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)

Disseminated infection with Aspergillus terreus is a rare disease that affects only the immunocompromised host. We report a case of systemic infection with A. terreus resulting in endocarditis, aortic embolization, and splenic infarction in a patient with acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Diagnosis through peripheral blood culture, lack of pulmonary involvement, and onset of disease during complete remission from leukemia constitute uncommon features of this case.
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PMID:Endocarditis and aortal embolization caused by Aspergillus terreus in a patient with acute lymphoblastic leukemia in remission: diagnosis by peripheral-blood culture. 977 91

IgE multiple myeloma is a rare disease characterized by a high frequency of Bence-Jones proteinuria and plasma cell leukaemia when compared to other isotypes of monoclonal proteins. Only 35 cases have been reported. We describe a 70-year-old woman with a stage III IgE kappa multiple myeloma presenting with a sacral plasmacytoma. Immunological and biochemical studies showed IgE kappa producing tumoral plasma cells. Serum total IgE was high without clinical symptoms suggesting an hyperIgE syndrome or mast cell activation. The patient underwent surgical removal of the sacral tumor and monthly melphalan-prednisone treatment together with intravenous pamidronate infusions. Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) of the dorsolumbar spine revealed an epidural process leading to T6-T9 radiotherapy. Bone densitometry showed a decreased bone mineral content supporting the management of myeloma-related osteoporosis with bisphosphonate infusions. A good partial response with plateau-phase and increase of bone mineral content was achieved after 1 year of treatment and still persists after a 28 months follow-up.
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PMID:IgE multiple myeloma. 1004 34

A father and son who both developed chronic neutrophilic leukaemia (CNL) are reported. The father, aged 63, had been exposed to radioactive fallout after the atomic bomb attack on Hiroshima; he presented with hepatosplenomegaly and neutrophilic leucocytosis, and died of intracerebral haemorrhage 1 month after diagnosis. 4 years later his son, then aged 44, presented with neutrophilic leucocytosis. Leukaemic transformation to acute myelogenous leukaemia (AML-M1) occurred, and he died of refractory leukaemia 4 months after the diagnosis of CNL. This is the first report of this rare disease occurring in family members; genetic effect due to radioactive poisoning was suspected in the development of CNL in these two cases.
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PMID:Familial occurrence of chronic neutrophilic leukaemia. 1023 14

Six statistics are compared in a simulation study for their ability to identify geographical areas with a known excess incidence of a rare disease. The statistics are the standardized incidence ratio, the empirical Bayes method of Clayton and Kaldor, Poisson probability, a statistic based on the 'Breslow T' test (BT) and two statistics based on the 'Potthoff-Whittinghill' test (PW) for extra-Poisson variance. Two alternative processes of clustering are simulated in which high-risk locations could be caused by environmental sources or could be sites of microepidemics of an infectious agent contributing to a rare disease such as childhood leukaemia. The simulation processes use two parameters (proportion of cases found in clusters and mean cluster size) which are varied to embrace a variety of situations. Real and artificial data sets of small area populations are considered. The most extreme of the artificial sets has all areas of equal population size. The other data sets use the small census areas (municipalities) in Finland since these have extremely heterogeneous population size distribution. Subset selection allows examination of this variability. Receiver operator curve methodology is used to compare the efficacy of the statistics in identifying the cluster areas; statistics are compared for the proportion of true high-risk areas identified in the top 1 per cent and 10 per cent of ranked areas. One of the PW statistics performed consistently well under all circumstances, although the results for the BT statistic were marginally better when only the top 1 per cent of ranked areas was considered. The standardized incidence ratio performed consistently worst.
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PMID:A comparison of some simple methods to identify geographical areas with excess incidence of a rare disease such as childhood leukaemia. 1039 88

