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)

From 1970 to 1975 patients with Stage IV Hodgkin's disease randomised for treatment in the British National Lymphoma Investigation were treated either with MOPP (nitrogen mustard, vincristine, procarbazine and prednisone) or MOP (the same combination without prednisone). The incidence of complete remission was significantly higher for patients treated with MOPP than for those who received MOP (69 vs. 36%, P less than 0.01) and the duration of survival also favoured the former group. From 1976 to 1979 patients with Stage IV disease were treated wither with MOPP or with MOPP plus bleomycin at low dosage (B-MOPP); the incidence of complete remission was not significantly different in the two groups of patients (52 vs. 65%) and a trend in survival favouring those treated by B-MOPP was not significant. The present trial is a comparison of MOPP with the same combination in which chlorambucil has been substituted for nitrogen mustard (LOPP). A proportion of those patients who achieved complete remission after treatment with MOPP or B-MOPP was randomised for maintenance for six months with the CVB combination (CCNU, vinblastine and bleomycin). No advantage could be discerned for patients 'maintained' in this way.
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PMID:Combination chemotherapy for stage IV Hodgkin's disease (Report no 14). 616 26

Eighteen patients with advanced Hodgkin's disease, refractory to combination chemotherapy with nitrogen mustard, vincristine, prednisone, and procarbazine (MOPP), were treated with vinblastine, doxorubicin (Adriamycin), bleomycin, CCNU, and dacarbazine (DTIC) (VABCD). Fifteen patients had Stage IV disease and 11 had systemic symptoms. Although hematologic toxicity was considerable, there was no drug related mortality. Eight patients achieved a complete remission (CR), and five are currently in a continuous CR of five, 24, 30, 34, and 36 months duration, respectively. An additional patient had a 30-month CR and relapsed with localized lymphadenopathy and is currently disease-free following involved-field radiotherapy 46 months from initiation of VABCD. This study suggests that long-term disease-free survival and potential cure can be achieved with VABCD in MOPP-refractory Hodgkin's disease.
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PMID:Treatment of MOPP-refractory Hodgkin's disease with vinblastine, doxorubicin, bleomycin, CCNU, and dacarbazine. 618 56

Vindesine (desacetyl vinblastine amide sulfate, DVA) was used in combination with CCNU (lomustine) and melphalan (Alkeran) (CAD) to treat 15 heavily pretreated patients with Hodgkin's disease in relapse. The patients were treated with up to six cycles, depending upon their response. Two patients (13%) achieved a complete remission (CR) and five (33%) patients a partial remission (PR). The major toxicity was prolonged thrombocytopenia, which was decreased by a reduction in the initial drug doses for patients who had received extensive prior chemotherapy and radiotherapy (RT). The CAD regimen was then alternated with nitrogen mustard or cyclophosphamide, vincristine, procarbazine, and prednisone (MOPP, C-MOPP) and doxorubicin (Adriamycin), bleomycin, and vinblastine (ABV) for a total of nine cycles in 25 patients with Hodgkin's disease in relapse with somewhat more favorable prognostic features. Two patients also received low-dose RT to areas of bulky nodal disease. Eleven patients (44%) achieved a CR and seven (28%) a PR. Of the 11 CR patients, six remain in remission. The serious toxicity was comparable to that seen with other combination chemotherapy regimens. These results indicated that the CAD/MOPP/ABVD regimen is as active as other so-called 'salvage' regimens for Hodgkin's disease in relapse, and suggest that it might be useful for newly diagnosed Hodgkin's disease.
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PMID:Combination chemotherapy for the treatment of Hodgkin's disease in relapse. Results with lomustine (CCNU), melphalan (Alkeran), and vindesine (DVA) alone (CAD) and in alternation with MOPP and doxorubicin (Adriamycin), bleomycin, and vinblastine (ABV). 619 13

Thirty-six consecutive patients with advanced recurrent Hodgkin's disease resistant to chemotherapy with mechlorethamine, vincristine, procarbazine, and prednisone (MOPP) were treated with doxorubicin (Adriamycin), bleomycin, (dacarbazine) DTIC, (lomustine) CCNU, and prednisone (ABDIC). Among the 34 patients evaluable for response, complete remission occurred in 35% and partial remission in 35%. The achievement of complete remission during primary MOPP induction was a statistically significant prognostic factor that predicted complete remission with ABDIC (p less than 0.01). The median time to complete remission was 2 months (range 1-11 mo). The median relapse-free survival time for complete responders is 47 months, and an estimated 53% of all patients who achieve complete remission are projected to be alive, free of disease off therapy at 3 years from initiation of ABDIC. The median survival of all patients is 24 months. The median survival of complete responders, partial responders, and nonresponders is 70, 17, and 4 months, respectively. The survival curve for complete responders is significantly different from that for partial responders (p less than 0.01); the survival curve for partial responders is also significantly different from that of nonresponders (p less than 0.01). Toxicity of ABDIC was acceptable; only one patient died from complications of myelosuppression. Our results indicate that ABDIC is a potentially curative regimen for a fraction of patients with MOPP-resistant Hodgkin's disease who achieve complete remission with prior MOPP therapy. It also prolongs the survival of patients who do not achieve complete remission with prior MOPP therapy.
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PMID:Long-term follow-up with ABDIC salvage chemotherapy of MOPP-resistant Hodgkin's disease. 619 78

