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)

Thirty two patients with refractory or recurrent acute leukemia or blast crisis of chronic myelocytic leukemia were treated with 1-beta-D-arabinofuranosylcytosine (Ara-C), 100 mg/m2 [group I (n = 15)] or 200 mg/m2 [group II (n = 18)], and tetrahydrouridine (THU) 350 mg/m2, given concurrently as a 3 h continuous intravenous infusion at 12 h interval for eight doses. Two of 13 (15.3%) evaluable patients in group I achieved a complete response, both of whom had acute myelocytic leukemia. In group II, seven of 14 evaluable patients (50%) obtained objective responses--six with complete responses (42.8%) and one with partial response (7%). Myelosuppression was seen in all patients with a median duration of 32.5 days (group I) and 36.3 days (group II), respectively. Non-hematologic toxicity consisted of nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, conjunctivitis, skin rash, hepatocellular toxicity, hemorrhage, and renal toxicity. Pharmacokinetic studies revealed, for group I, mean peak plasma Ara-C levels at 3 h (Cp3h) of 1254 ng/ml, area under the curve (AUC) 4651 ng x h/ml, total body clearance (TBC) 32.65 l/h/m2, renal clearance (RC) 7.04 l/h/m2 with a mean of 12.36% of the injected amount of Ara-C excreted unchanged in urine over the first 24 h. The corresponding mean values for group II are Cp3h 3305 ng/ml, AUC 15080 ng x h/ml, TBC 20.48 l/h/m2, RC 7.02 l/h/m2 and 26.23%. Ara-C 200 mg/m2 combined with THU gave serum Ara-C levels and response rates comparable to those achieved with high dose Ara-C (HiDAC) (greater than or equal to 1 g/m2). Central nervous system toxicity associated with HiDAC was not seen. Pharmacokinetics for uracil arabinoside (Ara-U) in patients treated with Ara-C 200 mg/m2 plus THU, were comparable to values seen with Ara-C for Cp3h, AUC and 24 h urine, amounting to 3160 ng/ml, 21717 ng x h/ml and 23.62% whereas TBC was significantly lower (p less than 0.001) for Ara-U than for Ara-C (3.02 versus 20.48 l/h/m2).
Leukemia 1991 Nov
PMID:Therapy of refractory/relapsed acute leukemia with cytosine arabinoside plus tetrahydrouridine (an inhibitor of cytidine deaminase)--a pilot study. 196 Oct 42

The toxicity of the conditioning regimen of high dose busulphan (Bu) (16 mg/kg) and cyclophosphamide (Cy) (120 mg/kg) has been compared to cyclophosphamide (Cy) (120 mg/kg) and fractionated total body irradiation (TBI) 12-14 Gy. Since 1985, 67 patients have received conditioning of Bu and Cy for HLA-identical sibling bone marrow transplants. 166 patients have received Cy and TBI since 1981. Veno-occlusive disease of the liver occurred in 19% in the Bu-Cy group and was fatal in 1/12 cases, but only in 1.3% of Cy-TBI group (P less than 0.0005) and was fatal in 1/2. 30% of evaluable patients developed haemorrhagic cystitis in the Bu-Cy group and 14% in the Cy-TBI group (P = 0.008). A multiple logistic regression analysis demonstrated the preparative regimen as the only significant risk factor for the development of veno-occlusive disease or haemorrhagic cystitis. Interstitial pneumonia was diagnosed in 12/56 evaluable patients (21%) in the Bu-Cy group and was fatal in 75%. It occurred in 39/137 evaluable patients (28%) in the Cy-TBI group with a 54% case mortality. Within the Bu-Cy group, the incidence of veno-occlusive disease and haemorrhagic cystitis was similar in chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML) and acute leukaemia (AL) groups, but there was a significant (P = 0.003) incidence of interstitial pneumonia in the CML group 36% as compared to 7% in the AL group. Preparative regimen and age were significant risk factors in the development of interstitial pneumonia in patients with CML. A flexural and acral rash ranging from pigmentation to severe erosion was noted in the Bu-Cy group, but not in the Cy-TBI group. Thus, veno-occlusive disease, haemorrhagic cystitis and cutaneous changes were more common in patients receiving Bu-Cy. Interstitial pneumonia was more common in patients receiving Bu-Cy for CML than for AL.
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PMID:The toxicity of busulphan and cyclophosphamide as the preparative regimen for bone marrow transplantation. 202 79

