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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (
leukemia
)
93,477
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Leukaemia
inhibitory factor (LIF) is able to potentiate megakaryocyte colony formation in cultures of mouse bone marrow cells in the presence of multi-CSF (interleukin 3). Membrane receptors for LIF are present on mouse megakaryocytes and receptor numbers increase with increasing maturation of the cells. When injected into normal mice at doses of 0.2-2 micrograms two to three times daily, LIF induced a rise in platelet numbers, which reached up to twice normal values during the second week of injections. This rise was preceded by a rise first in megakaryocyte progenitor numbers, then in mature megakaryocytes in the bone marrow and spleen. Injections of LIF also marginally accelerated platelet regeneration in mice pre-injected with 5-fluorouracil or subjected to whole-body irradiation and transplantation of marrow cells. In view of similar responses to LIF in parallel studies in primates, clinical trial of LIF in patients with
thrombocytopenia
is warranted.
...
PMID:Actions of leukaemia inhibitory factor on megakaryocyte and platelet formation. 142 12
The biological properties of a transplantable lymphocytic leukemia, L4415 in the WAG/Rij rat, are described. The radiation-induced L4415
leukemia
is characterized as a relatively slowly growing, non-immunogenic, immature T-cell
leukemia
which shows a reproducible growth pattern upon intravenous (i.v.) transfer. Survival time following i.v. inoculation is inversely related to the number of leukemic cells in the inoculum, which allows a quantitative estimate in terms of log leukemic cell kill of the effect of treatment. The first signs of leukemic growth are found in the bone marrow, the spleen, and the liver. Leukemic cells can be detected in the peripheral blood 13 days after inoculation. Due to replacement of normal hemopoietic tissue by leukemic cells and their number increasing exponentially thereafter, normal hemopoiesis is inhibited in the later stages of the disease as indicated by severe
thrombocytopenia
and anemia. Death is caused by a combination of splenic rupture, gastrointestinal and pulmonary hemorrhage, and impaired functions of heavily infiltrated organs. Hepatosplenomegaly and lymphadenopathy are prominent features at autopsy. Cyclophosphamide- and radiosensitivity of the clonogenic leukemic cells have been determined, a 2.9 log cell kill could be induced by single dose cyclophosphamide inoculation and a dosage giving a surviving fraction of 0.37 (D0) of 0.99 Gy with an extrapolation number (N) of 8.5 were calculated. Based on these data, the L4415 rat
leukemia
may be regarded as a relevant model for human acute lymphocytic leukemia and may thus serve to explore new treatment strategies.
Leukemia
1992 Nov
PMID:L4415: further characterization of the rat model for human acute lymphocytic leukemia. 143 99
Fourteen children (ages 2-15 years) with acute leukemia in relapse were treated with daily recombinant interferon gamma for 14 days by subcutaneous injections at fixed dose levels of 0.1, 0.25, 0.5, or 0.75 mg/m2 (1.0, 2.5, 5.0, or 7.5 x 10(6) units/m2) without intrapatient escalation. Patients received a second 14-day course of therapy followed by thrice weekly administration unless there were signs of progressive disease or grade 3 or 4 toxicity. Side effects in the 13 evaluable patients included fever (n = 10), fatigue (9), decreased Karnofsky performance score (8), hypertriglyceridemia (8), myalgia (5), weight loss > 5% (4), elevated liver transaminases (4), and abdominal pain (3). There was only one grade 4 toxicity: one of the six patients at the 0.5 mg/m2 dose level developed reversible acute renal failure. One patient died of gastrointestinal hemorrhage due to disease-related refractory
thrombocytopenia
. One child had an oncolytic response and two others stable disease for 138 and 148 days. An appropriate dose level for phase II studies in children is 0.5 mg/m2 per day.
Leukemia
1992 Nov
PMID:Phase I study of recombinant human interferon gamma in children with relapsed acute leukemia. 143 1
Splenomegaly associated with myelodysplastic disorders in children may be massive and can result in pancytopenia, abdominal discomfort, and respiratory distress. When these symptoms cannot be relieved by nonsurgical means, splenectomy may be indicated. Under such conditions, surgical splenectomy carries increased risks, as the
thrombocytopenia
is difficult to correct secondary to splenic sequestration. Additionally, the surgical anatomy is often distorted secondary to the massive spleen and dissection can be difficult. These factors can lead to uncontrollable hemorrhage. In an attempt to decrease intraoperative blood loss, the authors successfully performed preoperative splenic artery embolization in 11 of 12 children (age range, 1-11 years) with pancytopenia due to hypersplenism. Hypersplenism requiring surgical splenectomy was due to
leukemia
(n = 9), myelodysplastic syndrome (n = 1), immune
thrombocytopenia
(n = 1), and osteopetrosis (n = 1). Embolization was performed under general anesthesia, prior to surgery, with gelatin sponge particles alone, Gianturco coils alone, or a combination of polyvinyl alcohol sponge particles and Gianturco coils. Embolization allowed for safe surgical splenectomy.
