Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (leukemia)
93,477 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Of 13 cancers that tend to occur at lower rates in aboriginal Americans or in the native lands of Japanese, Chinese, and Spanish-speaking persons than in United States whites, rates for all but one (laryngeal) have increased in migrants to the United States. In addition to leukemia, these 13 cancers include neoplasms that have been related, at least in part, to a diet high in animal fats or proteins (colon and rectum cancer); reproductive and endocrinologic factors and a diet high in animal fats or protein (prostate, ovary, corpus uteri, breast, and testis cancer); chemical carcinogens (lung, larynx, bladder, and pancreas cancer); and a common infectious agent that, like polio viruses, causes clinically overt disease with a frequency directly related to age of patient at initial infection (Hodgkin's disease). Of 9 cancers that occur at higher rates in aboriginal Americans or in one or more of the native lands of migrants than in United States whites, the rates of 5 tend to decrease in migrants. These include cancers that may be related to food preservation (stomach cancer); products of microorganisms that may contaminate foods (esophagus and liver cancer); and infectious agents (nasopharynx, cervix uteri, and liver cancer). In addition, rates of cancer of the thyroid are high in aboriginal Americans; those of the gallbladder are high in individuals of native American ancestry and in Japanese; incidence of salivary gland tumors is high in Alaskan natives and Colombians; and rates of kidney cancer are high in Alaskan natives. Five types of epidemiologic studies are described that should be conducted in the migrants and in their countries of origin and adoption to elucidate further the etiology of various neoplasms.
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PMID:Epidemiologic studies of cancer in minority groups in the western United States. 53 17

From the Third National Cancer Survey (TNCS) Interview Study of 7,518 incident cases, lifetime histories of occupations and industries were studied for associations with specific cancer sites and types while controlling for age, sex, race, education, use of cigarettes or alcohol, and geographic location. Lung cancer patients were found more often than expected among several categories including trucking, air transportation, wholesaling, painting, building construction, building maintenance, and manufacturing (furniture, transportation equipment, and food products). Controlling for cigarette smoking did not change these associations. Leukemia and multiple myeloma were associated with sales personnel of both sexes, whereas lymphomas and Hodgkin's disease were excessive among women working in the medical industry. Other associations included rectal cancer with several retail industries; prostate cancer with ministers, farmers, plumbers, and coal miners; malignant melanoma with school teachers; and invasive cervical cancer with women working in hotels and restaurants. Breast cancer patients were more common among women who were teachers or other professionals and who worked in business and finance (even after controlling for education). Many other findings are presented in detailed tables. Results are reported mainly as a research resource for use by other investigators doing work in this field. Suggestions are given for future studies.
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PMID:Associations of cancer site and type with occupation and industry from the Third National Cancer Survey Interview. 90 93

Radiation-induced cancers after radiation therapy for cancer of the uterine cervix were investigated on 11,855 patients including 5725 patients treated with radiation therapy alone, 1969 postoperative radiation therapy and 4161 surgery alone. The observed-to-expected ratios of the second primary cancer was 0.933 for the patients with radiation therapy alone and 1.074 for the patients with postoperative radiation therapy, respectively. No significant increase was observed in the risk of second primary cancers when all sites were combined. However, assessing on site by site basis, significant excess was noted for the rectum cancer, leukemia, and bladder cancer for the radiation therapy group but not for the surgery group. A significant excess of lung cancer was observed in both radiation therapy and surgery groups, which was attributed to some other causative factors. Radiation-induced cancers were suggested to develop apparently in organs involved in the irradiated field.
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PMID:Second cancer after radiation therapy for cancer of the uterine cervix. 198 34

Cancer is a disease predominantly seen in the older age group. The most frequent forms are in males: lung, prostatic, stomach, colonic and bladder cancer. In females: breast, colonic, stomach cancer, lymphoma, leukaemia and rectal cancer. In view of the expected demographic figures a dramatic increase in the incidence of cancer is expected. The malignancies seen in the elderly respond generally poor to chemotherapy. Most cytotoxic drugs are excreted by the kidneys. Especially the renal clearance of anticancer drugs will therefore be compromised in the elderly, this should be considered when giving cytostatics. Mucositis, bone marrow toxicity, pulmonary and neurotoxicity are quite often enhanced in the older patient group. The indications for chemotherapy are limited. Chemotherapy should not be withheld from patients with advanced breast cancer and certain haematological malignancies. Further clinical research focussed on the elderly is warranted. Drugs with a mild spectrum of side effects deserve priority. Hormonal treatment is an important modality in breast, prostatic and endometrial carcinoma. The burden for the patients is limited and the advantages are well documented.
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PMID:[Drug treatment of cancer in elderly patients]. 221 38

