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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (
leukemia
)
93,477
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The authors present a 4-year-old girl with nephrotic syndrome who developed actue lymphoblastic
leukaemia
5 months after the start of a combined treatment of alternate day prednisone and daily cyclophosphamide during 3 months. The nephrotic syndrome was due to focal segmental
glomerulosclerosis
. The occurrence of
leukaemia
might be related to the preceeding treatment with cyclophosphamide.
...
PMID:Acute lymphoblastic leukaemia after treatment of nephrotic syndrome with immunosuppressive drugs. 106 23
A 13-year-old boy was found to have acute lymphoblastic leukemia 4 months after the diagnosis of nephrotic syndrome was made. Renal biopsy revealed focal segmental
glomerulosclerosis
(FSGS). While his
leukemia
remains in remission 7+ years from diagnosis, he requires chronic hemodialysis due to renal failure. The multiple immunosuppressive antileukemia agents he received did not appear to affect the progression of his renal disease.
...
PMID:Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis in a child with acute lymphoblastic leukemia. 208 98
A boy with null-cell
leukemia
received a bone marrow allograft after preparation with chemotherapy and total body irradiation. Cyclosporine A was not administered following transplantation. Renal biopsy performed 6 months after transplantation because of unexplained deterioration of renal function revealed diffuse mesangiolysis and
glomerular sclerosis
. The significance of this finding is discussed with reference to similar, recently reported cases.
...
PMID:Mesangiolytic glomerulopathy in a bone marrow allograft recipient. 265 94
A patient with acute myelomonocytic
leukemia
(AML) developed nephrotic syndrome. The renal biopsy showed focal
glomerulosclerosis
by light microscopy. Electron microscopy and immunofluorescence revealed electrondense deposits, IgG and C'3 in the glomerular mesangium. A 21S circulating immune complex (CIC) present in the patient's serum and the renal biopsy eluate contained immunochemically identical materials. The isolated antibodies from the 21S CIC and the eluate showed restricted reactivity against autologous AML cells. Immunodiffusion studies demonstrated common antigenicity between the 21S CIC antigen, the eluted antigen and between autologous AML cell membrane antigens.
...
PMID:Acute myelomonocytic leukemia associated with nephrotic syndrome. A case report with immunological studies. 657 68
The proto-oncogene Frat1 was originally identified as a common site of proviral insertion in transplanted tumors of Moloney murine
leukemia
virus (M-MuLV)-infected Emu-Pim1 transgenic mice. Contrary to most common insertion sites implicated in mouse T cell lymphomagenesis, retroviral insertional mutagenesis of Frat1 constitutes a relatively late event in M-MuLV-induced tumor development, suggesting that proviral activation of Frat1 contributes to progression of T cell lymphomas rather than their genesis. To substantiate this notion we have generated transgenic mice that overexpress Frat1 in various organs, including lymphoid tissues. Frat1 transgenic mice develop focal
glomerulosclerosis
and a nephrotic syndrome, but they do not exhibit an increased incidence of spontaneous lymphomas. Conversely, these mice are highly susceptible to M-MuLV-induced lymphomagenesis, and Frat1/Pim1 bitransgenic animals develop lymphomas with increased frequency compared to Pim1 transgenic littermates. These data support a role for Frat1 in tumor progression.
...
PMID:Overexpression of Frat1 in transgenic mice leads to glomerulosclerosis and nephrotic syndrome, and provides direct evidence for the involvement of Frat1 in lymphoma progression. 1055 87
Hypercalcemic nephropathy has been classified as a tubulointerstitial renal disease. The presence of glomerular pathologic findings attributable to hypercalcemia has been observed in only a few patients and therefore has been considered an unusual finding. In the current study, calcium deposition within glomeruli was investigated in 2 patients with extreme elevations in serum calcium levels and hypercalcemic nephropathy. The study material consisted of a renal biopsy specimen from a 31-year-old woman (patient 1) who had T-cell lymphoma/
leukemia
and a serum calcium level of 20.2 mg/dL (5.0 mmol/L) and autopsy kidney specimens from a 19-year-old woman (patient 2) who was being evaluated for primary hyperparathyroidism and a calcium level of 18.4 mg/dL (4.6 mmol/L). The renal biopsy specimen for patient 1 exhibited calcium deposits present in the glomerular capillary basement membranes, where they were associated with segmental sclerosing lesions (21% of glomeruli). Nine percent of the cortical tubules contained calcifications. In patient 2, calcium was found in the mesangial areas in 95% of glomeruli, filling the Bowman space in 7% of glomeruli, or associated with capillary basement membranes and segmental sclerosing lesions (12% of glomeruli). Fifteen percent of cortical tubules, 4% of outer medullary tubules, and 40% of inner medullary tubules were calcified. In neither case was there immunofluorescence or electron microscopic evidence of primary glomerular disease. Thus, glomerular calcification may exceed that occurring in the cortical and outer medullary tubules and may play a significant role in the loss of renal function in hypercalcemic nephropathy. Glomerular calcinosis may also be recognized as an additional cause of segmental
glomerulosclerosis
and nephrotic range proteinuria in patients with extremely high levels of serum calcium.
