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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (
leukemia
)
93,477
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Recombinant
interferon alpha
enhanced the MHC class I antigen density on human
leukaemia
/lymphoma cell lines REH, U-937 and HL-60, as measured by immunocytofluorometry using specific monoclonal antibodies. A similar effect was induced (as demonstrated in REH cells), also by human leukocyte interferon-alpha. The latter, however, caused no major alterations in the expression of leukocyte common antigen (ICA; CD45) and transferrin receptor (CD71) in the cell lines examined. In REH cells, there was no interferon-induced alteration of CD10 antigen (CALLA), which in this cell line is markedly down-regulated by 12-0-tetradecanoyl-phorbol-13-acetate (TPA). A decrease of CD4 antigen density on the cell membrane was induced by interferon-alpha in monoblastoid U-937 cells. No induction of MHC class I and II antigens by interferon-alpha was found in K-562 cell subline.
...
PMID:Interferon alpha-induced modulation of leukocyte cell surface antigens: immunocytofluorometric study with human leukaemia/lymphoma cell lines. 168 18
Hairy-cell leukemia is an unusual chronic lymphoid leukemia with distinctive clinical and pathological features. The management of this disorder has been revolutionized in the last decade with the discovery of the efficacy of alpha interferon and the inhibitors of adenosine metabolism, deoxycoformycin and chlorodeoxyadenosine. The best treatment protocol for hairy-cell
leukemia
has not yet been defined. Patients may still die from their disease, particularly in the early phases of treatment. Conversely, some patients appear not to require treatment and others respond well to splenectomy and need no further therapy. An individualized clinical approach is recommended, with a role for splenectomy in the patient with cytopenia and a relatively low number of hairy cells in the bone marrow. The first line drug treatment remains
interferon alpha
given for 12-18 months, following which the patient is observed for clinical relapse. Deoxycoformycin remains a useful experimental agent but cannot be recommended for routine clinical use until issues of long term toxicity are resolved. Chlorodeoxyadenosine is a very promising experimental drug, but confirmation of the early data in larger group trials is required. Similarly the adjunctive use of granulocyte colony stimulating factor appears useful, but will need further study in larger groups of patients. There is little or no role for alkylating agents or more intensive chemotherapy in the modern management of hairy-cell
leukemia
.
...
PMID:Treatment of hairy-cell leukemia. 170 7
The retinoids: all-transretinoic acid (tretinoin), 13-cis retinoic acid (isotretinoin) and the aromatic retinoids etretinate and acitretin have a preventive and therapeutic effect on chemically-induced tumours. Clinically, retinoids have shown variable effectiveness in therapy and/or prevention of oncological diseases of skin, head and neck, lung, bladder, vulva and bone marrow. With a few exceptions, monotherapy with retinoids has not been satisfactory. Similarly, monotherapy with
interferon alpha
has been used successfully only for some specific indications. Retinoids have a marked differentiation-inducing effect which may contribute to their therapeutic effect. Experiments were carried out in transformed cell lines to test the combination of retinoids with
interferon alpha
and other cytokines on differentiation. In HL-60 cells, an acute promyelocytic
leukaemia
cell line, induction of differentiation was determined by induction of an oxidative burst potential. Retinoids showed the following order of activity: tretinoin greater than isotretinoin greater than acitretin. Cytokines had no differentiation-inducing effect by themselves. However, the addition of the following cytokines to retinoids potentiated the retinoid-induced differentiation: IFN alpha, IFN beta, IFN gamma, TNF alpha, G-CSF, IL-1 alpha and IL-4. In experiments with HL-60 or other cell lines, the pattern of differentiation-induction was always dependent on the particular retinoid/cytokine combination. IFN alpha provoked a marked potentiation of retinoid-induced differentiation. The combination of the antiproliferative and differentiation-inducing effect of the retinoids together with the antiproliferative, immunostimulatory and differentiation-potentiating effects of IFN alpha suggests that this combination might be a particularly promising treatment for neoplastic diseases.
...