A 47-year-old man, who had been diagnosed as having acute myelomonocytic leukemia (AMMOL) and had been treated with combination chemotherapy, was admitted to our hospital because he had developed melena. He had been judged to be in complete remission and had shown no signs of recurrence for years, Daunorubicin, vincristine 6-Mercaptopurine and Cyclophosphamide had been administered for maintenance and intensification therapy. He was well until January 1986, when this melena began. A barium enema was given and he was diagnosed as having rectal cancer. Amputation of the rectum and a permanent abdominal colostomy was made safely, mainly because he had been in complete remission, and he recovered normally after the operation. In recent years, the survival of patients with malignancies has improved due to aggressive treatment even in cases of hematological neoplasms. However, the risk of secondary neoplasms in patients treated for cancer has increased. This case suggests that we have to be careful when prescribing treatment for cancer patients, since anti-tumor drugs may have cartinogenic effects.
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PMID:[A case of successful surgical treatment of rectal cancer complicated by acute myelomonocytic leukemia]. 348 Sep 60

The study describes the mortality of 5 017 men known to have been employed in the boot and shoe manufacturing industry in three towns in Great Britain in 1939. At the end of 1982, 97.5% of the men were traced, and 3 434 (68.4%) were known to be dead. Expected numbers were calculated according to the person-years method and were adjusted according to the standardized mortality ratios of the counties in which the towns were situated. The mortality experience of the men for all causes, all cancers combined, and all other causes was favorable. The anticipated excess of deaths from nasal cancer (10 observed, 1.87 expected) was found, and the excess was significant for workers in the finishing room. Deficits were found for other types of respiratory cancer. An excess mortality from leukemia was found for workers in one town (7 observed, 3.0 expected), and the excess was significant for workers in the lasting and making room, where glues and solvents, including benzene, were known to have been used. An excess mortality from rectal cancer was found for workers in two towns (61 observed, 47.6 expected), and it was significant for workers in the lasting and making rooms (25 observed, 12.4 expected). Some supporting evidence for a risk of rectal cancer in this industry was found in the literature.
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PMID:The mortality of boot and shoe makers, with special reference to cancer. 405 88

The risk of second primary cancer was evaluated in more than 25,000 women with cancer of the genital organs diagnosed between 1935 and 1982 in Connecticut. Significant excesses of subsequent cancers were observed following cancers of the cervix (35%, n = 656), uterine corpus (16%, n = 1,060), and ovary (58%, n = 366). When observed and expected second cancers of the female genital tract were excluded, these excesses became 40%, 30%, and 59% after cervix, uterine corpus, and ovary, respectively. Among women with either cancer of the cervix or uterine corpus, the risk of developing a second cancer rose with increasing duration of follow-up, reaching an excess of 61 and 34%, respectively, after 20 years. In contrast, among patients with ovarian cancer, the second cancer risk decreased over time to 41% after 10 years. Cancers related to smoking, i.e., oral cavity and pharynx, esophagus, and respiratory system, were notably increased among cervical cancer patients. The twofold to threefold risks observed for these second cancers are consistent with recent evidence linking cervical cancer to cigarette smoking and seem too large to be artifacts of confounding by low socioeconomic status. An increased incidence of second cancer of the abdominal organs (colon, rectum, kidney, bladder, ovaries) was generally observed for each gynecologic site. However, only rectal cancer was consistently linked with radiation treatment for the first primary cancer. Leukemia occurred in excess after cancers of the uterine corpus and ovary, but not after cervical cancer. The predominant cell type was acute nonlymphocytic leukemia, and the excess was associated with radiotherapy for uterine corpus cancer and with chemotherapy for ovarian cancer. Cancers of the breast and colon were increased following uterine corpus and ovarian cancer and vice versa, which supports the notion that these sites share a common etiology, perhaps related to dietary or hormonal factors. Cervical cancer patients experienced a deficit of subsequent breast cancer, possibly due to ovarian removal or ablation by radiation. Investigators need to explore further the association between the smoking-related cancer sites and cervical cancer, to clarify the role of radiotherapy and chemotherapy in relation to excess cancers, and to define more fully the etiologic factors that link cancers of the breast, colon, uterine corpus, and ovary.
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PMID:Second cancer following cancer of the female genital system in Connecticut, 1935-82. 408 93

