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)

The p53 gene was examined in primary lymphoblasts of 25 pediatric patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia by the RNase protection assay and by single strand conformation polymorphism analysis in 23 of 25 cases. p53 mutations were found to occur, but at a low frequency (4 of 25). While all four mutations were identified by single strand conformation polymorphism, the comparative sensitivity of RNase protection was 50% (2 of 4). Heterozygosity was retained at mutated codons in 3 of 4 cases. One pedigree was consistent with the Li-Fraumeni syndrome, and bone marrow from both diagnosis and remission indicated a germline G to T transversion at codon 272 (valine to leucine). Although members of another family were affected with leukemia, a 2-bp deletion in exon 6 was nonhereditary. The other two nonhereditary p53 mutations included a T to G transversion at codon 270 (phenylalanine to cysteine) and a G to C transversion at codon 248 (arginine to proline). These data support the role of both hereditary and acquired p53 mutations in the pathogenesis and/or progression of some cases of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia.
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PMID:Hereditary and acquired p53 gene mutations in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia. 173 52

Chromosome studies were carried out after a 24-hour harvest of unstimulated bone marrow aspirate cell cultures from a 75-year-old male with a clinical diagnosis of acute myelomonocytic leukemia (FAB M4). Analysis of nine cells after trypsin-Giemsa banding (GTG) revealed two cell lines with a mosaic chromosome pattern, 46,XY/46,XY,t(7;19)(q22;p13.3). A review of the recent literature reveals one case of childhood ALL with a 46,XY/46,XY,t(7;19)(q11;q13) chromosome pattern [1] and a 46,XY,t(3q;11q),t(7q;19p),t(15;17)(q26;q22) in one patient with ANLL (FAB M3) [2]. The t(7;19)(q22;p13.3) seen in our case has not been reported as the sole specific clonal chromosome rearrangement in myeloid neoplasia. Interestingly, the plasminogen activator inhibitor type I, multi-drug resistance, and erythropoietin genes are located at band 7q22 and the insulin receptor gene is located at band 19p13.3. Both sites contain fragile site loci. The possible role of these fragile sites, genes, or other genes in the rearrangement can only be surmised.
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PMID:Atypical (7;19) translocation in acute myelomonocytic leukemia. 175 94

Thirty children with refractory acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL) were treated with mitoxantrone, 8 mg/m2/day, for 5 days. Three children received a second course of the drug 3 to 4 weeks later. All but two patients had received prior anthracycline therapy. There were 2 complete responses, 4 early deaths, and 24 patients with persistent leukemia. Of the 21 patients with circulating blasts at the start of mitoxantrone who did not achieve remission, 16 (76%) had complete clearance of their peripheral blood blasts. Although all patients developed profound neutropenia (less than 100 per mm-3), mucosal and hepatic toxicities were uncommon and mild. Mitoxantrone has moderate activity in childhood ALL and should be considered for further trials in less heavily pretreated patients.
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PMID:Phase II trial of mitoxantrone in acute lymphocytic leukemia of childhood. A Pediatric Oncology Group study. 178 26

We evaluated event-free survival (EFS) and leukemia-free interval (LFI) of children treated for acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). Patients were randomized to receive either a low dose or high dose of methotrexate (MTX) as a single agent at the time of diagnosis. Five days later, multidrug therapy was begun. We assessed the early antileukemic efficacy of the two doses of MTX, as well as toxicity and long-term efficacy. An increase in cell kill, as indicated by a larger decrease in the percentage of viable cells in the bone marrow between days 0 and 5, was observed for the high-dose MTX group when compared with the low-dose MTX group (P = .04). At 7.1 years of median follow-up, the 38 children randomized to receive high-dose MTX had a better EFS and LFI compared with the 39 patients randomized to receive low-dose MTX. The 7-year percentages (+/- SE) for EFS were 82% +/- 6% for high-dose MTX and 69% +/- 7% for low-dose MTX (P = .13). The 7-year percentages for LFI were 91% +/- 5% and 69% +/- 7%, respectively (P = .01). We recommend that high-dose MTX be considered as an effective addition to induction therapy in childhood ALL.
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PMID:Low-dose versus high-dose methotrexate during remission induction in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (Protocol 81-01 update). 182 48