...
PMID:Preoperative embolization of the spleen in children with hypersplenism. 144 26
A variant strain of Rauscher
leukemia
virus (RLV-A) obtained from a transplantable murine monomyelocytic
leukemia
causes a disease characterized by frank anemia, wasting, hepatosplenomegaly and erythroblastosis. The involvement of platelets in this disease are reported here. The RLV-A induced a severe
thrombocytopenia
(25 percent of control level) at the terminal stage of disease. This
thrombocytopenia
was not associated with disseminated intravascular coagulopathy since the prothrombin times were always within normal limits. The partial thromboplastin time was elevated in the terminal stages of disease and was found to be associated with factor deficiencies, possibly owing to the presence of anti-factor antibodies, in the intrinsic coagulation pathway, especially factor VIII. Further, splenectomy did not abolish the
thrombocytopenia
, since splenectomized, virally infected animals also developed severe
thrombocytopenia
(29 percent of control levels). The ensuing splenomegaly during progression of disease was not the cause of the
thrombocytopenia
. A physiological response to the severe
thrombocytopenia
was the production of larger size platelets. At terminal stages of the disease, platelet volume increased to 4.2 mu 3 (normal is 3.0 mu 3). An increase in platelet volume was also observed in splenectomized, virally infected animals. Electron microscopy indicated that these circulating platelets contained c-type viral particles. Viral infection was associated with decreased life span of circulating platelets, as measured by 75Se-methionine at mid and terminal stages of the disease. Our results suggest that direct viral infection of platelets and/or megakaryocytes with subsequent cell lysis is a possible cause of the observed
thrombocytopenia
observed in RLVA-induced disease and may also occur in other retrovirally-induced diseases.
...
PMID:Thrombocytopenia in a retrovirally-induced murine erythroleukemia. 145 28
Nine platinum analogs are currently in clinical development, including three that contain the diaminocyclohexane substituent and five that contain the cyclobutanedicarboxylato leaving group. Many of them have shown activity in at least one cisplatin (CDDP)-resistant cell line, most commonly L1210 murine
leukemia
. In addition, most were less nephrotoxic than CDDP in preclinical evaluations. While these agents share certain key structural similarities, there are important differences in their toxicity profiles that may be exploitable in future combination therapies. Though neuropathy has been a troubling toxicity with two of the three diaminocyclohexane (DACH) compounds, it differs in that it appears to be less chronic and cumulative with oxaliplatin (I-OHP), which is also associated with much less myelosuppression. Of the cyclobutanedicarboxylato compounds that are structurally related to carboplatin (CBDCA), there are several notable differences. For several compounds, isolated neutropenia has been dose-limiting and
thrombocytopenia
, which is common with CBDCA, has been uncommon. Like CBDCA, neurotoxicity has not been an issue with this group. Therefore, the potential for dose escalation with a colony stimulating factor (CSF) appears enhanced. Furthermore, promising early clinical leads, such as the substantial response rates in cervix and head and neck cancers with 254-S and in patients with colon cancer using circadian modulation of I-OHP, require careful evaluation. Preclinical synergy data are also cited that suggest other potential clinical leads. The development of a number of these agents has been complicated by unanticipated issues, including unexpected chronic dose-limiting neurotoxicity with ormaplatin (OP), formulation and stability problems with liposomal-neodecanoato-diaminocyclohexane platinum (II) (L-NDDP), and problematic nephrotoxicity with zeniplatin (ZP). However, several of these new compounds are likely to enter broader phase II and III development and should provide important information not only about the utility of the agents themselves but also about the predictive value of some of these preclinical models of CDDP resistance.
...
PMID:The current status of new platinum analogs. 146 69
A 36-year-old male was admitted to the Ehime University Hospital with anemia, eosinophilia and hepatosplenomegaly. Peripheral blood examination demonstrated severe anemia (Hb 7.1g/dl),
thrombocytopenia
(Plt 6.8 x 10(4)/microliters) and increase of peripheral leukocyte counts (53,000/microliters) with 32.0% of eosinophils which had lobulated nuclei, abnormal distribution of eosinophilic granules and a few vacuoles. The level of serum IgE was low (< 5IU/ml), while that of serum vitamin B12 was elevated. A diagnosis of eosinophilic
leukemia
was made. He was noted to have spontaneous fluctuations in his eosinophil and total leukocyte counts. To analyze the mechanism of cyclic eosinophilic leukocytosis, we examined eosinophil colony stimulating activity of the serum and plasma of the patient. These examination showed that eosinophil colony-stimulating activity was not found in his serum and plasma, and cyclic eosinophilic leukocytosis was due to the hemopoietic stem cell disorder.
...