In a prospective randomized study the efficacy of fluconazole (50 mg in one single daily dose) was compared with oral amphotericin B in suspension and tablets (each 200 mg four times daily) for prevention of colonization and subsequent infection by yeasts in 50 patients undergoing remission induction treatment for acute leukaemia. All patients received ciprofloxacin for prevention of bacterial infections. Fluconazole was as effective as amphotericin B in preventing severe local and disseminated fungal disease (one documented and one highly suspected infection in each group of patients). Fluconazole effectively prevented yeast colonization of the oropharynx but was less effective than amphotericin B in preventing colonization of the lower alimentary tract. Fifty-two percent of patients receiving fluconazole had persistent positive stool cultures as compared to 4% in the amphotericin B group (P less than 0.01). Fluconazole was better tolerated than amphotericin B. One patient developed an extended rash leading to the termination of fluconazole.
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PMID:A randomized study to compare oral fluconazole to amphotericin B in the prevention of fungal infections in patients with acute leukaemia. 203 41

To examine whether the live varicella vaccine virus is attenuated, we analyzed varicella vaccine-induced contact cases of clinical chickenpox in healthy siblings of immunized children with leukemia. A rash developed approximately 1 month later in 156 children with leukemia who had been vaccinated. Vaccine-type virus was isolated from 25 of these children. Of 88 known susceptible healthy siblings who were exposed to a vaccine with a rash and from whom follow-up information was available, there was evidence of infection in 15 (17%). Of 15 siblings with seroconversion, 11 (73%) also acquired a mild rash with an average of 38 lesions and no accompanying systemic symptoms. Vaccine-type virus was isolated from four of the contact siblings. Tertiary transmission was documented once. Contact siblings with seroconversion were protected during future household exposure to chickenpox, which occurred in four instances. There was a direct relationship between transmission from vaccinees to varicella-susceptible close contacts and the presence and number of skin lesions in children with leukemia after vaccination. We conclude that in the transmission of varicella, the virus probably originates from skin lesions of infected persons and reaches the respiratory tract of those with secondary cases by the airborne route. On the basis of the mildness of the contact illness, the higher-than-normal rate of subclinical primary infection with varicella-zoster virus in contacts, and the lower-than-normal rate of spread of the vaccine virus to susceptible children in the household, we further conclude that the vaccine virus is attenuated. There was no evidence of reversion of the vaccine virus to virulence.
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PMID:Live attenuated varicella vaccine: evidence that the virus is attenuated and the importance of skin lesions in transmission of varicella-zoster virus. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Varicella Vaccine Collaborative Study Group. 215 90