4'-epi-doxorubicin (4'-epi-DX) is a new anthracycline antibiotic. It differs from doxorubicin (DX) by the epimerization of the OH group in position 4' of the aminosugar moiety, and was synthesized in an effort to find agents with a superior therapeutic index to the parent compound doxorubicin (DX). 4'-epi-doxorubicin binds to DNA and inhibits nucleic acid synthesis and function. The antitumor activity of 4'-epi-DX in several experimental tumors (Leukemias L 1210, P 388, Gross Leukemia, Sarcoma 180 ascitic and solid, C3H/HE mammary carcinoma) is similar to that of DX. However, 4'-epi-doxorubicin has greater antitumor activity than doxorubicin in Lewis lung carcinoma, MS-2 sarcoma lung metastasis, and human melanoma in athymic mice. In chronic toxicity studies there were no qualitative differences between 4'-epi-DX and DX; quantitatively, however, 4'-epi-DX was less toxic. In different experimental models 4'-epi-DX has been shown to be less cardiotoxic than its parent compound. In chronic toxicity studies in the rabbit, histopathologic findings revealed the same pattern of cardiotoxicity for both drugs but less marked with 4'-epi-DX. Distribution studies in mice with tumors showed a lower concentration of 4'-epi-DX in the heart, spleen and kidneys; the hepatobiliary metabolism and excretion of 4'-epi-DX investigated in the rat, indicated that the new analogue was more extensively metabolized than the parent compound. Pharmacokinetics of 4'-epi-DX in humans showed a multiexponential decrease of plasma levels; the same pattern was observed for the metabolite 13-OH epidoxorubicinol but with lower concentrations than the unchanged drug. A high plasma clearance (0.9-1.41/min), a terminal half-life of about 30-40 hr and a large volume of distribution were the main pharmacokinetic characteristics of 4'-epi-DX. A reduction of the dose appears to be appropriate in patients with liver function impairment. Phase II studies with 4'-epi-DX have indicated that the drug produces a pattern of acute toxicity, including acute cardiac toxicity, qualitatively similar to that of DX at identical doses but quantitatively lower, with particular regard to leukopenia and gastrointestinal toxicity. The range of single active doses is between 60 and 90 mg/m2, the most frequently employed doses schedules being 75 or 90 mg/m2 i.v. every 3 weeks. 4'-epi-DX has shown activity in a variety of tumors such as breast carcinoma, soft tissues sarcomas, NH lymphomas, leukemias, ovarian cancer and gastric cancer. Preliminary evidence of activity has been found in melanoma, rectal cancer and pancreatic cancer suggesting a broad spectrum of activity. As to chronic cardiac toxicity up to now only 2 mild to moderate and reversible CHF have been observed at doses of 1120 and 1235 mg/m2 in about 700 treated patients. Specific and comparative studies are in progress: preliminary findings from a randomized comparison of 4'-epi-DX vs DX in breast cancer indicated that 4'-epi-DX may have a lower cumulative cardiotoxicity.
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PMID:4'-epi-doxorubicin, a new analogue of doxorubicin: a preliminary overview of preclinical and clinical data. 634 72

The mortality experience of 10,322 men employed in woodworking industries was compared with that of 406,798 nonwoodworkers. All subjects were enrolled in an American Cancer Society study and followed prospectively from 1959 through 1972. Age-adjusted rates of death from all causes and from all cancers were not higher in the woodworker group, but excess rates were observed for cancers of the lung, stomach, and bladder, as well as nonmelanoma skin cancer and possibly leukemia. Woodworkers experienced significantly decreased rates of colon-rectum cancer and coronary heart disease. The elevated cancer rates could not be explained by cigarette smoking habits. If anything, there is evidence to suggest a possible interaction between employment in woodworking trades and heavy cigarette smoking, in increasing the risk of lung and bladder cancer.
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PMID:Cancer mortality among woodworkers. 672 Jun 95

Proportionate mortality for various causes was examined among 3,754 decedents (2,144 men, 1,610 women) who had worked in shoe manufacturing plants represented by either of two labor unions in the US. None of the shoeworker deaths were attributed to nasal cancer, whereas 2.2 were expected on the basis of general population data. Mortality from leukemia and cancer of the urinary bladder was not unusual in either sex or either union. However, deaths from cancers of the liver and gallbladder combined were significantly increased among male and female members of one union. Three deaths from mesothelioma were seen among members of this same union. Rectal cancer mortality was higher than expected among men and women in both unions. The findings are at variance with previous reports of high risks of certain cancer sites among shoeworkers. However, results for liver and gallbladder cancer and mesothelioma suggest the possibility that other previously unsuspected hazards may have been present in certain areas of the US shoe industry.
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PMID:Proportionate mortality among US shoeworkers, 1966-1977. 686 77


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