Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0019829 (Hodgkin's disease)
30,247 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The goal of this review is to provide a readable and exhaustive reference in three major areas of geriatric oncology: complications of chemotherapy and radiotherapy, responsiveness of cancer to systemic treatment, social issues in the care of elderly patients with terminal illnesses. The conclusions of this study are: 1. Progressive deterioration of renal function is the most consistent change of aging. Adjustment of doses of renally excreted drugs to individual creatinine clearance may prevent life-threatening myelotoxicity in the elderly. 2. Intensive chemotherapy regimens (acute leukemia, non Hodgkin's lymphoma) cause more serious and prolonged myelotoxicity in the elderly. Elderly are more susceptible than younger patients to cardiotoxicity and central and peripheral neurotoxicity. Age is a poor predictor of complications in other organs or systems. 3. The prognosis of patients with Hodgkin's disease worsens with aging, possibly due to increased prevalence of mixed cellularity histology. It is controversial whether the prognosis of other neoplasias is poorer. Prognosis is not age-related in multiple myeloma. In general, elderly in good performance status may benefit from systemic cancer treatment to the same extent as younger patients, except for Hodgkin's disease. 4. The Informal Support Network, epitomized by the family, appears the most suitable environment to care for the elderly with cancer.
...
PMID:Systemic treatment of cancer in the elderly. 304 34

A 53-year-old male with Bence Jones lambda myeloma developed hypercalcemia and acute renal failure (calcium 14.4 mg/dl, BUN 40 mg/dl, creatinine 3.0 mg/dl) after initial response to chemotherapy. A 99mTc-MDP bone scan revealed unusual isotope accumulation in the left hypochondrium. Extensive calcium deposition was confirmed in the gastric mucosa in the postmortem examination. Detection of gastric calcification by a bone scan is very rare. Only two cases of gastric calcification visualized on bone scans can be found in the literature, one with multiple myeloma) and one in Hodgkin's disease).
...
PMID:Metastatic calcification in the stomach demonstrated by a bone scan in Bence Jones lambda myeloma. 310 83

104 patients with previously untreated Hodgkin's disease stage IV were examined and treated at the Finsen Institute between 1969 and 1983. 99 patients were treated with combination chemotherapy (MOPP or equivalent regiments) with or without additional irradiation of some involved areas. Prognostic factors including age, sex, peripheral plus intrathoracic nodal tumour burden, intraabdominal nodal tumour burden, B-symptoms, histologic subtype, number of involved nodal regions, mediastinal involvement, number of involved extranodal sites, type of extranodal involvement, ESR, and haematologic and other blood values, together with exploratory laparotomy and treatment were examined in multivariate analyses. With regard to disease-free survival, the only factors of independent prognostic significance were sex and lymphocytopenia. With regard to overall survival the factors of independent significance were age, sex, bone marrow involvement, and an elevated serum creatinine. If only deaths of Hodgkin's disease were considered in overall survival, both lymphocytopenia and bone marrow involvement had independent prognostic significance. These two factors thus emerged as the most important prognostic factors in disseminated Hodgkin's disease, and both would appear to be related to the patient's total tumour burden.
...
PMID:Prognostic factors in Hodgkin's disease stage IV. 319 22

Nineteen patients with non-Hodgkin lymphoma of unfavourable histology (15 high grade and 4 intermediate grade) were treated with two new combination chemotherapeutic schemes. Except for one all were partial (8) or complete (10) responders to treatment. Polyamines were measured in every spontaneously voided urine sample. Pretherapeutically all (11) stage III and IV patients had borderline or increased urinary putrescine (Pu) and sum of isoputreanine, spermidine and spermine (sigma Isoputr,Sd,Sp), except for the non-responder. Except for one, all (8) stage I and II patients had normal urinary Pu and sigma Isoputr,Sd,Sp. Posttherapeutically patients with pretherapeutically increased sigma Isoputr,Sd,Sp returned to normal (5), borderline (2), or slightly increased (3) levels. The post-therapeutic achievement of normal or borderline sigma Isoputr,Sd,Sp was not necessarily connected with accomplishment of complete remission. From the start of therapy until clinical restaging, partially or completely responding stage III and IV patients excreted 5-234 mmol sigma Isoputr,Sd,Sp per mol of creatinine above the mean normal value plus 2 SD. For stage I and II patients and the clinical non-responder this parameter amounted to 0-5 mmol/mol of creatinine. Peaks in urinary Pu and sigma Isoputr,Sd,Sp follow-up curves were related in time to the administration of chemotherapeutics. For responding stage III and IV patients the rate of the decrease of sigma Isoputr,Sd,Sp levels paralleled the clinically observed rate of tumour load reduction. This study suggests that notably for non-Hodgkin lymphoma patients with high tumour loads the constant monitoring of polyamines can provide information on pretherapeutic spontaneous tumour cell loss, the efficacy of chemotherapeutic combinations, the kinetics-, and (within certain limitations) the extent of therapeutically induced tumour cell death.
...
PMID:Urinary polyamines and their metabolites during new combination chemotherapeutic treatments of high grade non-Hodgkin lymphoma. 365 47