PMID:[Eosinophilic leukemia with cyclic eosinophilic leukocytosis]. 147 3
Six infants with acute megakaryoblastic
leukemia
and a translocation (1;22)(p13;q13) were studied. There were five female infants and one male infant, and the age at initial examination varied from 0.8 to 6.5 months (median, 2.3 months). All the patients had hepatosplenomegaly and anemia (6 to 8.3 g/dL), and four patients had
thrombocytopenia
(9,000 to 63,000/mm3). The bone marrow showed prominent fibrosis in five cases and reticulin fibrosis in one patient at presentation. Crush artifact often made the histologic sections difficult to interpret, but typical megakaryoblasts could be identified in the smears. Biopsy specimens of the liver and lymph node were suggestive of a nonhematopoietic malignant condition because of the cohesiveness of the tumor cells, stromal fibrosis, and the prominent sinusoidal and vascular pattern of infiltration. Immunophenotyping of peripheral blood mononuclear cells was helpful in identifying the blasts as belonging to the megakaryoblastic lineage. Using a panel of mononclonal antibodies, it was also possible to confirm the nature of the infiltration in paraffin sections and to differentiate it from other childhood small round cell tumors, especially neuroblastoma in paraffin sections (typical staining pattern: CD45-, CD43+, vW Factor, Ulex europeus I+, CD20-, CD45RO-, synaptophysin-, chromogranin-, cytokeratin-, desmin-). This special type of infantile acute leukemia can be recognized with confidence if one is aware of its clinical features, peculiar pathologic characteristics, the morphologic features and immunophenotype of the megakaryoblasts, and the unique cytogenetic abnormality.
...
PMID:Acute megakaryoblastic leukemia in infants with t(1;22)(p13;q13) abnormality. 151 33
Chromosome analyses were performed in five patients with myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) who showed trisomy of chromosome 8 during the course of their disease. Four of these patients showed trisomy 8 at the diagnosis of MDS, and the remaining one had trisomy 8 when the
leukemia
phase developed. The proportion of bone marrow (BM) cells with trisomy 8 in the four patients who showed trisomy 8 at MDS diagnosis fluctuated, and this fluctuation was not related to the percentage of blasts in the BM or to progression of the disease. However, in two patients, metaphase cells with trisomy 8 disappeared when their anemic state improved, although leuko-
thrombocytopenia
was still present, suggesting that the decrease in the number of BM cells with trisomy 8 reflects hematologic features in some MDS patients. These findings indicate that trisomy 8 in our MDS patients was possibly not the primary event in the genesis of the disease, and that there may have been competition between a normal karyotype clone and a trisomy-8-positive clone. Our results further suggest that the presence of a clone with trisomy 8 is not always a sign of disease progression or of poor prognosis in MDS patients.
...
PMID:Trisomy of chromosome 8 in myelodysplastic syndrome. Significance of the fluctuating trisomy 8 population. 152 Dec 38
A patient with large granular lymphocyte (LGL) expansion (T-gamma lymphocytosis), neutropenia and
thrombocytopenia
was studied longitudinally. Analysis of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) demonstrated an unusual large proportion of CD3+ T-lymphocytes expressing a gamma delta T-cell receptor (TcR-gamma delta). Immunofluorescence (IF) stainings with subset-specific monoclonal antibodies showed a fluctuating expansion of TcR-gamma delta+ T-cells expressing V gamma 9 and V delta 2 variable (V) gene segments. Biochemical characterization of PBMC showed the presence of a disulphide-linked TcR-gamma delta. TcR gene rearrangement studies on sorted TcR-gamma delta+ T-cells showed rearrangements of V gamma 9-J gamma 1.2 and V delta 2-J delta 1 V and joining (J) gene segments, thereby confirming the IF staining results. These data alone did not allow us to determine whether the TcR-gamma delta+ LGL expansion represented a polyclonal or monoclonal proliferation, because the combinatorial repertoire of TcR-gamma delta receptors is limited due to the availability of only a few V and J segments within the TcR-gamma and TcR-delta genes and because of the preferential usage of V gamma 9-J gamma 1.2 and V delta 2-J delta 1 rearrangements by TcR-gamma delta+ T-cells in blood of healthy individuals. We therefore used polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-mediated amplification of the TcR-gamma delta rearrangements, using specific V gamma 9, J gamma 1.2, V delta 2, and J delta 1 oligonucleotides to determine the junctional diversity of the TcR-gamma delta+ T-cell population. Sequence analysis of the PCR products obtained revealed a mixture of different junctional region sequences compatible with a polyclonal expansion. This is in contrast to the few reported TcR-gamma delta+ LGL and the majority of TcR-alpha beta+ LGL expansions, which appeared to consist of monoclonal proliferations.
Leukemia
1992 May
PMID:Polyclonal expansion of T-cell receptor-gamma delta+ T lymphocytes associated with neutropenia and thrombocytopenia. 153 90
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