1-7.4 years), four of whom remain PCR positive from 1.7 to 2.9 years after transplantation. We conclude that T cell-depleted allogeneic BMT poses a low risk for death due to GVHD, and should be considered for patients with relapsed and refractory indolent NHL.
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PMID:T cell-depleted allogeneic bone marrow transplantation for high-risk non-Hodgkin's lymphoma: clinical and molecular follow-up. 961 81

Eurocord Transplant has established a registry for studying results of cord blood transplant. We have analyzed 78 patients who have received a related CBT between October 1988 and December 1996. The median follow-up time was 29 months (1-99). The median age was 5 years (0.2-20), median weight 19 kg (5-50). Forty-six patients had a malignant disease: 32 acute leukemia (AL), six chronic myeloid leukemia (CML), four myelodysplastic syndrome, two neuroblastoma and two non-Hodgkin lymphoma. Thirty-two patients were transplanted for non-malignant diseases including 17 bone marrow failure syndromes (BMFS), three sickle cell anemia, five thalassemia and seven inborn errors. The donor was an HLA-identical sibling in 60 cases and an HLA-mismatched donor in 18 cases. As conditioning, 36 patients received irradiation and 40 patients received associated busulfan-containing regimens. GVHD prophylaxis consisted of CsA alone in 36 cases, CsA associated with prednisone in eight cases, CsA, methotrexate (Mtx) with or without prednisone in 28 cases and CsA with monoclonal antibody or ATG in four cases. The median number of nucleated cells (NC) infused/kg was 3.9 x 10(7) (0.7-15). One-year survival was 63 +/- 6%. Age, weight, HLA identity and negative cytomegalovirus (CMV) serology in the recipient were significant favorable prognostic factors. Among these 78 patients, the incidence of grade > or = II GVHD was 9% in HLA-matched CBT and 50% in mismatched CBT (P < 0.001). Neutrophil engraftment was associated with age <6 years (P = 0.02) and weight <20 kg (P = 0.02). It was 73% in patients receiving <3.7 x 10(7) nucleated cells (NC) infused/kg and 85% in patients receiving more (P = 0.06). Favorable factors for platelets engraftment were age <6 years (P = 0.03), weight <20 kg (P = 0.002) and HLA identity (P < 0.0001). Related cord blood transplantation offers a good alternative to BMT. Theses results are in favor of freezing cord blood in families in whom a transplant might be indicated.
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PMID:Related cord blood transplants: the Eurocord experience from 78 transplants. Eurocord Transplant group. 971 97

Between February 1993 and November 1997, 62 patients with severe aplastic anaemia (SAA), acute myeloid (AML), acute lymphoid (ALL), or chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML) as well as two patients with NHL underwent allogeneic marrow transplantation (BMT) from HLA-identical or one-antigen mismatched sibling or unrelated donors. Patients received preparative regimens according to the baseline disease. Patients with SAA were conditioned with ATG/Cy (2 cases) and TAI/Cy (3 cases), AML, ALL and NHL with TBI/Cy (21 cases including two retransplantations) and CML with Mitobronitol/Ara-C/Cy except two patients conditioned traditionally with Bu/Cy. For GVHD prevention, patients received cyclosporin-A (CsA) with short course methotheraxe according to the Seattle protocol. Significantly better overall survival rates were associated with the Mitobronitol (DBM)/Ara-C/Cy conditioning regarded the patients as a whole. Autologous stem cell transplantation (bone marrow and/or peripheral blood) were performed in ten cases including 2 AML, 4 non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL), 3 Hodgkin's disease (HD) and 1 patient with multiple myeloma (MM). Patients with AML and two patients with NHL were conditioned with TBI/Cy and the others with BEAM combined chemotherapy. Eight out of ten patients are leukaemia- or lymphoma-free survivors. One patient relapsed having conventional chemotherapy and interferon maintenance therapy. One patient died in a rapid relapse five months post-BMT.
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PMID:Haemopoietic cell transplantation activity and results: a single institution experience. 991 38

The prognosis for patients with secondary AML, primary resistant AML or ALL and early (<12 months) relapse of acute leukaemia remains extremely poor with conventional chemotherapy. As part of a strategy to improve the outcome for these patients we have treated 22 consecutive patients (18 AML, four ALL, median age 35 years) with either primary resistant disease (n=3), early relapsed leukaemia (n= 12) or secondary AML (n= 7, four RAEBt, two antecedant ALL and one antecedant Hodgkin's disease) with 'FLAG' induction chemotherapy with the aim of proceeding to early allogeneic transplantation either from sibling or unrelated donors. Eighteen patients achieved CR after one course of FLAG, including five patients who had documented p-glycoprotein-induced multidrug resistance and 10 patients with adverse cytogenetic abnormalities. Eight patients were consolidated with a second course of FLAG prior to transplantation and so far 16 patients have undergone allogeneic transplantation, 10 from unrelated donors and six from sibling donors (one mismatched). By the time of transplant three patients had progressed and were in early relapse and all have relapsed post BMT. Of the remaining 13 patients transplanted in remission, nine remain in CCR at a range of 4-26 months, three have died of transplant-related complications (18%) and one patient has relapsed. We conclude that the use of FLAG induction therapy followed by early allogeneic transplantation from either a sibling or unrelated donor can be an effective strategy for the treatment of this difficult group of young patients with poor risk acute leukaemia and appears to be associated with a low procedure-related risk.
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PMID:Early allogeneic transplantation for refractory or relapsed acute leukaemia following remission induction with FLAG. 1037 84