The principal toxicity of standard induction regimens for acute non-lymphocytic leukemia (ANLL) [including cytarabine (ARA-C) 100 mg/m2 for 7 days plus an anthracycline] is myelotoxicity, leading to death in at least 25% of cases during induction in non-selected patients. The complete remission rate is less than 35% in patients over 65 years of age, due in part to an age-related increase of myelotoxicity. The other important adverse effect of standard-dose cytarabine is gastrointestinal toxicity, especially oral mucositis, diarrhoea, intestinal ulceration, ileus and subsequent Gram-negative septicaemia. Idiosyncratic reactions like exanthema, fever and elevation of hepatic enzymes are relatively frequent, but do not represent therapeutic problems. Intermittent high-dose cytarabine (3 g/m2 in 8 to 12 doses) is extremely myelosuppressive. Similarly, the gastrointestinal toxicity is formidable and dose-limiting. Severe, and sometimes irreversible, cerebellar/cerebral toxicity in 5 to 15% of courses of treatment limits the peak dose of cytarabine. The pathogenesis, prophylactic and therapeutic measures are unknown. These major toxicities are age-related and prohibitive to the use of high-dose cytarabine therapy in patients older than 55 to 60 years. Subacute noncardiogenic pulmonary oedema occurs in some patients, with an incidence of about 20%, and seems to have an intriguing coincidence with precedent streptococcal septicaemia; high-dose systemic steroids may be beneficial. Corneal toxicity is very frequent in high-dose cytarabine therapy but is always reversible. It is largely preventable with prophylactic steroid or 2-deoxycytidine eyedrops. Fever, exanthema and hepatic toxicity have an incidence similar to that in standard dosage. The maximum tolerable cumulated dose of cytarabine is significantly lower when the agent is administered as a continuous infusion, due to myelosuppression and gastrointestinal toxicity. Conversely, continuous infusion may be less neurotoxic. The antileukaemic effect of continuous infusion high-dose cytarabine is less well established. The only significant toxicity of low-dose cytarabine is myelosuppression. Given the generally poor condition of leukaemia patients, low-dose cytarabine therapy is well tolerated, although occasional cases of diarrhoea, reversible cerebellar symptoms, peritoneal and pericardial reactions, and ocular toxicity have been reported. Continuous infusion may be more toxic than the usual intermittent dosage. It is concluded that the toxicity of the standard induction regimen for ANLL is acceptable in patients younger than 60 to 65 years with no concurrent disease. Low dose cytarabine is tolerable for virtually all ANLL patients, but the overall therapeutic efficacy still needs to be defined and compared to standard therapy in the relevant age groups.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:The toxicity of cytarabine. 217 34

Fourteen patients with T-cell-derived leukemia and lymphoma underwent high-dose chemoradiotherapy and anti-T-cell monoclonal antibody-treated autologous bone marrow transplantation (ABMT). All patients were either in sensitive relapse or had adverse prognostic features, and five patients had a history of bone marrow involvement with disease. Patients received a median of 2 (1 to 3) prior chemotherapy regimens; 10 patients received local radiotherapy. After high-dose ablative therapy, greater than 500/mm3 granulocytes and greater than 20,000 untransfused platelets/mm3 were noted at a median of 23 (13 to 48) and 26 (15 to 43) days post-ABMT, respectively. Natural killer (NK) cells, T cells (predominantly T8+), and monocytes were noted within the first 1 to 2 months post-AMBT, as seen in other series. Disease-free survival was a median of 10.1 months, 5.9 months for patients with T acute lymphoblastic leukemia or lymphoblastic lymphoma and 25.6 months for patients with T non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL). Toxicities were common and severe. Thirty-six percent of patients developed bacteremias early post-BMT. Late complications included a skin rash consistent with graft versus host disease; infections with Herpes zoster, hepatitis, and Pneumocystis carinii; and the development of Epstein-Barr virus associated lymphoproliferative syndrome. Our findings suggest that patients who have undergone T-depleted ABMT have a profound immunodeficiency not reflected in the phenotypic reconstitution of the T and NK cells. Characterization of the functional deficiency may facilitate the development of methods to reduce the long-term toxicity of AMBT in these patients.
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PMID:T-cell-depleted autologous bone marrow transplantation therapy: analysis of immune deficiency and late complications. 219 91

Tiazofurin, an investigational antimetabolite, is undergoing clinical evaluation in leukemia. We analyzed the data base of 198 patients entered in Phase I trials to characterize the incidence and severity of toxicities associated with tiazofurin according to dose and schedule. Severe myelosuppression occurred infrequently, and was not dose-dependent. A five day bolus schedule had a higher incidence of severe or life-threatening neutropenia than other schedules. Tiazofurin produced lymphopenia which was not dose-dependent in the range of 23-36% decrease from baseline, and the effect on lymphocyte count was generally greater than the decline in neutrophil count. Non-hematologic toxicity of a moderate or worse severity (greater than or equal to grade 2) included nausea and vomiting (18% of all courses), serum transaminase elevations (SGOT, 16%; SGPT, 9%), rash (9%), stomatitis (3%), conjunctivitis (3%), headache (10%), other signs of central nervous system toxicity (8%), and cardiac toxicity, primarily pleuropericarditis (4%). Dose-related cutaneous toxicity, headache, and nausea and vomiting were evident in the five day bolus schedule, and myalgia was more frequently reported at higher doses on the single dose schedule. The five day continuous infusion (CI) schedule had a higher incidence of neurotoxicity, cardiac toxicity, SGPT elevations and ocular toxicity than the daily for five days bolus schedule, but none of these differences attained statistical significance. Although the peak plasma concentrations of tiazofurin achieved with the five day bolus schedule were 3-fold higher than the steady-state plasma levels seen with an equal dose given by CI, the area under the concentration-time curve (AUC) was approximately 1.6-fold higher with CI. These observations suggest that both high peak plasma concentrations (above 400 microM) and prolonged exposure to plasma levels exceeding 50 microM may result in a higher incidence of serious non-hematologic toxicity.
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PMID:Clinical toxicity associated with tiazofurin. 220 Jul 59

