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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (
leukemia
)
93,477
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A case is reported of a 7 years old boy with
Fanconi's Anemia
(FA). The aplastic anemia has been treated with androgens. Six years after the confirmation of the diagnosis FA a (pre-)
leukemia
occurred. Because of the known complications of cytostatics in FA and the bad prognosis, the
leukemia
has not been treated. The boy died 4 months later. An overview of the literature shows 31 patients with acute non-lymphocytic leukemia in FA, of which the clinical course, chromosomal investigations and therapy are discussed.
...
PMID:[Acute leukemia in Fanconi's anemia. Report of a patient and review of the literature]. 359 Jan 39
Marrow transplantation is effective treatment for a number of hematological diseases in patients under the age of 50 who have an HLA-identical sibling donor. It is successful in the treatment of aplastic anemia with 70-85% long-term survival. It offers 10-30% apparent cures for patients with acute leukemia who have relapsed at least once, and for those with chronic myelocytic leukemia in blast crisis. Although still somewhat controversial, it appears to be the treatment of choice for patients with acute nonlymphoblastic
leukemia
in first chemotherapy induced remission, and for those with chronic myelogenous leukemia in the chronic phase since approximately 50-60% of these patients experience long-term, disease-free survival. Patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia grafted in second or subsequent remission may expect a 30% "cure" of their disease. Marrow grafting is the only effective treatment for many patients with inherited immunologic deficiencies and certain genetic storage diseases. Cures of congenital
Fanconi's anemia
, Blackfan-Diamond anemia, osteopetrosis, paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria and thalassemia major have been achieved. Marrow transplantation is being explored for the therapy of patients with lymphoma, Hodgkin's disease, preleukemia, multiple myeloma, hairy cell leukemia, small cell lung cancer, testicular cancer, ovarian cancer and neuroblastoma. Marrow transplantation has been limited by the fact that many patients do not have HLA-identical siblings and very few have monozygotic twins. More recently, marrow transplants from HLA-nonidentical family members and even from unrelated donors have been successfully explored.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Marrow transplantation: the Seattle experience. 391 47
The association of immunosuppression and head and neck cancer is supported by numerous reports demonstrating impaired cell-mediated immunity, depressed T-cell function, decreased lymphocyte responsiveness, and elevated circulating immune complexes.
Fanconi's anemia
(FA) is a rare autosomal recessive syndrome characterized by progressive pancytopenia, skeletal abnormalities, hyperpigmentation, and other congenital anomalies. Increased chromosomal instability and defective DNA repair have been uniform findings. Several reports suggest associated immune deficiencies. There is an increased frequency of
leukemia
, hepatocellular carcinoma, and squamous cell carcinoma (SCC), including six cases of head and neck SCC. We reported a young girl with FA who developed SCC of the tongue. Initial studies suggest low lymphocyte counts, but normal lymphocyte responsiveness. More precise characterization of the immune system defects in malignancy prone, genetically determined syndromes may provide clues for the diagnosis and treatment of patients with the more usual but more variable risk factors for SCC of the head and neck.
...
PMID:Squamous cell carcinoma in the immunosuppressed patient: Fanconi's anemia. 401 Apr 14
Fanconi's anemia
is a rare genetic disorder associated with congenital deformities, infections, chromosomal abnormalities, and
leukemia
. This brief article describes the case of a 20 year old man affected with the disease, who was given 100 mg daily of oxymetholone to cure leukopenia and thrombocytopenia. 10 months later he died of hepatic failure. Autopsy revealed hepatoma and liver peliosis, a rare condition of unknown etiology characterized by blood-filled cysts in the liver. It is possible that in the case reported here the hepatoma could have been related to the oxymetholone treatment, which conceivably could have initiated hepatic damage.
...
PMID:Hepatoma and peliosis hepatis developing in a patient with Fanconi's anemia. 432 28
Fanconi's anaemia
(FA) is a hereditary disease transmitted in a recessive manner, characterized by congenital malformations and bone marrow aplasia. A high rate of chromosome breakage is observed in mitoses of cultured blood cells, but the caryotypes are normal. Forty-four patients (27 boys and 17 girls) were followed in the same department between 1962 and 1976. Most were treated with androgens, sometimes combined with corticosteroids. Nine patients died of acute granuloblastic
leukaemia
, with more than 25% bone marrow blasts; in three of these, cytogenetic examination showed clonal anomalies. Five patients were in preleukaemic state with non-blastic bone marrow; 4 showed clonal anomalies and 2 of these died of aplasia; the 5th patient had gross liver and spleen enlargement and died of haemorrhage. Among the 30 remaining patients 12 are still alive and 18 died of cerebral haemorrhage (7), hepatic failure (3), cardiac failure (1), pancreatitis (1), septicaemia (2) or graft-versus-host reaction after bone marrow transplantation. One patient transplanted 4 years ago has complete chimerism and is still alive without treatment. The incidence of leukaemic or preleukaemic state in this series was 30%, while no case of
leukaemia
was observed in 200 patients with acquired aplastic anaemia. Neither parents norsibship had
leukaemia
. Androgen treatment apparently did not increase the risk of
leukaemia
which developed within 1 to 13 years (mean = 5 years) of the diagnosis, was preceded by a 2 1/2 year long preleukaemic state with clonal chromosomal anamolies and invariably was of the granulocytic type. None of the patients developed cancer. The median survival in this series was 4 1/2 years.