PMID:Retinoids and interferon: a new promising combination? 171 90
Long-term treatment with recombinant
interferon alpha
(
IFN
) leading to complete remission in a patient with hairy cell
leukaemia
is presented. Four months after the beginning of treatment with
IFN
, the parameters of the peripheral blood had normalized. In spite of a continuous dose reduction (to a dose of 1 Mio. U/week) remission could be maintained during the six years of treatment. Two years after the start of treatment with
IFN
, a metastasizing carcinoma of the prostate was diagnosed, leading to death after four years. With regard to the hairy cell
leukaemia
, the patient was free of symptoms and the obduction confirmed the complete remission: the histological examination of bone marrow, spleen, liver and lymph nodes showed no more signs of hairy cell
leukaemia
. This case report shows that long-term treatment with
IFN
in some cases is effective to induce and to maintain complete remission in hairy cell
leukaemia
.
...
PMID:[Low dosage long-term treatment with recombinant alpha interferon induces in hairy cell leukemia continuous complete remission]. 175 61
T cell clones derived from a chronic myelogenous
leukaemia
(CML) patient during
interferon alpha
(IFN alpha, Wellferon) biotherapy preferentially lysed autologous rather than allogeneic CML target cells in an apparently MHC-unrestricted fashion, but also lysed bone marrow cells from certain normal donors regardless of whether or not they shared HLA antigens with the patient. Although T cell clones inhibited both CML and normal bone marrow in the colony-forming assay, they blocked proliferation of CML cells more efficiently than bone marrow cells. This inhibitory effect was mediated at least in part by the tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF alpha) and IFN gamma secreted by the clones. Antisera to these cytokines partially prevented inhibition. Involvement of additional factors is also suggested in blocking CML cell proliferation because this was not 100% inhibited even by a combination of TNF alpha and IFN gamma. In addition, most clones failed strongly to block the proliferation of normal bone marrow cells, which were susceptible to inhibition by these cytokines.
...
PMID:Cytotoxic and noncytotoxic mechanisms involved in the in vitro anti-leukaemia effects of T cell clones established from a chronic myelogenous leukaemia patient during treatment in vivo with interferon alpha. 190 97
Recent evidence suggests that tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF) is an autocrine growth factor for the chronic B-cell malignancies hairy cell
leukaemia
(HCL) and some cases of B-chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (B-CLL). Incubation with TNF in vitro has been shown to increase viability, DNA synthesis and the expression of the protooncogenes myc, fos and jun in the tumour cells from these patients. TNF in vitro also increases expression of TNF-mRNA, suggesting the existence of an autocrine growth loop for TNF in these cells. Current experiments are compatible with the hypothesis that
interferon alpha
(
IFN
) interferes with this autocrine growth loop in HCL and B-CLL by stimulating degradation of messenger RNAs (mRNAs) for a number of cytokines including that of TNF. This RNA degradation may be mediated through induction of the enzyme 2,5 oligo-A synthetase with consequent increased synthesis of 2,5 oligo-A which is known to stimulate the activity of a latent ribonuclease capable of degrading cytokine mRNAs. Circulating tumour-derived TNF may also contribute to the pancytopenia in HCL and B-CLL. Whether cytokine autocrine growth loops are important in other B-cell malignancies, e.g. myeloma and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, and subject to
IFN
-stimulated breakdown needs further study.
...
PMID:Possible mechanism of action of interferon alpha in chronic B-cell malignancies. 193 2
Recombinant interferon alfa-2a has been shown to be an effective induction agent in essential thrombocythaemia and thrombocythaemia associated with other myeloproliferative disorders, including chronic granulocytic
leukaemia
, polycythaemia rubra vera and myelofibrosis. Few data exist on the use of the recombinant interferons as maintenance agents in patients with thrombocythaemia. A cohort of 22 previously untreated patients, with essential thrombocythaemia, were treated with recombinant interferon alfa-2a maintenance therapy for a minimum period of 6 months. Effective long-term control of platelet counts, without evidence of haematological toxicity, was achieved in 19/22 patients. No objective haemorrhagic or thrombotic event occurred in 298 patient-months of interferon therapy. Three patients discontinued
interferon alpha
therapy due to adverse side-effects. Interferon alfa-2a is an effective maintenance agent in essential thrombocythaemia and is discussed in this context.
...