Twelve patients with non-Hodgkin malignant lymphoma of poor prognosis were treated with heavy chemotherapy of the TACC type (cyclophosphamide 45 mg/kg/day i.v. X 4; cytosine arabinoside 200 mg/m2/12 hours i.v. X 7; 6-thioguanidine 100 mg/m2/12-hourly p.o X 7 and CCNU 200 or 250 mg/m2 p.o. single dose) followed by autologus bone marrow transplantation (853 to 20.000 CFUc/kg). The patients were divided into 2 groups depending on whether they received an induction treatment for large visible tumoral mass (group I: 3 initial presentations, 3 relapses) or a consolidation treatment for small residual tumour (group II: 6 complete and 1 partial remissions). The results show that autologous bone marrow transplantation shortens the duration of the therapeutic aplasia. White cell (greater than 10(9)/l) and platelet (greater than 50.10(9)/l) recovery was observed on days 12 (range 9-19) and 14 (range 8-27) respectively. In group I, 1 patient died of myocardial TACC toxity and acute renal failure on tumoral kidney; there were 2 failures and 3 complete remissions (8, 21, 45 + months). Remissions occurred in patients treated initially; the overall survival since diagnosis was 48+, 48+ and 60+ months. In group II patients there were 1 failure and 5 complete remissions persisting after a 2+ months to 30+ months follow-up; the overall survival was 23+, 24+, 27+, 42+ and 70+ months. The 3 failures in the series occurred in circumstances suggesting contamination of the cryopreserved bone marrow by tumoral cells. The toxicity, largely due to infection, of the TACC-bone marrow transplantation combination was tolerable. It was clearly lower in group II (6 patients, no septicaemia) than in group I (5/6 patients with septicaemia). These preliminary results confirm that there is room for autologous bone marrow transplantation in highly malignant non-Hodgkin lymphomas, particularly during complete remissions to facilitate the use of an aggressive consolidation chemotherapy.
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PMID:[Non-Hodgkin's malignant lymphoma. Therapeutic value of autologous bone marrow transplantation]. 622 2

Forty-seven patients with advanced Hodgkin's disease were entered in a prospective, randomized trial comparing MOPP (mechlorethamine, vincristine, procarbazine, and prednisone) with a regimen containing lomustine (CCNU), vinblastine, and prednisone (CCNU-VP). Both groups were comparable for the variables of age, stage, substage (symptoms), histology, prior radiation, and sites of involvement. Seventy-two percent of CCNU-VP-treated patients achieved a pathologically documented complete remission (CR) compared to 41% of the MOPP-treated group. Two additional patients treated with MOPP had remission documented only clinically but have been long-term, disease-free survivors. There was a greater frequency of CR in the patients who had received previous irradiation when compared to patients with no prior irradiation. After a median follow-up of greater than 89 months, there is no statistical difference between the two treatment groups in survival (45% for MOPP and 60% for CCNU-VP). Further, no statistical difference in survival for the two treatment groups was noted when compared by histology, stage, or symptoms. The CCNU-VP combination was better tolerated with significantly less nausea and emesis. The alternative drug regimen of CCNU-VP appears to be as effective as MOPP in producing CR and long-term survival in patients with advanced Hodgkin's disease.
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PMID:Randomized study for the treatment of adult advanced Hodgkin's disease: mechlorethamine, vincristine, procarbazine, and prednisone (MOPP) versus lomustine, vinblastine, and prednisone. 634 71

During a 3-year period 39 evaluable patients with stage III and IV non-Hodgkin's lymphomas and unfavorable histologies were treated with a unique chemotherapeutic regimen based on a modified CHOP combination to which was added the nitrosourea, CCNU. Complete response was observed in six of 15 (40%) patients with diffuse poorly differentiated lymphocytic lymphoma (DPDL), four of 11 (36%) with diffuse mixed histiocytic lymphocytic (DML), and seven of 13 (54%) with diffuse histiocytic lymphoma (DHL). Of the 17 patients who achieved complete response, nine (53%) have remained continuously disease-free for greater than 2.5 years (2.7-4.1 years) from the onset of therapy: four of six with DPDL, two of four with DML, and three of seven with DHL. Median survival was 18.9 months for all patients, 18.9 months for those with DPDL, 17.4 months for those with DML, and 9.7 months for those with DHL. The median survival has not been reached for patients who attained a complete response, and will exceed 3.3 years. Central nervous system relapse was observed in three patients. In general, toxicity was moderate and consisted primarily of leukopenia, nausea, vomiting, and neurotoxicity. There were no drug-related deaths. The addition of CCNU to a modified CHOP combination resulted in an effective, generally well-tolerated out-patient regimen. However, it did not appear to decrease the rate of CNS relapse or improve current treatment results observed with other adriamycin-containing regimens for similar patients.
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PMID:CCNU in combination chemotherapy for advanced histologically unfavorable non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. 635 17

