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)

There have been many reports of space-time clusters of patients with Hodgkin's disease, childhood leukemia and Burkitt's lymphoma. We present a tight space cluster of 4 men with pathologically confirmed testicular seminomas. None of the men had any known reason to be at increased risk for testicular cancer. They all lived in the same immediate neighborhood for at least 7 years. There were 2 sources of potential carcinogens in the area. It is concluded that testicular cancer may have developed in these men as a result of exposure to environmental carcinogens.
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PMID:A geographic cluster of testicular seminomas. 684 17

The most common second primary tumors after treatment of childhood Hodgkin's disease are leukemia, lymphoma, breast cancer, soft tissue sarcoma, and thyroid cancer. Although intracranial meningioma has been reported after radiotherapy to the scalp for benign conditions and for intracranial primary brain tumors, this appears to be an extremely rare sequelae of treatment for Hodgkin's disease. The authors describe a 15-year-old boy who underwent radiotherapy for Hodgkin's disease and in whom a meningioma developed in the posterior fossa 27 years later.
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PMID:Meningioma after radiotherapy for Hodgkin's disease. 1044 Jan 90

Survivors of childhood Hodgkin's lymphoma (HL) have an increased risk of developing treatment-related complications, especially second malignant neoplasms, as a result of treatment regimens incorporating chemotherapy and radiation therapy. Second cancers include leukemias that generally occur in the first two decades after therapy, and adult-type solid tumors that generally exhibit continued increasing incidence throughout subsequent follow-up. Identified clinical risk factors for second cancers include age at the time of treatment and intensity and type of therapy, with particularly strong associations between the use of radiotherapy and subsequent breast cancer, and alkylator chemotherapy dose-intensity and risk of secondary leukemia. However, second cancers affect a minority of patients, and there is probably great variability in individual susceptibility for this complication. Common genetic polymorphisms in drug-metabolizing enzymes that result in impaired detoxification of chemotherapy or inefficient repair of drug- or radiation-induced genetic damage may lead to increased risk of a second cancer. Studies of the potential role of polymorphisms in the genes encoding the glutathione S-transferases, cytochrome P450 3A4, NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase and myeloperoxidase in the etiology of treatment-related complications are reviewed. Biological markers of drug- and radiation-induced genetic damage may also identify patients at higher risk of immediate and delayed side effects of therapy. The Children's Oncology Group (COG) is examining the roles of polymorphisms in drug metabolizing enzymes and biological markers of genotoxicity in predicting the treatment-related outcomes of patients with HL. These investigations may ultimately allow the use of pharmacogenetically guided therapy to improve the outcome of HL therapy and reduce the risk of therapy-related complications, especially secondary malignancies.
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PMID:Polymorphisms of drug metabolizing enzymes and markers of genotoxicity to identify patients with Hodgkin's lymphoma at risk of treatment-related complications. 1207

Although childhood Hodgkin disease is sensitive to the treatment regimens devised for Hodgkin disease in adults, long-term toxicity is enhanced in the developing individual. As a result, there have been dual goals in the design of clinical trials for pediatric Hodgkin disease: 1) to reduce long-term organ injury; and 2) to increase efficacy. Radiation dose and field has been reduced by enhanced reliance on chemotherapy, thus limiting the risks of hypoplasia, hypothyroidism, secondary cancers, and valvular and atherosclerotic heart disease. Multiagent, chemotherapeutic regimens for children have been developed to avoid the risks of sterility, leukemia, and cardiopulmonary toxicity. Newer approaches advocate for early dose intensity to limit cumulative therapy using response-based paradigms. Targeting molecular mechanisms specific for the Reed-Sternberg cell may allow for less toxic and more efficacious treatments in the future.
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PMID:The management of Hodgkin disease in the young child. 1254 64