We have evaluated the use of high-dose intravenous ciprofloxacin as monotherapy in the empirical therapy of febrile episodes in neutropenic patients during the course of a randomized trial comparing ciprofloxacin with a standard combination regimen. Sixty-four episodes of fever were studied in a high risk population of 42 patients mostly undergoing intensive chemotherapy for leukaemia. Ciprofloxacin achieved clinical responses as follows: completely successful in 39%, partially successful in 20%, and unsuccessful in 41%. Infections were microbiologically documented in 37 (58%), with Gram-positive bacteria (of which 37% were coagulase negative staphylococci and 34% were streptococci) accounting for 81% of all organisms cultured. Responses in documented infections were as follows; completely successful in 32%, partially successful in 27%, and unsuccessful in 41%. One infection-related death occurred 30 h after starting ciprofloxacin, and a further three patients died before the resolution of neutropenia. The early death was caused by fulminant infection with a ciprofloxacin-resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa. No other ciprofloxacin resistance was seen amongst eight Gram-negative isolates. There was no evidence of emerging ciprofloxacin resistance during the course of the study. Ciprofloxacin was associated with a low incidence of adverse events with skin rash (five cases) and nausea (one case) being reported as possibly or probably related to ciprofloxacin. We conclude that high-dose intravenous ciprofloxacin may be safely employed as monotherapy in the empirical treatment of febrile episodes in neutropenic patients. It has the additional advantages of twice daily administration, the availability of intravenous and oral presentations, and absence of cross-allergy in beta-lactam antibiotic hypersensitive patients.
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PMID:High dose intravenous ciprofloxacin in febrile neutropenic patients. 229 37

An acute myelomonocytic leukemia presenting transient skin rash during preleukemic phase was described. Following four years of unexplained leukopenia, a generalized exanthema developed and subsequently regressed spontaneously. The skin biopsy and immunohistochemistry revealed monocytic infiltration into the dermis. Twenty-eight months later, the patient became leukemic and died. The skin lesions, however, did not occur after leukemic transformation. Probably transient monocytic skin infiltrate was a symptom of preleukemia, a stem cell neoplasm manifested by functionally abnormal maturation.
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PMID:[Transient monocytic skin infiltrate during preleukemic phase of acute myelomonocytic leukemia]. 236 46

Chronic adult T-cell leukemia with surface phenotype CD 4+5+8-, Leu 7+ at acute crisis was presented. A 43-year-old female visited our hospital complaining of generalized lymphadenopathy and skin rash in December, 1973. Peripheral blood picture and histological findings of skin led to the diagnosis of malignant lymphoma (leukemic type). Intermittent chemotherapy kept white blood cell count less than 25,000/microliters for more than 9 years. In January, 1983, abnormal lymphocytes began to increase and reached 100,000/microliters or over in a few months. Surface marker study showed their phenotype as CD 4+5+8-, Leu 7+ and anti-ATLA antibody was positive in the patient, her son and her daughter. Intensive chemotherapy was ineffective and she died in August, 1983. Histological diagnosis of lymph-nodes on autopsy was malignant lymphoma (diffuse, small cell type). This case is considered unusual in both clinical course and surface phenotype of its leukemic cells.
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PMID:[Adult T-cell leukemia (chronic type) with unusual surface phenotype CD 4+5+8-, Leu 7+ at acute crisis]. 247 64


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