A group of 12 children and 5 adults, all with diffuse non-Hodgkin's malignant lymphoma (NHML), received massive chemotherapy regimens. The stages of the disease were as follows: 7 patients were in second complete remission; 6 in a progressive phase of the disease; and 4 in first complete remission which occurred late in the course of the disease. All patients received BACT (BCNU+aracytine+cyclophosphamide+thioguanine) or TACC (idem with CCNU) at different dose levels: 6/17 received 10 Gy total-body irradiation (TBI) after BACT treatment; 16/17 received autologous bone marrow transplantation (ABMT) previously stored in liquid nitrogen to combat the medullary effects of chemotherapy. Direct therapy-related deaths occurred in 4/17 patients (1 Aspergillus endocarditis; 1 Moskowitz syndrome; 1 veno-occlusive disease of the liver; and 1 Escherichia coli pneumopathy) and 6/17 patients relapsed between days 25 and 70 of treatment. Seven out of these 17 patients are still alive NED 102-900 days (mean, 475 days) after the beginning of therapy without receiving maintenance treatment. Massive chemotherapy could thus be the best treatment for NHML in relapse, but the high percentage of early therapy-related deaths is a strong limiting factor for patients before relapse.
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PMID:Massive BACT chemotherapy with autologous bone marrow transplantation in 17 cases of non-Hodgkin's malignant lymphoma with a very bad prognosis. 635 3

Twelve patients with non-Hodgkin's lymphomas of poor prognosis were treated by TACC high-dose chemotherapy (cyclophosphamide 45 mg/kg/day X 4, cytosine arabinoside 200 mg/m2 i.v. q 12 hr X 7,6-thioguanin 100 mg/m2 p.o. X 7 and CCNU 200 or 250 mg/m2 p.o., single dose) followed by autologous bone marrow transplantation (ABMI) (infused dose: 853-20,000 CFU-c/kg). Patients were divided into 2 groups: those in primary therapy with high tumor load (group 1; 3 initial diagnoses, 3 relapses) and those in consolidation therapy for a low tumor load (group 2; 5 complete and 1 partial remissions). Results show that: (1) the aplasia following autologous bone marrow transplantation was short. Leukocyte (greater than 10(9)/1) and platelet (greater than 50 X 10(9)/1) recoveries were observed on day 12 (range, 9-19) and day 14 (range, 8-27). (2) In group 1 there were 3 complete remissions (8,21, 45+ months) and 3 failures, including 1 death to toxicity of TACC. The 3 remissions occurred in patients in primary therapy and overall survival of these patients from the time of initial diagnosis was 48+, 48+ and 60+ months. In group 2 there were 5 persisting complete remissions (12+ to 40+ months) and 1 failure. Overall survival of these patients was 23+, 24+, 27+, 42+ and 70+ months. In both groups failures were associated with contamination of the frozen marrow by tumor. The toxicity of the association TACC + ABMT was acceptable and dominated by the risk of pericardial effusion and infection. The latter was absent in group 2 and occurred in 5/6 cases in group 1. These preliminary results indicate that autologous bone marrow transplantation has a possible role in the aggressive treatment of non-Hodgkin's lymphomas of high-grade malignancy and that its use should preferentially be in the consolidation mode.
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PMID:Autologous bone marrow transplantation in the treatment of poor prognosis non-Hodgkin's lymphomas. 636 42

The current report examines the clinical response observed in 137 patients with advanced Hodgkin's disease who had relapsed from an initial complete response following radiation therapy (RTF) in comparison to 280 patients with no prior therapy (NPT). Patients were prospectively randomized to therapy with a four-drug combination chemotherapy program to determine whether CCNU and/or vinblastine are more effective than mechlorethamine and/or vincristine when combined with procarbazine and prednisone. The frequency of complete remission (CR) was 75% for the RTF group compared to 60% of those with NPT (P = .005). In the RTF group, those patients receiving a nitrosourea (CCNU) had a significantly greater CR frequency than those receiving mechlorethamine (P = .006). Significant risk factors favoring longer duration of remission were age less than 40 (P = .005), the absence of splenic involvement (P = .007), and the use of CCNU-containing programs (P = .015). The advantage for CCNU-containing programs was seen only in patients less than 40 years of age. In this study, the strongest factors favorably affecting response to therapy were prior RTF, age less than 40 years, and treatment with a nitrosourea (CCNU).
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PMID:The effects of prior radiation therapy and age on the frequency and duration of complete remission among various four-drug treatments for advanced Hodgkin's disease. 637 18


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