...
PMID:Glomerular calcification in hypercalcemic nephropathy. 1256 59
A 5-year-old African-American male was diagnosed with nephrotic syndrome (NS). Because of concomitant leukopenia, bone marrow aspiration was performed, which did not demonstrate a hematological malignancy. The patient received standard daily steroid therapy for treatment of NS. Steroid resistance at 5 weeks of therapy led to a renal biopsy, which documented focal segmental
glomerulosclerosis
(FSGS). He was begun on cyclosporin A (CsA) and later switched to tacrolimus because of side-effects of CsA. Seven months after the initial diagnosis of NS, the patient was diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). The patient is in complete remission of ALL and partial remission of NS with continued nephrotic-range proteinuria. Review of the literature shows four other cases of pediatric ALL after NS. No particular immunosuppressive agent seemed to be causative in the evolution of ALL. Although the exact mechanism for development of ALL after NS is unknown, the incidence of
leukemia
may be increased after immunosuppressive therapy when used in this context.
...
PMID:Acute lymphoblastic leukemia in a child with nephrotic syndrome. 1537 24
The authors report a 9-year-old boy presenting with a left cerebral ischemic infarction as the first manifestation of acute promyelocytic leukemia. During consolidation chemotherapy, the patient developed nephrotic syndrome and a renal biopsy revealed focal segmental
glomerulosclerosis
(FSGS). Remission in bone marrow was achieved with chemotherapy, however, new intracranial ischemic areas developed on follow-up. Acute promyelocytic leukemia complicated by FSGS has not been previously reported in children. There may be a relationship between anthracycline treatment and FSGS. Thrombosis could be related with both
leukemia
and nephrotic syndrome, here thrombosis was the initial symptom, before FSGS was diagnosed.
...
PMID:Acute promyelocytic leukemia treated with idarubicin complicated by focal segmental glomerulosclerosis. 2004 87
We report a case of collapsing glomerulopathy associated with natural killer cell
leukemia
in a previously healthy 27-year-old African American man. An initial kidney biopsy showed findings concordant with the cellular variant of focal segmental
glomerulosclerosis
. A repeated biopsy 3 months later showed collapsing glomerulopathy, likely representing a morphologic evolution from a cellular variant into the collapsing glomerulopathy variant of focal segmental
glomerulosclerosis
. Collapsing glomerulopathy has been described in connection with a number of disparate disorders in which podocyte injury seems to be the common denominator. The close temporal association between clinical presentation and the development of nephropathy provides support for a direct pathogenic link between the underlying lymphoproliferative disorder and the glomerular lesions. We hypothesize that dysregulated cytokine production by the neoplastic cells led to podocyte alterations and eventually to the development of collapsing glomerulopathy.
...
PMID:Collapsing glomerulopathy associated with natural killer cell leukemia: a case report and review of the literature. 2190 87
Renal injury in hematopoietic cell transplant recipients may be related to a combination of factors including chemotherapy, radiation, infection, immunosuppressive agents, ischemia, and graft-versus-host disease, and can involve glomerular, tubulointerstitial, and vascular structures. We reviewed renal pathology from 67 patients at a single institution (2009-2014), including 14 patients with biopsy for clinical dysfunction, 6 patients with surgical kidney resection for other causes, and 47 autopsy patients. Kidney specimens frequently contained multiple histopathologic abnormalities. Thrombotic microangiopathy, membranous nephropathy, minimal change disease, and focal segmental
glomerulosclerosis
were the most common glomerular findings. Pathologies not previously reported in the hematopoietic cell transplant setting included collapsing glomerulopathy, antiglomerular basement membrane disease, fibrillary glomerulonephritis, and in the case of two surgical resections distinctive cellular segmental glomerular lesions that defied classification. Kidney specimens frequently demonstrated acute tubular injury, interstitial fibrosis, arteriolar hyaline, and arteriosclerosis. Other kidney findings at autopsy included
leukemia
and amyloid (both recurrent), diabetic nephropathy, bacterial infection, fungal invasion, and silver deposition along glomerular and tubular basement membranes. Also in the autopsy cohort, C4d immunohistochemistry demonstrated unexpected membranous nephropathy in two patients, yet C4d also colocalized with arteriolar hyaline. This retrospective hematopoietic cell transplant cohort illustrates multifaceted renal injury in patients with renal dysfunction, as well as in patients without clinically recognized kidney injury.
...
PMID:Renal pathology in hematopoietic cell transplant recipients: a contemporary biopsy, nephrectomy, and autopsy series. 2701 34
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