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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (leukemia)
93,477 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Patients in first remission of acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) considered to be at high risk of relapse were offered autologous bone marrow transplantation (ABMT) using purged marrow as a therapeutic alternative to cranial irradiation and maintenance chemotherapy. Twenty-seven bone marrows taken in remission, were purged using monoclonal antibodies (anti CD7 for T lineage and anti CD10 and/or anti CD19 for B lineage leukaemias) plus rabbit complement. Retrospective analysis of 19 purged marrows by immunophenotyping or immunoglobulin gene rearrangement studies demonstrated no evidence of disease. Engraftment was seen in 26 of the patients. No correlation was found between the numbers of infused nucleated cells or colony forming units-granulocyte-macrophage (CFU-GM) and subsequent engraftment kinetics. The actuarial disease-free survival (DFS) is 32% at 7 years (median follow-up 3.4 years). There were two transplant related deaths (actuarial risk 8%); the main cause of treatment failure has been disease recurrence with an overall actuarial risk of 67%; 76% for T-ALL (five of nine), 62% for common ALL (five of 10), two of five pre B and none of three patients with B-ALL. In these 27 high risk patients in vitro purging of remission marrow as part of ABMT appears not to improve patient outcome, although confirmation of this would require a randomized trial.
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PMID:Failure of purged autologous bone marrow transplantation in high risk acute lymphoblastic leukaemia in first complete remission. 171 92

Exons 5 to 8 of the p53 gene were examined for mutations in 60 patients with B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), including 50 cases of precursor-B-cell ALL, nine cases of Burkitt (L3) ALL and one case of atypical ALL with surface immunoglobulins and t(8:14) translocation but L2 morphology. Karyotype was available in all patients. DNA was analyzed by polymerase chain reaction, single strand conformation polymorphism analysis, and nucleotide sequencing. Three patients showed point mutations in exons 7 or 8, including two of the nine patients with Burkitt ALL and one of the 50 patients with precursor-B-cell ALL. These findings suggest that p53 gene mutations are rare in precursor-B-cell ALL but may be more frequent in Burkitt ALL. In the three patients with p53 mutations, however, the relevance of those mutations to the development or progression of leukemia remained uncertain.
Leukemia 1992 Jan
PMID:Mutations of the p53 gene in B-cell lymphoblastic acute leukemia: a report on 60 cases. 173 12

About 70% of children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia may be cured by conventional chemotherapy. The prognosis is considerably worse in infant leukemia with a translocation t(4;11). We report an infant with a diagnosis of cytochemically undifferentiated acute hybrid leukemia (pre pre B-ALL coexpressing one myelomonocytic marker) and t(4;11). Initial clinical presentation and the course of the disease were typical for t(4;11) acute leukemia. After an early hematologic relapse intensive chemotherapy resulted only in a second partial remission 7 months after initial diagnosis. Subsequent bone marrow transplantation with 16 mg/kg busulfan and 200 mg/kg cyclophosphamide followed by the infusion of autologous purged bone marrow resulted in a continuous second remission which has lasted 46 months so far.
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PMID:Unusually long survival after autografting in second partial remission of translocation t(4;11) acute infant leukemia. 175 29

A 17-month-old child with acute biphenotypic (pre B-ALL/myelomonocytic) leukemia is reported. Extensive cytogenetic analysis performed at various stages of the disease revealed a clonal evolution at the time of initial diagnosis with two types of abnormal clones, one with trisomy 22 and two other related clones with trisomy 22 plus partial trisomy of the long arm of chromosome 1 associated with the telomeric segment of either chromosome 20q or 21p. At the time of relapse the only abnormal clone involved trisomy 22 and partial trisomy of 1q, but this time in association with the telomeric segment of 14p. The unique feature of these translocations is discussed and the possibility of the correlation between the different chromosomal abnormalities and the expression of biphenotypic markers is raised.
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PMID:"Jumping translocation" in a 17-month-old child with mixed-lineage leukemia. 175 67