Although endocrine dysfunction has been reported in survivors of allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (alloBMT), data for autologous BMT (autoBMT) recipients are lacking. Because information on male potency in particular is scanty, we prospectively assessed male sexual function after autoBMT. We identified 16 men who were < or =50 years of age at the time of evaluation and disease free for at least 6 months after autoBMT. Nine had Hodgkin's disease, 4 had acute myelogenous leukemia, and 3 had non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. Blood samples were assayed for luteinizing hormone (LH), follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), and testosterone. Patients were surveyed with a modified version of the Pyschosocial Adjustment to Illness Scale regarding erectile dysfunction and loss of interest in sexual activities. Seventy five percent of the men reported normal interest in sexual activities and 87.5% reported normal erectile function; however, 4 of 16 reported a moderate loss of interest in sexual activities, and another 2 of 16 reported frequent loss of erectile function. All 4 men with decreased libido and both men with impaired erectile function had Hodgkin's disease. Fourteen (88%) of 16 patients had an elevated FSH level, 7 (47%) of 15 had elevated LH, and 6 (38%) of 16 had decreased testosterone levels. Decreased testosterone levels correlated with a moderate or total loss of libido (P = .008) and a diagnosis of Hodgkin's disease (P = .01). Thus, after transplantation, most men have abnormal levels of gonadotrophins. Decreased levels of testosterone and symptoms of sexual dysfunction correlated with a diagnosis of Hodgkin's disease and may be related to the induction and salvage therapy received prior to autoBMT.
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PMID:Male sexual function after autologous blood or marrow transplantation. 1140 Sep 50

Bone marrow aspirates (BMA) and trephine biopsies (BMT) are commonly performed in the staging of patients with newly diagnosed Hodgkin's lymphoma (HL) but the value of these procedures is controversial. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the predictive value of the blood count and erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) for bone marrow involvement (BMI) and the influence of BMI on stage and prognostic score. A retrospective analysis of 955 patients with newly diagnosed HL entered into clinical trials in a regional cancer centre between 1975 and 1999 was performed. BMI was identified by BMT in 50 patients (5.2%) but in only five of these by BMA. The negative predictive values of a normal full blood count (FBC) and ESR for absence of BMI were 98.8% and 97.3%, respectively, and the positive predictive value of an abnormal FBC and ESR for presence of BMI were both 6.7%. BMT did not alter initial patient management in a single case but provided valuable prognostic information in certain subgroups of patients. BMA gave no additional staging information over BMT and abnormalities of blood count and ESR were poor predictors of infiltration. We conclude that BMA should be abandoned for staging purposes in HL and BMT restricted to patients with stage IIB or III disease, for whom valuable prognostic information may be obtained.
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PMID:The value of bone marrow examination in the staging of Hodgkin's lymphoma: a review of 955 cases seen in a regional cancer centre. 1240 78

A 51-year-old patient with refractory non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) received non-myeloablative conditioning and a two of six (A, B, DR) human leucocyte antigen (HLA) mismatched donor BMT. Post-BMT lymphocytes showed fluctuating T- and natural killer (NK)-cell chimerism, which culminated in mainly donor lymphocytes by Day + 100. Changes in lymphocyte chimerism correlated with anti-donor and anti-host responses in mixed lymphocyte reaction (MLR). On Day + 100, a strong anti-host response was observed in MLR in the absence of graft-versus-host disease (GVHD), together with near complete regression of the patient's lymphoma. A mild chronic GVHD later developed and, eventually, by 680 days post-BMT, the lymphoma had relapsed and MLR reflected a state of global immune unresponsiveness. These observations demonstrate evolving host-versus-graft and graft-versus-host tolerance that correlates with fluctuating lymphoid chimerism and graft-versus-lymphoma (GVL) effects, in the absence of severe GVHD. Eventual lymphoma relapse temporally correlated with a generalised immunosuppressed state.
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PMID:Fluctuating lymphocyte chimerism, tolerance and anti-tumor response in a patient with refractory lymphoma receiving nonmyeloablative conditioning and a haploidentical related allogeneic bone marrow transplant. 1260 94


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