Ataxia telangiectasia is an autosomal recessive disease with a striking predisposition of lymphoid malignancies. ATM mutations have been reported in adult sporadic lymphoma and leukaemia. The aim of this study was to investigate the possible involvement of the ATM gene in the carcinogenesis of Hodgkin disease in children. Tumours were obtained from 23 patients and were subjected to mutation screening and loss of heterozygosity analysis. Eight base substitutions were identified in seven patients. Of them, Y54Y, a silent change, was observed in two patients and a known polymorphism, D1853N, in three patients. Of the other two patients, one harboured a combined genotype P604S/F1463C, identified previously in two patients with Hodgkin lymphoma, and the other a novel missense mutation, V595A. The alterations were present in the germ line, and both had a more aggressive disease. In all, 100 matched normal ethnic controls were screened for these mutations and P604S/F1463C was identified in one healthy control. Loss of heterozygosity was identified in four patients and in three of them it was located centromeric to the ATM gene, and, in one, it spanned a large region, indicating the involvement of other tumour-suppressor genes in this disease. Missense variants of the ATM gene are a rare event in childhood Hodgkin disease.
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PMID:Molecular variants of the ATM gene in Hodgkin's disease in children. 1473 3

Although treatment of pediatric Hodgkin disease has become highly effective over the past 40 years, a number of patients have developed concerning late effects, such as secondary malignancies. These cancers may occur years to decades after remission and arise in the breast, thyroid, gastrointestinal tract, lung, skin, urogenital tract, and brain. There is also an increased risk of leukemia and non-Hodgkin lymphoma. Etiology and risk factors for each cancer type vary but often include certain chemotherapy agents and radiation dosages. Survivorship also varies but is often poor. The authors examined retrospective analyses of these secondary malignancies and present a summary of these findings. The information may allow clinicians to better monitor childhood Hodgkin disease survivors and reduce mortality.
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PMID:Second malignancy after treatment of pediatric Hodgkin disease. 1565 75

The introduction of modern methods of combined therapy: chemotherapy and radiotherapy, allows the cure more than 90% of children and adolescents with Hodgkin's disease. However, the intensive treatment may cause early and late complications. The late complications may include: damage of soft tissues and respiratory, cardiovascular, skeletal, and endocrine systems, and second cancers. Late complications may impair the patients' quality of life after cessation of therapy. This study presents evaluation of health status of persons who underwent therapy for pediatric Hodgkin's disease in centers of Polish Pediatric Leukemia/Lymphoma Study Group. The special questionnaire was established to collect data concerning hematopoietic system function, damage of soft tissues and skeletal system, thyroid and reproductive organs function, respiratory, cardiovascular, and nervous system function, liver and kidney function, status of dentition, occurrence of infections, immunologic system function, and psychological and social problems. The project included patients treated in 9 pediatric oncology centers. During the study the questionnaires of 288 patients [151 boys (52.4%) and 137 girls (47.6%)] in whom treatment of Hodgkins's disease started in 1994-1996 (44 questionnaires), and in 1997-2001 (244 questionnaires). In 42 patients no diagnostic procedures were performed. In this group 20 patients are currently under care of adult oncology clinics, 21 failed to come for a visit, and one patient is treated because of HD progression. The questionnaires of 246 patients treated in 1994-1996 (25 questionnaires) and 1997-2001 (221 questionnaires), were analyzed and the data on the late complications of these patients were obtained. General health status of examined patients was found satisfactory. However, 2.3% of patients had radiological evidence of pulmonary fibrosis, and 4.9% had various ECG abnormalities. Endocrine therapy is needed in 4.5% of patients because of thyroid function abnormalities. Second cancers were diagnosed in 1.7% of patients. The health status of children and adolescents cured from Hodgkin's disease and other childhood cancers should be regularly evaluated. Results of these evaluations will be the basis for introducing new treatment protocols aimed of decreasing the incidence of late complications while maintaining or improving cure rates.
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PMID:[The health state evaluation in persons after therapy of Hodgkin's disease in childhood: report of the Polish Pediatric Leukemia/Lymphoma Study Group]. 1689 95