The glycosphingolipids GD3, GM3, and alpha 2, 3-sialosylparagloboside (SPG) are major gangliosides of lymphoid leukemia cells. The reactivity of two monoclonal anti-ganglioside antibodies, an anti-GD3 (R24) and an antibody cross-reactive to GM3 and SPG (M2590), to blasts of patients with T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and B-cell precursor ALL (pre-B-ALL), were compared using indirect immunofluorescence and flow cytometry. Results from 23 patients with T-ALL and eight with pre-B-ALL yielded four subclasses of T-ALL and two subclasses of pre-B-ALL. Blasts from most of the patients with T-ALL were R24+M2590- whereas most of the patients with pre-B-ALL were R24-M2590-. Seven of 23 patients with T-ALL had ganglioside immunophenotypes similar to that of pre-B-ALL, i.e. R24-M2590- or R24-M2590+. These subclasses could not be further characterized by additional cell surface immunophenotypic markers or by gene (immunoglobulin and T-cell receptor) rearrangement analysis. The ratio R24/M2590 was less than 1.0 in all patients with pre-B-ALL, and was greater than 1.0 in all patients with T-ALL who were R24 positive, but was not useful in characterizing the double negative T-ALL subclass. To assess whether cryptogenicity of gangliosides due to cell surface protein could account for the low binding of either R24 or M2590, blasts were treated with trypsin before antibody analysis. Whereas the binding of R24 was unchanged after trypsin treatment, binding of M2590 was increased in a number of samples, particularly in those samples which were originally M2590-positive. The results show that comparative staining of T-ALL and pre-B-ALL cells with both anti-GD3 and anti-GM3/SPG antibodies results in a further subclassification of ALL and provides a quantitative assessment of the expression of tumor-associated gangliosides on the blasts of this disease.
Leukemia 1991 Dec
PMID:Immunoreactivity of leukemic lymphoblasts of T-cell and B-cell precursor origin with monoclonal anti-GD3 and anti-GM3 antibodies. 177 57

The results of a comprehensive study on 1,000 patients who had been cytogenetically diagnosed to have leukemia in our department since 1962 are reported, and the value of cytogenetic diagnosis for leukemia emphasized. In our series, we detected patients with FAB L1 and L2 showing an abnormality rate of 60 and 66%, respectively. They included 20% with Ph1 positive ALL. In FAB L3, we found t(8;14) in 5 of the 6 patients. The FAB M1 group showed the lowest abnormality rate (50%). Forty percent of the M2 patients exhibited t(8;21), 60% of which also showed loss of sex chromosome of either X or Y. Seventy-eight percent of the M3 patients presented t(15;17) (two patients with no detectable t(15;17) showed rearrangements of retinoic acid receptor alpha gene). Inversion of chromosome 16 was found in 10% of the patients with FAB M4. Patients with M6 exhibited relatively complex chromosomes aberrations. RAEB patients showed more frequent and complex type of chromosome aberrations than PARA patients. Cytogenetic and molecular-biological analyses provided valuable information on the pathophysiology of leukemia and suggested the possible localization of novel oncogene(s).
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PMID:[The significance of cytogenetic analysis in the diagnosis of leukemia]. 177 62

Seven hundred and forty-four newly diagnosed patients with acute leukemias between 1978 and 1990 were classified on the basis of immunological phenotypes. The majority of the patients were enrolled in the Tokyo Children's Cancer Study Group (TCCSG) studies. The incidence of subclassification of acute leukemias in this study was as follows: 522 patients with ALL (70%), 139 patients with ANLL (18%), 29 patients with biphenotypic leukemia, 8 patients with Ph1-positive acute leukemia (Ph1-AL), and 45 patients with infant leukemia. ALLs were classified into common ALL (cALL, 77%), T-ALL (15%), B-ALL (4%), and unclassified ALL (3%). The incidence of ALL subtypes in this study reflected those of TCCSG. Biphenotypic leukemias were categorized into 4 groups as follows; 1) cALL with positive myelomonocytic antigen(s) (N = 11), 2) unclassified ALL with positive myelomonocytic antigen(s) (N = 5), 3) ANLL with positive B-lymphoid antigen(s) (N = 4), and 4) acute leukemia with positive T-lymphoid and myeloid antigen(s). Infant leukemias were classified into ALL type (N = 27) and ANLL type (N = 18). In this present study, clinical features and immunological phenotypes of the acute leukemias with a poor prognosis, i.e. biphenotypic leukemia, Ph1-AL, and infant leukemia are analyzed and discussed.
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PMID:Immunological classification of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia. 179 11

