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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (
leukemia
)
93,477
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The incidence of malignant tumors in the primary immunodeficiency diseases is dramatically increased. Four patients with primary immunodeficiencies who developed fatal malignancies are reported. Lymphoreticular tumors and
leukemia
predominate in most conditions, but epithelial neoplasms are the most common tumors in selective Iga deficiency, and they comprise over one-fourth of malignancies in common variable immunodeficiency. With the exception of common variable immunodeficiency and the
Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome
, hyperplasia of lymphoid tissue usually does not occur. Lymph node enlargement in any of the other immunodeficiencies is therefore most likely secondary to malignancy. Benign gastrointestinal nodular lymphoid hyperplasia occurs frequently in common variable immunodeficiency and in some instances may be impossible to differentiate roentgenologically from lymphoma.
...
PMID:Primary immunodeficiency diseases and malignancy. 4 31
Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) has been implicated in the development of lymphomas in immunocompromised patients. To test this hypothesis, 26 lymphomas involving the central nervous system (CNS) (11 primary, 15 systemic) were studied for the presence of EBV. In situ hybridization (ISH) was performed on formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue using a sulfur 35 (35S)-labeled EBV probe (EBV BAMH1-W). The results were interpreted without knowledge of the patients' immunologic status. The EBV sequences were detected in 11 lymphomas, nine of which were mixed or large cell subtypes. Review of the clinical information revealed that nine of the 26 lymphomas occurred in immunocompromised patients secondary to renal transplantation, human immunodeficiency virus infection,
leukemia
, and
Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome
. The EBV sequences were detected in all nine lymphomas occurring in immunocompromised patients, whereas two of the 17 lymphomas occurring in immunocompetent patients expressed EBV sequences. The authors conclude that the presence of EBV sequences in CNS lymphomas is highly correlated with a history of compromised immune status supporting a pathogenetic role of EBV in the development of CNS lymphomas in immunocompromised patients.
...
PMID:In situ hybridization for the detection of Epstein-Barr virus in central nervous system lymphomas. 184 47
Optimal allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT) presupposes the use of a HLA-identical sibling as donor. Unfortunately, only about 30% of patients have an HLA-matched donor, so that the use of alternative donors has been increasingly used. We report an analysis of 13 children transplanted using an HLA-partially matched donor as source of haemopoietic stem cells. They suffered of ALL (3 pts), ANLL (1 pt), SAA (2 pts), Osteopetrosis (1 pt),
Wiskott-Aldrich Syndrome
(2 pts), Severe Combined Immunodeficiency Disease (2 pts) and Familial Haemophagocitic Lymphohistiocytosis (2 pts). Full engraftment was obtained in all 11 of the patients who survived longer than 14 days and, globally, a moderate incidence of acute GvHD (grade II-IV) was observed in the evaluable patients (3 out of 11 with a percentage of 27%); only a patient of the six survivors more than one hundred days after BMT had severe chronic GvHD (16.6%). Four pts (31%) are actually alive and well (mean follow-up 358 days) with a mean Karnofsky score of 95%. Our data suggest that BMT from HLA-partially matched donors could represent a possible alternative therapeutic strategy in children when a compatible donor is not available. This is especially due to the reduced severity of GvHD in childhood and because of T-cell depleted marrow transplants could obtain more satisfactory results when employed in typical pediatric non-malignant disorders (i.e. immunodeficiencies) rather than in
leukemia
.
...