A 74-year-old woman was hospitalized because of decreased appetite, fatigue, and weight loss. The laboratory examination revealed hypercalcemia, a slightly increased serum creatinine level, and a markedly elevated serum level of 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3. The most important finding the physical examination revealed was enlarged inguinal lymph nodes. A biopsy disclosed lymphocyte-depleted Hodgkin's disease. After steroids, but not after calcitonin, both the elevated calcitriol concentration and serum calcium normalized. In spite of intensive chemotherapy, a further episode with hypercalcemia occurred and increased 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 serum levels were observed. According to the available evidence it seems probable that the humoral hypercalcemia in this patient resulted from production of 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 in the tumor.
...
PMID:Hypercalcemia and elevated serum 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 in a patient with Hodgkin's lymphoma. 375 25

Serum beta 2-microglobulin (S-beta 2m) was measured at diagnosis in 189 patients with malignant lymphoma, all with a normal serum creatinine clearance. The diagnosis was non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) in 149 patients and Hodgkin's disease (HD) in 40. Among the NHL group, S-beta 2m was raised (greater than 3.0 mg/l) in 15% of patients with Stage I and II and in 65% of those with Stage III and IV. The corresponding frequencies for HD were 11% and 83% respectively. In NHL, a high pretreatment level of S-beta 2m was found to be a poor prognostic sign in all stages. Patients in Stage I and II with an elevated pretreatment level of S-beta 2m had a higher relapse rate than those with normal S-beta 2m. In Stage III and IV patients with initial levels greater than 3.5 mg/l, the survival was significantly shorter than in those with initial values of less than 3.5 mg/l. A lower mean S-beta 2m value was found in Stage III and IV patients who achieved complete remission than in those who did not. Serial determinations of S-beta 2m in 23 patients with NHL showed that increased pretreatment levels became normal when remission was achieved and increased again in relapse. Thus the S-beta 2m provides valuable prognostic information in this group of patients.
...
PMID:Serum beta 2-microglobulin in malignant lymphoma. 618 72

Two young men developed nephrotic syndrome associated with Hodgkin's lymphoma and progressive renal failure. After a short course of hemodialysis with blood transfusion, each received a cadaveric renal transplant. During the postoperative period, chemotherapy (MOPP) was given. No transplant rejection episodes were diagnosed. The patients, who live normal lives, have been in lymphoma remission for 12 and 22 months and have serum creatinine levels of 120 and 108 mumol/L 47 and 50 months posttransplant, respectively (Table 1).
...
PMID:Cadaveric renal transplantation in two patients with preexisting Hodgkin's lymphoma. 638 20