In this prospective study we investigated the frequency of CD10+, TdT+ and CD10+TdT+ mononuclear cells in the bone marrow (BM) and peripheral blood (PB) before and after autologous bone marrow transplantation (ABMT). 49 patients treated for acute lymphoblastic or myeloblastic leukaemia, malignant lymphoma or multiple myeloma were included. A significant increase in CD10+ cells occurred in BM in both children and adults after ABMT. In children, we also found a significant increase in CD10+ cells in PB. In individual patients remaining in remission, up to 34% CD10+ cells having a normal Ig kappa/lambda light chain ratio were recorded after ABMT. In children, the percentage of TdT+ and CD10+ TdT+ cells increased significantly in BM. In most cases the CD10/TdT-ratio was greater than 1.0, but during early regeneration after ABMT this ratio was less than 1.0 in several patients remaining in complete remission. In patients remaining in remission, CD10+TdT+ cells were detected in the blood in only 2 out of 140 samples tested, and the proportion of these cells never exceeded 0.03%. We conclude that quantitation of CD10+TdT+ cells in peripheral blood is helpful in the evaluation of complete remission in patients treated for pre-B-ALL.
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PMID:Regeneration of CALLA (CD10+), TdT+ and double-positive cells in the bone marrow and blood after autologous bone marrow transplantation. 182 71

Leukemia karyotypes were analyzed in 792 children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and 217 patients with acute myelocytic leukemia (AML). These patients were registered and uniformly treated in German multicentre trials from 1984-01-01 to 1989-12-31. In distinct leukemia subgroups specific chromosome abnormalities were found: Numerical aberrations such as hyperdiploidy over 50 chromosomes in c-ALL or structural aberrations (translocations) such as t(8;14) in B-ALL, t(11;14) in T-ALL, t(4;11) in ppB-ALL, t(1;19) in pB-ALL, t(15;17) in AML-M3, t(8;21) in AML-M2. Prognostic significance of the leukemia karyotype probably can be changed by intensive cytotoxic chemotherapy. Unfavorable prognosis, however, still persists in t(9;22) and t(4;11); "favorable" prognosis can be seen in t(8;21) and t(15;17). Inherited or induced chromosome instability is discussed as a possible predisposing factor for the origin of chromosome aberrations.
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PMID:[Chromosome aberrations in acute leukemia in childhood: analysis of 1009 patients]. 183 89

A female patient with precursor B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (precursor B-ALL) was analyzed cytogenetically. Karyotyping of the leukemic cells showed a Philadelphia chromosome (Ph1), and also showed a translocation between 2p13 and 14q32, which is thought to be specific for children with B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia. DNA analysis with both conventional and pulsed-field gel electrophoresis revealed the rearrangement of the c-abl gene, the BCR gene outside the 5.8 kb breakpoint cluster region (bcr or M-BCR), and the comigration of an abnormal Not I pHabl 5' and 3'-bcr fragment, indicating the presence of BCR/c-abl recombination. The JH gene was rearranged, but the JK gene showed a germline configuration, as with previously reported cases with a t(2;14). This case is the first report of a patient with Ph1-positive precursor B-ALL, in whom a specific translocation t(2;14)(p13;q32) is found simultaneously.
Leukemia 1991 Aug
PMID:Philadelphia chromosome positive precursor B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia with a translocation t(2;14)(p13;q32). 188 25


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