Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0023418 (
leukemia
)
93,477
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In order to investigate the role of T-cell receptor (TcR)-delta and TcR-gamma gene rearrangements and/or deletions in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) coexpressing T-cell-associated antigens (i.e. CD2 and/or CD4 and/or CD7), we examined blasts from a selected group of 56 AML cases (25 children, 31 adults) coexpressing either of these antigens without cytoplasmic CD3 expression. Forty-four typical AML cases (7 children, 37 adults) without T-cell associated antigens were further studied as controls. Germline configuration of the TcR-delta gene was observed in 91 out of the total of 100 AML cases investigated. Eight of nine cases with rearranged or deleted TcR-delta genes coexpressed T-cell-associated antigens. Blast cells of 7/9 cases were classified as FAB M1, two as
FAB M2
. In six of these cases TcR-gamma gene rearrangements were also detected. TcR-delta alterations were predominantly found in children whose blasts coexpressed T-lymphoid associated antigens (6/25, 24%), but were rarely detected in adult AML with or without coexpression of T-cell antigens (2/31 and 0/37, respectively).
Leukemia
1992 Dec
PMID:Rearrangements of T-cell receptor delta, gamma and beta genes in acute myeloid leukemia coexpressing T-lymphoid features. 133 55
Disseminated fungal infection not infrequently complicates the course of allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (allo BMT) in severely immunocompromised patients, and the prognosis of BMT patients who develop systemic fungal infection is very poor. We describe a patient who developed disseminated Candida albicans infection with liver abscess after the first allo BMT for acute myelogenous leukemia (
FAB M2
). The infection was successfully eradicated by the administration of miconazole and amphotericin B. However, 1 year after the first allo BMT, the patient suffered a relapse of acute myelogenous leukemia with fungal liver abscess. A second allo BMT, accelerating granulocyte recovery by recombinant human granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (rhG-CSF), was successfully performed and the fungal liver abscess resolved with a combination therapy of fluconazole and amphotericin B. The patient is alive and free of both
leukemia
and fungal disease more than 37 months after the first allo BMT and 25 months after the second allo BMT.
...
PMID:Successful second allogeneic bone marrow transplantation in a relapsed acute myeloid leukemia patient with fungal liver abscess. 138 22
According to criteria established by the French-American-British (FAB) classification, a diagnosis of acute myelomonoblastic
leukemia
(FAB M4) is based on the presence of 20% bone marrow monocytes or a serum lysozyme level that exceeds the reference value by three times. Reported here is a case of acute myelogenous leukemia with eosinophilia and a cytogenetic inversion of chromosome 16 (inv 16) that lacks morphologic, cytochemical, and immunophenotypic features of monocytic differentiation, but which is associated with an elevated serum lysozyme value. The authors used an immunoelectron microscope to localize lysozyme to both normal and abnormal eosinophil granules, in addition to the secondary granules of myeloid precursors and monocytes. This enzyme could not be demonstrated within the myeloblasts of the patient studied. Postfixation with osmium tetroxide greatly reduced the staining intensity within the crystalloids of normal eosinophils, but only minimally affected that of monocytes, neutrophils, normal eosinophil granule matrix, and the abnormal granules of the leukemic eosinophils. These results demonstrate that lysozyme is present in both normal and leukemic eosinophils and that elevation of serum lysozyme in patients with acute myelogenous leukemia with eosinophilia is not a reliable indicator of monocytic differentiation. Furthermore, an occasional case of acute leukemia with inv 16 is classifiable as acute myelogenous leukemia with differentiation (
FAB M2
).
...
PMID:The significance of an elevated serum lysozyme value in acute myelogenous leukemia with eosinophilia. 154 87
Among 50 cases of acute nonlymphocytic leukemia (ANLL) with available cytogenetic data seen in our section since May 1988, two were found to carry a monosomy 21 abnormality which has been rarely reported in hematologic malignancies. The first case is a 58-year-old male with a diagnosis of AML,
FAB M2
, who died of refractory
leukemia
9 months later. The other case is a 59-year-old female with AML,
FAB M2
. Complete remission was achieved initially but she died of sepsis 3 months later with no evidence of leukemic relapse. Monosomy 21 is not yet recognized as a nonrandom cytogenetic abnormality in ANLL, whereas its unusual predilection in AML, especially the
FAB M2
or M4 categories, as noted in our study and others' reports, have raised this possibility. Further studies and the accumulation of new cases are needed in the hope of defining it as a subtype of ANLL.
...
