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)

One hundred thirty-eight patients with hairy cell leukemia were randomized to receive either a dose of 2.0 megaunits (MU)/m2 or a 10-fold lower dose of 0.2 MU/m2 of a highly purified natural alpha-interferon, administered daily for 28 days followed by a three times a week schedule. Ninety-seven of these patients had previously undergone splenectomy, but otherwise none of the patients had received prior therapy for their leukemia. The two doses were comparable in their effect on improving the neutrophil and platelet count, whereas the higher dose had a greater beneficial effect on the hemoglobin level and a greater antileukemic effect on the marrow. Acute toxicity in the form of a flu-like syndrome, neurologic side effects, neutropenia, and the need for platelet transfusions was observed less frequently in the low-dose group, as was the chronic fatigue syndrome. No neutralizing antibody activity was seen in the sera from 61 patients examined. Because of its beneficial effect on the neutrophil and platelet count and a lower degree of toxicity (ie, a superior therapeutic/toxicity ratio), the low dose is recommended as initial therapy in patients with hairy cell leukemia. This therapy may be followed by dose escalation once clinical improvement is observed.
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PMID:A randomized comparison of two doses of human lymphoblastoid interferon-alpha in hairy cell leukemia. Wellcome HCL Study Group. 174 80

Ten European wildcats (Felis silvestris) were examined at necropsy and an additional 23 were examined clinically for evidence of viral diseases in Scotland. Two plasma samples taken from live free-living wildcats showed positive ELISA reactions to feline leukemia antigen. A feline leukemia virus of subgroup A was isolated from one of these samples, taken from a wildcat in north-western Scotland. No antibodies to feline coronavirus or feline immunodeficiency virus were detected in any sample. Three of the live wildcats and one of the dead had chronic mucopurulent rhinotracheitis suggestive of "cat flu." One other dead wildcat had diffuse enlargement of anterior lymph nodes. The findings indicated that feline leukemia virus infection can occur in free-living Felis silvestris. It is possible that the disease exists as a sustained infection in some wildcat populations, although the close interaction between wildcat and the domestic cat means that the latter could act as a continual source of infection.
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PMID:Some viral and protozool diseases in the European wildcat (Felis silvestris). 175 37

The effect of recombinant interferon alfa-2b on platelet count, thrombocytosis-associated symptoms and marrow fibrosis was studied in 18 patients with myeloproliferative diseases and associated thrombocytosis (nine with essential thrombocythaemia, three with polycythaemia vera, three with myelofibrosis and three with chronic myelogenous leukaemia). A reduction of the platelet count below 600 x 10(9)/L was achieved in 94%, and below 400 x 10(9)/L in 77% of the patients within 8 to 330 days of treatment. The selective thrombocytosis-reducing effect of alpha interferon was maintained for long periods of time in most patients without serious side effects. Thrombocytosis-associated symptoms were relieved once the number of platelets was reduced to near normal levels. Marrow reticulin content was found to be reduced after treatment in two of the seven patients studied. Side effects of alpha interferon were flu-like symptoms, which usually subsided within 7 days of treatment.
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PMID:alpha Interferon treatment of essential thrombocythaemia and other myeloproliferative disorders with excessive thrombocytosis. 179 84

Fifty-four patients with Ph1-positive chronic myelogenous leukaemia (CML) (48 with chronic-phase and six acute-phase disease) were treated with interferon alfa-2b subcutaneously (s.c.). The starting dose was 4 million units (MU)/m2 body surface area daily. It was reduced in parallel with serially determined leucocyte counts, and minimal effective doses were given as maintenance after achieving remission. Haematological remissions were induced in 22 of the 48 patients (46%) with chronic-phase disease. Thirteen patients (27%) revealed partial haematological remission and another 13 no response to treatment. No complete remission could be induced, although minor or partial cytogenetic responses were seen in 16 patients (33%). Moreover, a bcr-abl reduction was detected on Southern blot analysis in two patients. In chronic-phase disease, results of treatment were influenced by elapsed time after diagnosis, extent of previous treatment and interferon dosage. No beneficial effects of interferon were detected in the six patients with acute-phase disease. Principal acute side effects were fever and flu-like symptoms at the beginning of the therapy, which usually subsided within 3-7 days. Chronic side effects, especially weakness and neuropathy, were less frequent but more severe and necessitated discontinuation of treatment in 10 patients. In summary, interferon alfa-2b seems to be an effective treatment in early chronic-phase CML. Long-term effects on the course of the disease, however, must be determined.
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PMID:Interferon alfa-2b in acute- and chronic-phase chronic myelogenous leukaemia: initial response and long-term results in 54 patients. 179 85

The cytosine analogue of neplanocin A, cyclopentenylcytosine (CPE-C, 3), has significant antitumor and antiviral activity commensurate with the drug's ability to produce a significant depletion of cytidine triphosphate (CTP) levels that result from the potent inhibition of cytidine triphosphate synthetase. Another important antitumor agent, previously identified as a potent inhibitor of the same enzyme, is 3-deazauridine (2). The synthesis of the cyclopentenyl nucleosides 3-deaza-CPE-C (5) and 3-deaza-CPE-U (6) was undertaken in order to investigate the effects of a modified 3-deaza pyrimidine aglycon moiety on the biological activity of the parent CPE-C. These compounds were synthesized via an SN2 displacement reaction on cyclopenten-1-ol methanesulfonate (10) by the sodium salt of the corresponding aglycon. In each case, separation and characterization of the corresponding N- and O-alkylated products was necessary before final removal of the blocking groups. The target compounds were devoid of in vitro antiviral activity against the HSV-1 and human influenza viruses. Although 3-deaza-CPE-C was nontoxic to L1210 cells in culture, 3-deaza-CPE-U displayed significant cytotoxicity against murine L1210 leukemia in vitro.
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PMID:Synthesis of two cyclopentenyl-3-deazapyrimidine carbocyclic nucleosides related to cytidine and uridine. 199 19