...
PMID:[Fanconi's anemia. Incidence of its development into leukemia]. 622 98
A possible causal association between chromosome structural change and neoplastic transformation has long been mooted, particularly since chromosomal changes occur frequently in the cells of a variety of malignancies. Only in recent years, however, has the evidence in support of this contention begun to appear convincing, and this has followed from the application of developments in cytogenetic techniques. The advent of methods for revealing specific bands in the human metaphase complement has enabled all the chromosomes and many chromosomal regions to be unambiguously identified, and the recent application of prophase banding methods gives further improvements in resolution. With these techniques, specific constitutional chromosomal deletions or translocations have been discovered in inherited cases of retinoblastoma (del.13q14), Wilms' tumour with aniridia (del.11p13) and renal-cell carcinoma (t(3:8) (p21:q24)), in which each of the chromosomal changes appears to be a dominant factor in inheriting a predisposition to a tissue-specific tumour. A heritability for cancer predisposition is also associated with the inherited chromosomal instability syndromes of Bloom's,
Fanconi's anaemia
and ataxia telangiectasia, although specific chromosomal changes have not been reported to be associated with the neoplasms in such individuals, except in some cases of lymphoma and
leukaemia
in ataxia telangiectasia. Specific chromosomal translocations have, however, been recorded in a variety of malignancies, with a particular involvement of chromosomes 22, 14, 8, 15, 17 and 21. However, although many hundreds of patients with the specific 9/22 rearrangement seen in chronic myeloid leukaemia and also those with the 14/8 rearrangement in Burkitt's, and other, lymphomas have been described, no single case in which these rearrangements were present as constitutional changes has been reported. The possible nature of the changes seen at the cytogenetic level in terms of gene content of the chromosomes involved is discussed.
...
PMID:Cytogenetics of heritability in cancer. 629 35
Fanconi's anemia
is a rare autosomal recessive disorder which manifests itself in early childhood, presenting as pancytopenia, pigmentation changes, skeletal deformities, small statures and chromosomal aberrations. Most patients ultimately die from sepsis as a result of their hematologic abnormalities, however, some patients live long enough to develop malignancies such as
leukemia
, hepatocellular carcinomas and squamous cell carcinoma. The association of
Fanconi's anemia
and squamous cell carcinoma is examined with a report of a patient with
Fanconi's anemia
and squamous cell carcinoma of the pyriform sinus and hypopharynx.
...
PMID:The association of Fanconi's anemia and squamous cell carcinoma. 634 59
Two sisters in whom a diagnosis of
Fanconi's anemia
was made at ages 12 and 18 subsequently developed acute nonlymphocytic leukemia (ANLL). A third sibling had previously died at age 11 of apparent sepsis. Both sisters had cytogenetic studies that showed increased chromosomal breakage and a 46,XX karyotype, but subsequently developed ANLL after, or coincident with, the emergence of monosomy 7. These observations suggest that, in addition to myelodysplastic syndromes and defective neutrophil chemotaxis, monosomy 7 may be associated with the emergence of
leukemia
in this disorder.
...
PMID:Transformation of Fanconi's anemia to acute nonlymphocytic leukemia associated with emergence of monosomy 7. 673 70
Some specific chromosomal abnormalities are associated with certain cancers. The earliest description of such a specific association is the one of the Philadelphia chromosome and myelogenous leukemia (1960). Other congenital karyotype abnormalities are associated with specific cancers. Examples of these are Down's syndrome with
leukemia
and Klinefelter's syndrome with male breast cancer. Genetic diseases of increased chromosome breakage, or of defective chromosome repair, are associated with greatly increased cancer incidence. Three such diseases have been recognized: 1)
Fanconi's anemia
, associated with leukemias and lymphomas, 2) Bloom's syndrome, associated with acute leukemias and lymphosarcoma, and 3) ataxia telangiectasia, associated with Hodgkin's disease,
leukemia
, and lymphosarcomas. Ten percent of individuals with ataxia telangiectasia will develop one of these neoplasms. Individuals with certain of these syndromes display an unusually high radiosensitivity. Radiation therapy for cancers has been fatal in patients who received as low as 3000 rad. This remarkable radiosensitivity has been quantitated in cell cultures from such cases. Evidence suggests that the apparent sensitivity may reflect subnormal ability to repair radiation damage. The rapid proliferation of information in this field stems from the interdigitation of many disciplines and specialties, including cytogenetics, cell biology, molecular biology, epidemiology, radiobiology, and several others. This paper is intended for clinicians; it presents a structured analytic scheme for correlating and classifying this multidisciplinary information as it becomes available.
...
PMID:Chromosomes, cancer and radiosensitivity. 686 20
Fanconi's anaemia
is reported in 2 siblings. The simultaneous onset of pancytopenia after possible exposure to common external agents suggest that both a frail genotype and environmental factors may be etiologically involved in the disorder. One of the children died after having developed a monoblastic
leukaemia
. This patient disclosed very striking cytological abnormalities, including a dyserythropoietic pattern and ropalocytosis. The physiopathology of the latter abnormality, which has hitherto not been noticed in
Fanconi's anaemia
, is uncertain.
...
PMID:Fanconi's anaemia. Simultaneous onset in 2 siblings and unusual cytological findings. 695 56
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