PMID:Allogeneic bone marrow transplantation in children from other than HLA-identical sibling donor. 185 74
Clinicopathologic records and neuropathologic tissues of 109 patients who underwent necropsy after treatment with bone marrow transplantation (BMT) were examined. Underlying disorders included
leukemia
(70), aplastic anemia (25), solid tumors (7), lymphoma (5), Hodgkin's disease (1) and
Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome
(1). There were 34 females and 75 males, ranging in age from 2 to 56 years. Survival after transplantation averaged 3.6 months. The most common findings were cerebrovascular lesions (29), including hematomas, hemorrhagic necrosis, and infarcts. Central nervous system infections comprised the next most common finding, including 10 fungal and four bacterial infections. A recurrence of underlying malignancy for which transplant had been performed occurred in five patients. Leukoencephalopathy of varying severity was found in eight patients, half of whom had received intrathecal chemotherapy and/or cranial radiation. Patients with systemic graft-versus-host disease had a variety of nonspecific neuropathologic findings in the nervous system; however, nearly half (44%) showed no detectable changes. Other nonspecific alterations included hypoxic/ischemic changes, vascular siderocalcinosis, and neuroaxonal spheroids (associated with hemorrhage or necrosis). These findings provide a guide as to likely causes of a neurologic syndrome in a patient who has undergone BMT, and can be compared with neuropathologic findings in other forms of immunosuppression.
...
PMID:Neuropathologic findings after bone marrow transplantation: an autopsy study. 219 Sep 10
The N-ras gene is the only member of the ras family which has never been naturally transduced into a retrovirus. In order to study the in vitro and in vivo oncogenicity of N-ras and to compare its pathogenicity to that of H-ras, we have inserted an activated or a normal form of human N-ras cDNA into a slightly modified Harvey murine sarcoma virus-derived vector in which the H-ras p21 coding region had been deleted. The resulting constructions were transfected into NIH 3T3 cells. The activated N-ras-containing construct (HSN) induced 10(4) foci per microgram of DNA and was found to be as transforming as H-ras was. After infection of the transfected cells by either the ecotropic Moloney murine
leukemia
virus or the amphotropic 4070A helper viruses, rescued transforming viruses were injected into newborn mice. Both pseudotypes of HSN virus containing activated N-ras induced the typical Harvey disease with similar latency. However, we found that the virus which contained normal N-ras p21 (HSn) was also pathogenic and induced splenomegaly, lymphadenopathies, and sarcoma in mice after a latency of 3 to 7 weeks. In addition, Moloney murine
leukemia
virus pseudotypes of N-ras caused neurological disorders in 30% of the infected animals. These results differed markedly from those of previous experiments in which we had inserted the activated form of N-ras in the pSV(X) vector: the resulting SVN-ras virus was transforming on NIH 3T3 cells but was poorly oncogenic in vivo (M. Souyri, C. F. Koehne, P. V. O'Donnel, T. H.
Aldrich
, M. E. Furth, and E. Fleissner, Virology 158:69-78). However, similarly poor oncogenicity was also observed when the v-H-ras coding sequence was inserted in pSV(X) vector, which indicated that the vector sequences play a crucial role in the pathogenicity of a given oncogene. Altogether, these data demonstrated unequivocally that N-ras is potentially as oncogenic as H-ras and that such oncogenic effect could depend on the vector environment.
...
PMID:Oncogenicity of human N-ras oncogene and proto-oncogene introduced into retroviral vectors. 254 8
Bone marrow transplantation is increasingly used to treat a broad spectrum of human diseases including aplastic anemia,
leukemia
, solid tumors, immune and genetic disorders. In certain circumstances the role of transplantation is reasonably well established, such as aplastic anemia and resistant
leukemia
. In other circumstances there is controversey as to the role of transplantation such as
leukemia
in remission. An increasing number of genetic disorders including severe combined immunodeficiency,
Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome
, osteopetrosis, and Thalassemia have been cured by transplantation. Despite substantial progress, with transplantation that remain to be solved including graft-vs.-host disease, interstitial pneumonia, immune deficiency, and the lack of suitable donors for most potential recipients. These problems and potential approaches are discussed in detail Future direction of research include the application of transplantation to other diseases as well as the use of this approach either as a prelude to solid-organ grafts or as a vehicle for the introduction of new genetic information.
...