At the height of the United Kingdom influenza A epidemic in December 1989, three children receiving treatment for non-T cell acute leukaemia developed pancytopenia with concomitant influenza A infection. Bone marrow histology showed prominent marrow erythrophagocytosis by morphologically mature histiocytes, consistent with the picture of virus associated haemophagocytic syndrome (VAHS). In two cases there was an initial spontaneous recovery, though recurrence of VAHS developed in one case in association with a different viral infection (cytomegalovirus) following autologous bone marrow transplantation. The third child died from cardiorespiratory failure secondary to infection with influenza A and Klebsiella pneumoniae sepsis. It is suggested that influenza A should be added to the list of infective causative agents.
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PMID:Influenza A and the virus associated haemophagocytic syndrome: cluster of three cases in children with acute leukaemia. 203 Jan 47

Neonatal exposure to Gross murine leukemia virus results in a profound inhibition of the virus-specific T and B cell responses of adult animals. Animals exposed to virus as neonates exhibit a marked depression in virus-specific T cell function as measured by the virtual absence of in vivo delayed type hypersensitivity responses and in vitro proliferative responses to virally infected stimulator cells. Further, serum obtained from neonatally treated mice failed to either immunoprecipitate viral proteins or neutralize virus in an in vitro plaque assay, suggesting the concurrent induction of a state of B cell hyporesponsiveness. The specificity of this effect at the levels of both T and B cells was demonstrated by the ability of neonatally treated mice to respond normally after adult challenge with either irrelevant reovirus or influenza virus. The replication of Gross virus within both stromal and lymphocytic compartments of the neonatal thymus suggests that thymic education plays a key role in the induction of immunologic nonresponsiveness to viruses.
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PMID:Neonatal exposure to thymotropic gross murine leukemia virus induces virus-specific immunologic nonresponsiveness. 214 51

Phylogenetic trees for the human T-cell leukemia virus type I (HTLV-I) and its related viruses were constructed by use of nucleotide sequences of the long terminal repeat (LTR) and the tax gene. The trees showed that the viruses diverged from a common ancestral virus and that they are classified into two groups whose hosts are either primates or bovines. However, the topology of the trees for the viruses differed from that for the hosts. This suggests that HTLV-I and HTLV-I-related viruses evolved independently of host-species divergence and that interspecies transmission between human and monkeys occurred in the past. The nucleotide diversity of the tax genes of HTLV-I was estimated to be 0.025. This value is more than 10 times larger than that of human globin genes, but it is about 20 times smaller than that of hemagglutinin genes of influenza A viruses. Thus, the genetic variability of the HTLV-I genes seems to be higher than that of nuclear genes but much lower than the genes of typical RNA viruses. Furthermore, we examined functional constraints on the overlapping region of the rex and tax genes. The results obtained imply that for the overlapping region, the tax gene has much stronger constraints against amino acid changes than the rex gene.
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PMID:Molecular evolution of human T-cell leukemia virus. 217 98

The common problem for defined purified antigens or antigen determinants has been to make them immunogenic regardless of whether they are produced conventionally, produced as cloned genetechnology products or chemically synthesized. The first problem is to get the protective antigen into a submicroscopic particle where the antigen is presented in several copies, i.e. as a multimer. For some antigens it seems also necessary to enhance the immunogenicity with an adjuvant. The immunostimulating complex (iscom) was created to fulfil these criteria by assembling antigens in a multimeric form on a matrix with built-in adjuvant to form a particle. The components are held together by hydrophobic interactions. The iscom has turned out to be highly immunogenic, inducing high antibody mediated and cell-mediated immunity including cytotoxic T cell response to influenza virus. In a mouse model iscoms containing influenza virus envelope proteins induced protective immunity by one intranasal administration. Protective immunity was also induced to a retrovirus--feline leukemia virus. In a monkey model system iscoms containing gp360 of Epstein-Barr virus induced protection to induction of tumours. Iscoms have also been used as carriers for small molecules such as oligopeptides, which combination appeared to be highly immunogenic.
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PMID:Iscoms. 220 74

To make purified antigens highly immunogenic, they have to be presented in several copies in the form of a microscopic or submicroscopic particle. This is the case, regardless of whether the antigens are obtained by isolation from conventional microorganisms, or from gene-manipulated cells, or synthesized. In the iscom, the antigens are attached as multimers to a 40-nm cage-like particle with a built-in adjuvant. The antigens in iscoms are rapidly transported from the injection site to the draining lymphatic organ. Iscom-borne antigens induced a 10-fold higher antibody response than the same amount of antigen in micelle form. One intranasal immunization with influenza virus iscoms induced protection to intranasal challenge infection in mice. Besides a strong antibody response in all Ig classes and isotypes, cytotoxic T cells were induced. With iscoms containing gp160 of HIV-1, cytotoxic T cells (CD8+ CD4-) were induced under restriction of class I MHC antigen. Iscoms containing the fusion protein of measles virus induced T cell clones in mice whereof one, after adoptive transfer, protected mice against intracerebral challenge infection. Protective immunity against Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-induced tumor formation by iscoms containing gp350 of EBV has been elicited in cotton-top Tamerin monkeys. Protective immunity has also been induced against several virus infections including feline leukemia virus and against parasites, i.e., Trypanosoma cruzi, in mice.
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PMID:The iscom: an immunostimulating system. 228 59


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