Previous trials of gallium nitrate (NSC-15200) showed that bolus administration produced dose-limiting nephrotoxicity without substantial antitumor activity. As an effort to increase the therapeutic index of this compound and to establish a satisfactory out-patient schedule, the authors evaluated the effects of gallium nitrate administered as a continuous infusion in patients with advanced malignant lymphoma. In an initial Phase I trial, four dose levels which ranged from 200 to 400 mg/m2/day in 27 patients were studied. Nausea which impaired oral hydration was found to be dose-limiting. A dose of 300 mg/m2/day was chosen for extended Phase II evaluation and 37 additional patients were entered into the study at that dose level. Overall, 16 of 47 patients (34%) who had bi-dimensionally measurable parameters of disease achieved major antitumor responses (six of 15 with diffuse "histiocytic" lymphoma, five of ten with diffuse poorly-differentiated lymphocytic lymphoma, two of five with nodular poorly-differentiated lymphocytic lymphoma, and three of 17 with Hodgkin's disease). The median duration of response was 2.5 months. Only 8% of patients who received 300 mg/m2/day developed an increase in serum creatinine concentration greater than 1.1 mg/dl over baseline values. Hypocalcemia occurred in two-thirds of patients. Other toxic effects, including paresthesiae, diarrhea, and hearing loss, were noted in less than 5% of patients. There was minimal myelosuppression. The authors conclude that gallium nitrate administered as a continuous infusion for seven days at 300 mg/m2/day is well-tolerated and effective treatment for patients with advanced malignant lymphoma. Outpatient administration using portable infusion pumps is safe and practical. Further evaluation of the drug administered as a constant infusion is indicated in patients with other neoplastic diseases.
...
PMID:Treatment of patients with advanced malignant lymphoma using gallium nitrate administered as a seven-day continuous infusion. 683 91

The early metabolic events in 33 patients with non-Hodgkin lymphoma were analyzed in the present study. Twenty-three patients had Burkitt lymphoma, 3 had non-Burkitt undifferentiated lymphoma and 7 had lymphoblastic lymphoma. Eight patients developed azotemia prior to starting chemotherapy while five did so during the first treatment week. All the patients but two who developed azotemia had stage C or D disease. Serum LDH prior to chemotherapy correlated well with the stage of disease and predicted the serum levels of creatinine, uric acid and phosphorus in the post-treatment period. Surgical excision of the main tumor mass was associated with a low incidence of azotemia and other metabolic derangements. Hyperuricemia and occasionally obstruction were encountered as the causes of azotemia in the pre-treatment period. Hyperuricemia and/or hyperphosphatemia were presumed responsible for the development of azotemia in the post-chemotherapy period. Two patients were dialyzed for renal failure due to hyperuricemia and one for renal failure due to hyperphosphatemia which developed shortly after starting chemotherapy. The patterns of renal and metabolic disturbances observed during treatment of these patients were characterized by the following profiles: 1. Azotemia due to hyperuricemia prior to treatment. 2. Hyperuricemia without azotemia in the pre-treatment period with azotemia due to hyperphosphatemia in the post-treatment period. 3. Azotemia due to combined hyperphosphatemia and hyperuricemia developing gradually in post-treatment period. 4. Increased urine phosphorus excretion in both non-azotemic and azotemic patients.
...
PMID:Renal and metabolic complications of undifferentiated and lymphoblastic lymphomas. 689 77

The clinical course of a 14-year-old boy who developed biopsy-proven minimal change nephrotic syndrome (MCNS) prior to institution of therapy for Hodgkin's disease (HD), mixed cellularity histologic subtype, is presented. In the first week of radiotherapy to the major site of disease in the neck, BUN and creatinine levels rose to 98 mg% and 8.4 mg%, respectively. During the second week of treatment, levels gradually decreased becoming normal in the third week. Body weight gradually decreased in the second week of radiotherapy, falling rapidly in the third and fourth week when diuresis was greatest. Although urine protein concentration fell initially, the concentration remained 1 + or more for 10 weeks following radiotherapy. Following radiotherapy to the neck, staging laparotomy demonstrated a single focus of Hodgkin's disease in the spleen. Radiotherapy was given to the splenic pedicle: six courses of multiagent chemotherapy (MOPP) followed. The boy remains free of any evidence of either HD or MCNS 33 + months from the time of the diagnosis. Circulating lymphocytes showed normal responses to stimulation by phytohemaglutinin, Concanavalin A, and pokeweed mitogens. The patient's monocyte-macrophage-mediated antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) was low both prior to and following radiotherapy. Lymphocyte-mediated ADCC was normal at both of these times.
...
PMID:Hodgkin's disease complicated by nephrotic syndrome. New clinical observations on the response of both diseases to radiotherapy to the neck. 730 60


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Next >>