Sequential methotrexate (Mtx) absorption studies were undertaken in 127 children undergoing treatment for childhood non-T acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) to determine whether serum drug concentration, clearance and dosage affect event free survival (EFS). Higher serum concentration and area under the plasma concentration curve (AUC) were not associated with an improved EFS. Methotrexate clearance was not found to be of prognostic significance. Patients who tolerated only low 6-mercaptopurine (6-MP) doses because of neutropaenia and those who randomly were prescribed higher doses of Mtx had a lower rate of leukaemia relapse after the completion of therapy. This suggests that the use of maintenance therapy in maximally tolerated doses may be associated with an increased survival in childhood ALL.
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PMID:The influence of serum methotrexate concentrations and drug dosage on outcome in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia. 163 72

An increasing number of papers document cases of acute leukemia in which individual blast cells co-express markers normally restricted to a single cell lineage. Numerous terms are used to refer to cases with unscheduled expression of lineage-foreign proteins; the best defined categories were hybrid acute leukemia and acute mixed-lineage leukemia. The incidence of phenotypically variant acute leukemia varies with the quality and quantity of parameters used and the stringency of the criteria employed for its definition. Considerable interest has focused on acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) cells expressing one or several myeloid lineage-associated antigens (My+ ALL), CD13, CD14, CD15, CD33, and CDw65. Owing to legitimate and cryptic expression on lymphoid cells, CD11b and CD15 reagents may not be considered as specific indicators of myeloid differentiation. The reported incidence ranged from 5 to 46% in 14 studies on My+ ALL, totalling 3817 patients. Several detailed reports documented a higher incidence of My+ ALL in adults (realistically in the range 10-20%) than in children (5-10%) and in B-lineage ALL as opposed to T-lineage ALL. My+ ALL cases are more likely to display unique cytogenetic [t(9;22), 11q23, 14q32] features than My-neg ALL. There appears to be no predominant expression of a single myeloid-associated antigen among those analyzed. As the morphological diagnosis of a leukemia subtype is often imprecise, some T-neg B-neg My+ ALL cases might actually contain FAB AML-M0 populations. While the expression of myeloid-associated antigens has no apparent prognostic significance in the majority of childhood ALL subtypes, in adults myeloid antigens seem to identify a high risk group of ALL patients with a poorer response to standard ALL therapy.
Leukemia 1991 Aug
PMID:Review of the incidence and clinical relevance of myeloid antigen-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia. 188 19

Co-expression of myeloid antigens on the leukaemic blast cells was evaluated in 532 children with a diagnosis of acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL). Using a panel of monoclonal antibodies belonging to CD11b, CD13, CD14, CD15 and CD33 an overall incidence of 4.3% was found, with values ranging between 1.8% for CD14 and 6.1% for CD15. When the data were further dissected, a significantly higher incidence of co-expression was noted in null-ALL (15/70 cases = 21.4%), compared to cases expressing a more mature immunophenotype, i.e. common-ALL (7/394 cases = 1.7%) and T-ALL (1/68 cases = 1.4%) (P less than 0.001). In null-ALL, 9/15 patients were infants, five of whom with the t(4;11); two further children also had a t(4;11). The clinical outcome of the 23 cases which co-expressed myeloid antigens was unfavourable. Only two of the 15 null-ALL, two of the seven common-ALL and the unique case with T-ALL are in fact in persistent first remission between 19 and 93 months from diagnosis. Though the overall incidence of childhood ALL expressing myeloid antigens is low, the evidence that this co-expression may be related to an unfavourable clinical course and that it more frequently occurs in null-ALL, particularly in the first year of life, suggests that the routine assessment of myeloid antigens may allow to identify a subgroup of childhood ALL with a poor clinical outcome.
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PMID:Co-expression of myeloid antigens in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia: relationship with the stage of differentiation and clinical significance. 158 Dec 45