PMID:Monosomy 21 in two patients with acute nonlymphocytic leukemia. 163 89
Human granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) receptors on human acute leukemia cells were investigated using human G-CSF iodolabeled by the lactoperoxidase method. Among various human leukemic cell lines, only cells of myelogenous lineage including HL-60, THP-1 and U937 had one type of high-affinity receptor for G-CSF, as shown by Scatchard analysis. Fresh
leukemia
cells from 19 patients with acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) were then studied. Specific receptors for G-CSF were demonstrated on blast cells in all 19 cases, the mean number of G-CSF receptors per AML cell ranging from 95 to 1436. G-CSF receptors on AML cells appeared to be a single affinity type, although some variations were observed. The mean number of G-CSF receptors on leukemic cells from patients with either FAB M3 or
FAB M2
was greater than that of cells from patients with M1 (p less than 0.01, p less than 0.10, respectively). Moreover, the mean number of receptors for G-CSF on CD13- and CD34-positive AML cells was higher than that on CD13-negative and CD34-positive AML cells (p less than 0.01), and the mean number of G-CSF receptors on CD7-positive AML cells was lower than that for CD7-negative AML cells (p less than 0.10). Since the FAB classification and surface phenotypes reflect maturation stages, our findings indicate that the distribution of G-CSF receptors, even on AML cells, may be related to the maturation process.
...
PMID:Human granulocyte colony-stimulating factor receptors in acute myelogenous leukemia. 170 27
We studied clinical and biological features of five cases of hybrid
leukemia
. Three of the five patients were classified as biphenotypic
leukemia
because of the coexpression of myeloid/B lymphoid markers in patients 1 (
FAB M2
) and 2 (FAB CMMoL) and myeloid/T lymphoid markers in patient 3 (FAB M4). Patient 4 was identified as bilineal-biphenotypic
leukemia
because acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) (FAB M4) and acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) (FAB L1) coexisted and each population coexpressed myeloid and T lymphoid markers. Patient 5 was identified as bilineal
leukemia
due to the conversion from AML (FAB M1) to ALL (FAB L1) at an interval of 3 months. The Philadelphia (Ph1) chromosome was negative in all cases. A leukemic blast colony formation using cell line 5637 conditioned medium as a stimulator was obtained in all four patients examined. Three of the five patients had been suffering from so-called stem cell disorders such as aplastic anemia in patient 2, trilineage myelodysplasia in patient 4 and refractory anemia with excess of blasts in transformation in patient 5. The pre-existing impairment of pluripotent stem cell was probably the background of these hybrid
leukemia
. Hybrid
leukemia
appears to have an inferior prognosis: an AML-directed chemotherapy resulted in a low remission rate (2/5) with a short duration of relapse free survival (1/2) and an ALL-directed chemotherapy produced no remission (0/3). Chronological phenotypic analysis revealed that hybrid features of leukemic blasts disappeared at the time of relapse in patient 1 and progression to AML in patient 2. Monitoring of lineage-associated markers should be required for the management of hybrid
leukemia
.
...
PMID:Clinical characteristics of hybrid leukemia: report of five cases. 217 35
Human acute myelocytic leukemia (AML) marrow cells respond to stimulation with increased proliferation and enhanced intracellular metabolism of the cytotoxic antimetabolite 1-B-D arabinofuranosylcytosine (ara-C). Our previous studies have focused on the drug-induced humoral stimulatory activity (HSA) present in serum following initial cytoreduction which augments in vitro growth and biochemical pharmacology. The activity of HSA likely relates to the presence of multiple stimulators. The effect of 18-hr culture in purified recombinant human granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor (rhGM-CSF) (1 ng/ml) on in vitro AML marrow cell [3H]dThd incorporation into DNA, intracellular ara-C activation to the triphosphate form (ara-CTP), and subsequent ara-CTP retention were determined in leukemic cells of 11 patients and compared with cells similarly cultured in HSA-containing sera. The stimulatory effects of rhGM-CSF and HSA on both growth and pharmacologic parameters were comparable for each AML population, with maximal response to both regulators detected for
FAB M2
. These data demonstrate that GM-CSF acts similarly to HSA as an active stimulator of leukemic cell proliferation and net intracellular ara-C metabolism in vitro, and support clinical trials designed to examine the role of rhGM-CSF in enhancing ara-C cytotoxicity by increasing the growth fraction of drug-responsive target cells in vivo.
