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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (
leukemia
)
93,477
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We report a case of acute megakaryoblastic
leukemia
(AMKL) with antiplatelet antibody in a boy with
Down syndrome
. When the patient was admitted, his platelet count was 1.3 X 10(4)/mm3 and antiplatelet antibody in the plasma was detected. Two months after admission, blasts, which showed positive reaction to both antiplatelet monoclonal antibody and platelet peroxidase, increased.
...
PMID:Acute megakaryoblastic leukemia in Down syndrome, following thrombocytopenia with antiplatelet antibody. 214 73
Transient
leukemia
in phenotypically normal children is rare. A newborn child in whom fever and tachypnea developed at age 2 days had a white blood cell count of 20.1 x 10(9)/L and many abnormal blast cells. Chromosome analysis of spontaneously dividing cells from the blood showed these to have
trisomy 21
, and 80% of cells in the marrow were also trisomic. No trisomic cells were present in skin fibroblast cultures. At age 6 months, at which time the blood film appeared normal, trisomic cells were no longer present.
...
PMID:Trisomy 21 in transient myeloproliferative disorder. 214 65
Two infants with congenital nonlymphoblastic
leukemia
were discovered to have mosaicism for
trisomy 21
. Both infants achieved durable spontaneous remissions. Trisomy was apparently restricted to the leukemic clone and could be detected in neither phytohemagglutinin-stimulated peripheral blood cells or bone marrow in either patient nor in myeloid progenitor cells from the second patient after resolution of the transient myeloproliferative disorder. We conclude that spontaneous remission of congenital
leukemia
is not confined to infants with partial or complete systemic
trisomy 21
but can occur in genetically normal newborns whose leukemic cells contain a third chromosome 21.
...
PMID:Transient myeloproliferative disorder of the Down type in the normal newborn. 214 44
We have reviewed 215 published cases of
leukaemia
and transient
leukaemia
in
Down syndrome
. There is an over-representation of mosaic
trisomy 21
, possibly the result, at least in part, of a survival effect. The most intriguing observation is a bimodal distribution of maternal age, produced largely because cases with true
leukaemia
have a significantly higher maternal age than cases with transient
leukaemia
(33.5 versus 29.5 years). In conjunction with evidence that meiosis I nondisjunction is infrequent in transient
leukaemia
, this suggests different mechanisms for the etiology of
leukaemia
and transient
leukaemia
, and favours a locus predisposing to transient
leukaemia
proximal to the centromere on the long arm of chromosome 21.
...
PMID:Leukaemia and transient leukaemia in Down syndrome. 214 8
The clinical, hematologic, and immunophenotypic features in 20 patients with
Down's syndrome
(DS) and acute leukemia were analyzed. Of the 20 patients, all 14 patients who were 3 years old and less were diagnosed as having acute megakaryoblastic
leukemia
(AMKL) by use of platelet-specific monoclonal antibodies and platelet peroxidase (PPO) reaction in electron microscopy. They were characterized by the presence of bone marrow fibrosis, having a history of myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) and a poor response to chemotherapy. Only one patient has remained in continuous complete remission for more than 1 year. Acute leukemia in six patients who were older than 4 years was classified as common acute lymphoblastic leukemia antigen (CALLA)-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). In one of six patients classified as ALL, the leukemic blasts simultaneously expressed myeloid-associated surface antigens. All six patients achieved a complete remission and have remained in continuous complete remission and have remained in continuous complete remission from 10 to 52 months from the initial diagnosis. Although it has been suggested that the distribution of types of acute leukemia in patients with DS is similar to that in normal children, the present study shows that the distribution of acute leukemia types is quite different from that in patients without
Down's syndrome
.
...
PMID:Down's syndrome and acute leukemia in children: an analysis of phenotype by use of monoclonal antibodies and electron microscopic platelet peroxidase reaction. 182 81
Down syndrome
(DS) individuals are known to be predisposed to develop
leukemia
and their lymphocytes are highly sensitive to the induction of chromosome aberrations by X-rays. A study was conducted to identify the chromosome breakpoints and to evaluate whether site specificity for chromosome breakage and rearrangement may exist which may explain the predisposition phenomenon. DS lymphocytes at the G1 phase of the cell cycle were irradiated with 300, 450, and 600 rad of X-rays. Cells were harvested after 3 days in culture and 193 G-banded karyotypes were analyzed to identify the induced chromosome abnormalities. Out of 273 breakpoints identified, 122 were involved in the formation of stable chromosome rearrangements and 151 in the formation of unstable abnormalities. The Poisson analysis of these breakpoints demonstrated that 16 chromosome bands located in chromosomes 1, 3, 7, 12, 17, 19 and X were preferentially involved in breakage and rearrangement (P less than 0.05). These 16 bands are also found to be locations of "cancer breakpoints," oncogenes, or fragile sites. Many abnormal cells were observed to carry stable chromosome rearrangements only. Therefore, these cells are presumed to be compatible with survival and to be "initiated" in the transformation process. We propose that similar stable and site-specific chromosome rearrangements may exist in proliferating cells in DS individuals after exposure to clastogens and that this abnormality predisposes them to develop
leukemia
.
...