PMID:Bone marrow transplantation. 391 31
IgE levels were determined before and serially after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT) in 12 patients. Six patients had aplastic anemia, four
leukemia
, and one each
Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome
and infantile agranulocytosis. IgE levels increased sharply (7- to 2,000-fold) in 10 of the 12 as early as 14 days after BMT. They all returned to baseline levels by 60 days. In six of these patients, the rise accompanied clinical and biochemical evidence of acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD). All of the patients who received rabbit antihuman thymocytic serum (ATS) in preparation for transplantation and were tested for IgE antirabbit serum antibody by radioallergosorbent test (RAST) (n = 6) developed a strongly positive RAST which paralleled their total IgE levels. These high IgE levels detected during the period of acute GVHD may be a manifestation of a transient lack of suppressor T cell activity.
...
PMID:Increased serum immunoglobulin E levels following allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. 699 85
Information was collected on 301 cases of the
Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome
in the United States and Canada Examination of available medical records, death certificates and published case reports on these patients showed that they came from a wide geographic area and many diverse ethnic and racial groups. No significant difference was found in the incidence of cases born between 1947 and 1976; the overall rate was 4.0 per million live male births in the United States. Median survival has increased with time from eight months for patients born before 1935 to 6.5 years for those born after 1964. Seventy-six of the 301 patients (25%) were still alive at last follow-up and ranged in age from 1 to 36 years with a median of 10 years. Causes of death were primarily limited to infections or bleeding, but malignancy represented a significant problem. Twelve percent of the group (36 of 301) developed malignancy, the predominant types being lymphorecticular tumors (23 of 36) and
leukemia
(7 of 36). The overall relative risk for malignancy was found to be greater than 100 times that of the general population and was found to increase with increasing age.
...
PMID:The Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome in the United States and Canada (1892-1979). 738 51
Cord blood has been used successfully for stem cell transplantation in several haematological conditions: Fanconi's anaemia,
leukaemia
and
Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome
. On account of the low incidence of GVHD observed following cord blood transplantation, it has been suggested that cord blood be used for HLA-matched, or perhaps one or two antigens mismatched, and unrelated stem cell transplantation. Based on an extensive immunophenotype-functional correlation, we determined that cord blood contains mainly immature unprimed T lymphocytes that are predominantly suppressor cells. Recent findings suggest that dysregulated production of cytokines (IL-1, IL-2, TNF alpha) plays a role in GVHD. We showed that T cells in cord blood express receptors for IL-2, TNF alpha, but no receptors for IL-1. Similarly, NK cells, one of the effector cells of GVHD, express receptors for TNF alpha and gamma IFN but do not express receptors for IL-1, nor IL-2R alpha-chain (CD25) although IL-2R beta-chain is expressed. The potential for activation of T lymphocytes and NK cells therefore exists in the context of bone marrow transplantation. However, the high number of suppressor cells in cord blood most likely modulate the activation of lymphocytes and NK cells thereby minimizing GVHD.
...
PMID:Phenotypic analysis of functional T-lymphocyte subtypes and natural killer cells in human cord blood: relevance to umbilical cord blood transplantation. 777 9
Mutations of the p53 tumor suppressor gene are among the most common genetic alterations found in many different human malignancies, including those of the colon, lung, and breast. Alterations in wild-type p53 lead to loss of the suppressor function and thus contribute to tumorigenesis. The potential role of p53 mutations in a sampling of B-cell lymphomas, the majority of which were associated with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), was investigated. Twenty-six biopsy specimens from immunocompromised patients, including allograft recipients and patients with AIDS, Wiscott-
Aldrich syndrome
, and human T-cell
leukemia
virus type 1 infection, in comparison with three Burkitt lymphomas and four Burkitt lymphoma cell lines were analyzed. Mutation in p53 was detected in all four Burkitt lymphoma cell lines as well as the three Burkitt lymphoma biopsy specimens. In patients with AIDS, 5 of 10 lymphomas were EBV positive, and 1 had a mutation in p53. Mutation in p53 was not detected in 14 EBV-positive lymphomas which arose in transplant recipients. These data indicate that with the exception of Burkitt lymphomas, p53 mutations are not involved in the majority EBV-positive B-cell lymphomas which develop in immunocompromised patients.
...
PMID:Alterations of the p53 gene in Epstein-Barr virus-associated immunodeficiency-related lymphomas. 810 96
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