Leukemia
1990 Aug
PMID:Effects of rhGM-CSF on intracellular ara-C pharmacology in vitro in acute myelocytic leukemia: comparability with drug-induced humoral stimulatory activity. 220 33
We established and maintained long-term cultures of marrow from normal dogs and dogs with lymphoma or
leukemia
by single inoculations of mononuclear cell suspensions. Media containing only horse sera (as opposed to horse and fetal calf sera) and catalase (for antioxidative effect) supported improved culture viability, as indicated by increased recovery of progenitor cells (granulocyte-macrophage colony-forming units, CFU-GM) and the release of abundant erythroid cells in the cultures for up to 3 weeks. CFU-GM were maintained for at least 3-4 weeks of culture. Culture appearance, cell counts, and assays of CFU-GM were used to compare the culture kinetics of tumor-involved marrow to normal marrow specimens. Cultures of marrow with extensive tumor involvement tended to be less viable, apparently due to a relative lack of competent progenitors. To investigate whether canine long-term marrow culture provided a purging effect similar to the loss of tumor cells noted in human long-term cultures of marrow from patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) or acute myelogenous leukemia (AML), we established long-term marrow cultures from 28 dogs with histologically confirmed untreated lymphoma or
leukemia
. Eleven of these dogs had cytogenetically marked tumor cells in the marrow at the initiation of culture. In six dogs with lymphoma and one dog with acute monocytic leukemia (AMoL) French-American-British classification (FAB) M4
leukemia
, we could detect no cytogenetic evidence for persistence of the tumor clones in individually plucked or pooled CFU-GM grown from 3-week-old long-term cultures. In one case of AML (
FAB M2
), 80% of CFU-GM recovered from long-term cultures at 4 weeks still contained an extra metacentric marker chromosome associated with the continued presence of the leukemic clone in the cultures. Our documentation of a purging effect for some tumors supports the use of this canine model system in the investigation of autologous marrow transplantation with long-term cultured cells for humans with lymphoma and
leukemia
.
...
PMID:Long-term culture of canine marrow: cytogenetic evaluation of purging of lymphoma and leukemia. 239 54
We report two
leukemia
patients with double minutes (DMs) chromosomes. Both patients were diagnosed as having acute myelocytic leukemia (AML)
FAB M2
. Cytogenetic analysis showed normal chromosome karyotype with 1-53 DMs chromosomes in the first patient, and complex chromosome aberrations including deletion of chromosome 8 at 8q24 region and 1-84 DMs chromosomes in the second patient who had a history of extensive radiotherapy for laryngeal cancer 8 years prior to the development of
leukemia
. Analysis of DNA from the two patients revealed that oncogene of c-myc was amplified about 5 to 10 folds in the leukemic cells. The other fourteen oncogene of c-myc was c-myb, c-abl and N-myc, showed no increases of gene content. Furthermore, a transforming gene, N-ras was detected in the first patient by in vivo selection assay method. This is the second report on AML patients with c-myc gene amplification and DMs chromosomes.
...
PMID:[c-myc gene amplification and N-ras transforming gene in two cases of acute myelocytic leukemia with double minute chromosomes]. 269 22
This thesis is a survey of nine previously published articles on MPO deficient PMN. The incidences in
leukaemia
and allied disorders of the presence of this abnormal subpopulation of mature neutrophils and the relationship to clinical course in AML, susceptibility to infections in AML, FAB classification in AML and MDS, cytogenetically defined aberrations in MDS and morphometrical characteristics were investigated. The aims of the studies were to examine the diagnostic as well as the prognostic value of the parameter, to examine the usefulness of the parameter as an predictive indicator of CR and relapse in AML and to examine the concept that MPO deficient PMN may originate from leukaemic precursors. MPO deficient PMN were found to occur in a minor number (less than 4% of the total number of PMN) in normal humans and the incidences of an abnormal number (greater than 4%) were found to be about 40% in AML (I, II, III, IV, VIII), 60% in CML (I, VII), 30% in MPD other than CML (VII) and 30% in MDS (V). The highest incidences in AML were found in the FAB subtypes possessing the most myeloid differentiation potential i.e.
FAB M2
and FAB M4 (IV). In ALL, CLL, HCL, Hodgkin's disease, anaemia not related to
leukaemia
and leukaemoid reactions the incidences all were 0% (I, unpublished data). The abnormal MPO deficient PMN subpopulation, if present, disappeared when CR was achieved and reappeared when relapse eventually was developed (II, VIII). In both situations serial determinations showed that the change occurred before the usual routine blood examinations predicted CR and relapse; several days and several months prior, respectively (VIII). The probability of obtaining CR was lower in the AML patients with the abnormal subpopulation and the risk of developing relapse higher than in AML patients without the anomaly (II, VIII). These differences were not statistically significant, however. AML patients, showing an increased number of MPO deficient PMN, revealed a statistically significant increased susceptibility to infections (P less than 0.01) during the preremission phase accounting for 18% to 67% of the total number of infections in this period (III). This increase was positively correlated to the extent of the anomaly (P less than 0.002). The spontaneous occurrence of a subpopulation of MPO deficient PMN in MDS went together with a simultaneous progression in cytogenetically determined clonal chromosomal aberrations and were related to progression in FAB subtype as well (VI). Morphometrically MPO deficient PMN were characterized by a decreased total cell size and an increased nucleus size of the projected images (IX).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Myeloperoxidase deficient polymorphonuclear leucocytes in leukaemia and allied disorders. 285 15
1
2
3
4
5
Next >>