PMID:Maintenance therapy in the myeloproliferative disorders: the current options. 193 19
The possible synergistic interaction between azidothymidine (AZT) and
interferon alpha
(rIFN-alpha 2a) in the treatment of chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) was studied in vitro using marrow or peripheral blood hematopoietic progenitors from 10 patients with CML in the mixed (CFU-GEMM) colony culture assay. Used singly, either agent inhibited erythroid (BFU-E) and granulocyte-macrophage (CFU-GM) CML hematopoietic progenitor proliferation in a dose-dependent fashion, with the inhibitory effect being more pronounced on BFU-E than on CFU-GM colony-forming cells. The combination of both drugs in therapeutic concentrations exerted a significant synergistic inhibition on CML stem cells as assessed by the median-effect principle and isobologram equation analysis. A suboptimal dose of AZT (0.5 mumol/l) synergistically augmented the effect of rIFN-alpha 2a whereas an inactive dose of 10 U/ml rIFN-alpha 2a similarly enhanced the CML stem cell growth inhibition exerted by AZT. Our data indicate that AZT may augment the already established therapeutic benefits of IFN-alpha in CML.
Leukemia
1991 Feb
PMID:Synergistic antiproliferative effect of interferon alpha and azidothymidine in chronic myelogenous leukemia. 202 Jan 93
In a Phase II study, 82 patients with Philadelphia chromosome(Ph)-positive chronic myelogenous
leukaemia
were treated with 3.5 million I.U./d of recombinant
interferon alpha
-2c (rIFN). 73 patients have so far been evaluated (42 male, 31 female, mean age 50 [12-87] years). At the start of therapy, 10 were in the accelerated phase (group 1) and 63 in the chronic phase, of whom 19 had received previous treatment with cytotoxics (group 2), while the remainder (group 3, n = 44) had received primary treatment with rIFN. There was short-term stabilization in 7 of the 10 group 1 patients, but none had complete haematological or cytogenetic remission. In contrast, the remission rate (complete or partial haematological remission) was 63% in the previously treated (group 2) and 66% in the previously untreated chronic phase patients (group 3). There was a reduction in the proportion of Ph-positive metaphases in 7 group 2 patients (11%) and in 10 group 3 patients (23%). Complete cytogenetic remission has so far been seen in 2 patients. Cytogenetic improvement occurred after 3 months at the earliest, and in some patients only after 12 to 19 months treatment. Differences in response to treatment were related to stage (prognostic staging system of Kantarjian et al.) in group 3 patients: complete or partial haematological remission was seen in 22 out of 25 patients with stage 1 disease, in 4 out of 7 in stage 2, and in only 3 out of 12 in stages 3 and 4.
...
PMID:[Recombinant interferon alpha-2c in Ph-positive chronic myeloid leukemia. Results of a multicenter phase II study]. 202 4
We investigated the effect of recombinant tumor necrosis factor-alpha (rTNF-alpha) and recombinant lymphotoxin (rLT) in the growth modulation of purified hairy cell leukemia (HCL) cells. In response to rTNF-alpha, HCL cells from five of eight patients showed a 3 to 23-fold thymidine incorporation above their unstimulated controls. The effect was time and dose dependent with a maximum between 10 and 25 ng/ml rTNF-alpha after 120-hr incubation. rLT (1-50 ng/ml), however, could not enhance DNA synthesis in six of six cases. Cell number of rTNF-alpha stimulated cells ranged from 2-3 x 10(6)/ml from days 0-50 whereas cell number of unstimulated controls decreased from 3 x 10(6)/ml at day 0 to 0.01-0.02 x 10(6)/ml after 50 days in culture. rTNF-alpha induced proliferation could be suppressed in all HCL cell populations by 0.3 ng/ml recombinant
interferon alpha
(100 U/ml rIFN-alpha). TNF binding studies in two patients revealed that both TNF-sensitive HCL cells (1,990 +/- 148 receptors/cell) as well as TNF-insensitive HCL cells (1,261 +/- 101 receptors/cell) express specific receptors for TNF-alpha. These data show that rTNF-alpha and rLT have different effects on the growth of HCL cells. In addition there is a subgroup of patients who show no response to rLT or rTNF-alpha.
Leukemia
1990 Jun
PMID:Tumor necrosis factor-alpha, but not lymphotoxin, stimulates growth of tumor cells in hairy cell leukemia. 216 99
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