PMID:Distribution of X-ray-induced chromosome breakpoints in Down syndrome lymphocytes. 214 46
Trisomy 21
as an acquired clonal chromosome change has been described in 642 of the 10,625 human neoplasms with chromosome aberrations known from the cytogenetic literature. A total of 590 of the 642 cases (92%) are hematologic disorders and malignant lymphomas. The incidence of
trisomy 21
is similar (4.1%-6.7%) in acute myeloid leukemia (AML), chronic myeloid leukemia, myeloproliferative disorders, myelodysplastic syndromes, chronic lymphoproliferative disorders, and malignant lymphomas; it is substantially higher (14.8%) in acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL). In most cases, the extra chromosome 21 is present together with other numerical and/or structural changes. Acquired
trisomy 21
is the only karyotypic abnormality in only 0.4%.
Trisomy 21
has never been reported as the sole anomaly in a solid tumor. The cytogenetic literature contains information on 62 patients with constitutional
trisomy 21
and a malignant disorder in which the tumor cells have been analyzed by banding techniques. Thirty-four of the 62 patients had AML, 16 had ALL, and 2 had acute undifferentiated leukemia. The 52 leukemic
Down syndrome
(DS) cases account for 1.4% of the total acute leukemias, an overrepresentation that parallels the generally increased risk of
leukemia
development in DS. Sixty-three percent of the ALL patients and 79% of those with AML had additional changes superimposed on constitutional
trisomy 21
. These included several of the characteristic primary
leukemia
-associated aberrations: 5q-, 7q-, +8, and t(8;21) in AML, and t(1;19), t(4;11), 6q-, and 14q + in ALL. Thus, it seems that the pattern of acquired karyotypic changes is similar in patients with DS and in individuals with a normal constitutional karyotype.
...
PMID:Trisomy 21 in neoplastic cells. 214 59
Twenty-eight children with
Down syndrome
(DS) and acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL) were compared to non-DS control leukemics matched by age, white blood cell (WBC) count, and treatment protocol to evaluate presenting manifestations, toxicity, and outcome. The DS children with ALL did not have unique clinical or biologic characteristics to distinguish their disease from that of non-DS patients. Eleven of the DS patients had successfully banded cytogenetic studies of their leukemic cells with the distribution of model chromosome number of 46 (n = 1), 47 (2), 48 (5), and greater than 50 (3). The abnormal leukemic line involved an isochromosome of the long arm of chromosome 9[i(9q)] in 3 cases. Multiagent chemotherapies induced complete remissions in 25 patients (85%), yet overall 5 year event-free survival was only 23 +/- 8% when compared to 64 +/- 9% for control children receiving similar therapies (P less than 0.01). A significant cause of treatment failure was late marrow recurrence in the DS children. Host toxicity was striking in these children. Severe congenital heart disease present in one-third contributed to 2 deaths during antileukemia therapy. Hyperglycemia secondary to diabetogenic agents and repeated bronchitis were common toxicities. Intolerance to the antifolate methotrexate with severe gastrointestinal and skin toxicities was universal. We conclude that the poor prognosis for the child with DS and ALL stems in part from their increased risk of complications and toxicity from intensive modern
leukemia
therapies, specifically antifolates.
...
PMID:Clinical and biological characteristics of acute lymphocytic leukemia in children with Down syndrome. 214 60
The incidence of
Down syndrome
(DS) has been studied intensively for the two periods 1960-1972 and 1980-1985. The age distribution of birth-giving mothers has changed to older age at child birth from the first to the second period. Non-disjunction studies were carried out in 328 families. Most cases were first maternal meiotic division failures (43%). Nearly 12% were paternal meiotic failures, half of them in first meiosis and half in second. Both newborn infants and fetuses were studied. There was an excess of males, especially among newborn DS children, which was related to a failure at paternal first meiosis. A positive sex ratio was found in all newborn infants as well as in free trisomics as in those with de novo translocations. Survival was studied in the cohort of 278 infants born 1980 to 1985. The highest death-rate occurred between 22 days to 1 year (10.4%), 30 times more than the death probability in the Danish population. There was a significant difference between DS cases with congenital heart defect and those without. The probability of infants without heart disease of reaching the first year was 93.1% and the age of 6 years 88.0%. The probability of survival of children with congenital heart defect was 71.7% and 45.2%, respectively, reflecting also the increasing number of infants born prematurely with low birth weight or small-for-date infants. The predominant heart problems were atrio-ventricular canal defects. Infections and malformations added to the high mortality rate. Three cases of
leukemia
were significantly more than expected.
...
PMID:Incidence, survival, and mortality in Down syndrome in Denmark. 214 79
This report describes three cases with
Down's syndrome
. These cases initially had transient abnormal myelopoiesis (TAM), from which they recovered spontaneously. They finally developed into overt acute leukemia characterized by an increase of blasts, hepatosplenomegaly, and elevated lactic dehydrogenase. Of these three cases, one was thought to have ANLL, which broke out 5 months after spontaneous remission. The other two had ALL, each occurring 8 and 9 years later. Chromosomal abnormality, in addition to
trisomy 21
, was detected in blast cells from one of the patients with acute leukemia. All three patients with acute leukemia experienced complete remission. However, two of the three patients relapsed and died. It is noted in the literature that remission is permanent in most cases of TAM, and is rarely terminated by leukemic relapse. In view of our observations, the importance of following up on such patients who evidence apparent remission of their
leukemia
-like disorder is emphasized.
...
PMID:[Transient abnormal myelopoiesis followed by acute leukemia in children with Down syndrome]. 215 Apr 19
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