Of 125 children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), who had been in continuous remission for three years on chemotherapy, 108 patients received biological response modifiers (BRM) such as Bestatin, N-CWS, OK-432 and/or PSK in order to prevent relapse after treatment suspension. From 20 patients who were treated with PSK, 6 relapsed within 13 months. This relapse rate was quite similar to the rate observed with those children who were off therapy (4 relapses in 17 patients within 13 months). In contrast to these 37 patients, only 3 out of 31 patients who received Bestatin (p less than 0.05) and 8 out of 57 patients who received N-CWS or OK-432 relapsed. Based on these findings, BRMs used in the present study seems to be effective to prevent relapse of leukemia among childhood ALL who have electively stopped chemotherapy.
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PMID:Effects of biological response modifiers on childhood ALL being in remission after chemotherapy. 191 66

Cytogenetic study in 53 children (aged less than 15 years) with acute non-lymphocytic leukemia (ANLL) were studied. The cytogenetic findings were compared with those of ANLL patients (136 aged less than 19 years and 747 aged over 20 years) in the Fourth International Workshop on Chromosomes in Leukemia (IV IWCL) and also with those of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) cases (previously reported as our 124 ALL case). Of the ANLL patients, 77.4% had acquired chromosomal clonal abnormalities. As abnormalities, t(15;17), all cases which were seen in M3 or M3V cases, t(8;21), which was seen in M1 or M2, and rearrangements of 11q23, which were seen in M5, were more frequently seen than was reported at the IV IWCL (20.8%, 17.0% and 7.5% vs 6.3%, 6.3% and 3.2% respectively). 5q-, monosomy 7, t(6;9) and t(9;22), which have been noted previously in this disease, were not seen. Besides structural abnormalities, some cytogenetic differences in numerical abnormality between ALL and ANLL were observed as follows: 1) Hyperdiploidy of greater than 51 chromosomes noted in ALL was not found in ANLL. 2) Isolated trisomy 8 was frequently found in ANLL, but not in ALL. 3) Loss of a sex chromosome was frequently found in ANLL, but not in ALL. Our study revealed a different frequency of non-random chromosome abnormality in children with ANLL as compared with that of adults, and clarified the differences in numerical abnormalities, as well as structural abnormalities, between ALL and ANLL.
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PMID:[Cytogenetic studies on 53 childhood acute nonlymphocytic leukemia]. 192 Aug 39

Of all children diagnosed with leukemia in Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, and Sweden, 981 had discontinued therapy before 1985 and had been followed up annually after cessation of therapy. Progeny was registered and fertility evaluated among survivors who passed age 18 years without a relapse (n = 299). By April 1989, 48 offspring were registered, one of whom had congenital anomalies. This was no more than expected from the incidence of birth defects in the general population. No childhood malignancies or genetic diseases have so far been diagnosed in the progeny. In the study group, none of the 19 female and 8 male survivors of myeloid leukemias had become parents, and only 4 fathers were reported among the 131 male survivors of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). However, 23 of the 149 females treated for ALL had delivered 41 children. Fertility was measured as cumulative rates of first birth by maternal age. In a Cox regression analysis, cases who had received prophylactic radiation of the central nervous system (CNS) had a lower first birth rate than those without radiation (rate ratio 0.39, 95% CI 0.15-1.00), indicating that doses of 18-24 Gy to the brain may possibly be a risk factor. By using the Norwegian birth cohort of 1966 as a control group, matching the median year of birth for the study subjects, the group of female ALL survivors as a whole was as likely as the general female population to have given birth up to the age of 23. The first generation of females successfully treated for childhood ALL seems to have a nearly normal reproductive pattern during young adulthood, without increased risk of congenital anomalies in the offspring. However, cranial radiation as CNS prophylaxis may possibly impair subsequent reproduction.
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PMID:Reproduction following treatment for childhood leukemia: a population-based prospective cohort study of fertility and offspring. 196 Nov 32


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