Aplastic anaemia is a rare disease which is more prevalent in the Far East. In Malaysia, it appears to be unusually common in the state of Sabah. A retrospective analysis of all cases of aplastic anaemia diagnosed between January 1993 and March 1996 was undertaken. The criteria of the International Aplastic Anaemia and Agranulocytosis Study (IAAAS) was used. In this 39 month period, 31 cases were confirmed by marrow trephine biopsy to be aplastic anaemia. The male-to-female ratio was 3.4. Median age of diagnosis was 23 years. There were 24 patients (77%) who were from the Kadazan-Dusun ethnic group, which forms 18% of the population of Sabah. The incidence of aplastic anaemia in Sabah appears to be higher than that reported elsewhere in the Far East, at 4.8 per million population per year. Peak incidence is in the elderly group at 8.6 per million followed by a second peak in young people aged 15 to 24 (7.9 per million). The aplastic anaemia to total acute leukaemia ratio is 0.37. The marked male preponderance and apparent susceptibility of the Kadazan-Dusun people are also notable. A further prospective study to address the true incidence of aplastic anaemia and possible aetiologic factors accounting for these observations is necessary.
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PMID:Epidemiology of aplastic anaemia in the state of Sabah, Malaysia. 1096 39

Candidal meningitis is a rare disease that is seen most frequently in neonates, neurosurgical patients, and the immunocompromised host. We describe a series of 12 children with cancer (all of whom had leukemia) who had candidal meningitis develop. Univariate analysis revealed that duration of fever, antibiotic therapy, and profound neutropenia and use of total parenteral nutrition were significantly associated (P<.05) with candidal meningitis in children with cancer, compared with matched control subjects. Only duration of profound neutropenia (P=.08) and use of total parenteral nutrition (P=.06) approached significance in the multivariate analysis. One species of Candida, Candida tropicalis, was responsible for 11 of the 12 cases, indicating increased pathogenicity of this organism in CNS disease. The cases were invariably fatal, supporting aggressive treatment of candidal meningitis in immunocompromised patients and further study of the prevention, diagnosis, and management of C. tropicalis meningitis.
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PMID:Candidal meningitis in children with cancer. 1098 4

Congenital amegakaryocytic thrombocytopenia (CAMT) without physical anomalies is a rare disease, presenting isolated thrombocytopenia and megakaryocytopenia in infancy, which can evolve into aplastic anemia and leukemia. Recently, two heterozygous truncating mutations of the thrombopoietin (TPO) receptor MPL, coded by the c-mpl gene, were identified in a 10-year-old Japanese patient with CAMT transmitted in an autosomal recessive manner. Here, we report for the first time two different MPL amino-acid substitutions in a 2-year-old Italian boy with CAMT and compound heterozygosis for two (c-mpl point mutations. C-to-T transitions were detected on exons 5 and 12 at the 769 and 1904 cDNA nucleotide positions, respectively. The mutation in exon 5 substitutes an arginine with a cysteine (R257C) in the extracellular domain, 11 amino acids distant from the WSXWS motif conserved in the cytokine-receptor superfamily. The mutation in exon 12 substitutes a proline with a leucine (P635L) in the last amino acid of the C-terminal intracellular domain, responsible for signal transduction. As in the Japanese family, the mutations were both transmitted from the parents. TPO plasma levels were highly increased in the patient. The patient's 7-year-old brother, who was a candidate donor for allografting, turned out to be an asymptomatic heterozygous carrier of P635L and showed defective megakaryocyte colony formation from bone-marrow progenitor cells. The present study provides important confirmation that CAMT can be associated with (c-mpl) mutations.
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PMID:Compound heterozygosity for two different amino-acid substitution mutations in the thrombopoietin receptor (c-mpl gene) in congenital amegakaryocytic thrombocytopenia (CAMT). 1107 83

Infant leukemia below the age of 12 months is a rare disease that exhibits a high frequency of 11q23 rearrangements. We assessed the presence of polymorphisms in several metabolic genes in 23 families of infants diagnosed with leukemia under 12 months of age in Italy. When polymorphism frequencies were calculated within families, frequencies of GST gene deletions were significantly higher than expected only among the parents of infants without the 11q23 rearrangement. These data suggest that the deletion of GST genes in parents may affect the risk of infant leukemia through a pathway independent of the MLL gene.
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PMID:Deletion of parental GST genes as a possible susceptibility factor in the etiology of infant leukemia. 1108 81

Mutations in the genes of hematopoietic growth factor receptors as a cause of congenital cytopenia, such as congenital amegakaryocytic thrombocytopenia (CAMT) or severe congenital neutropenia (CN), are discussed. There are striking differences in the relevance of receptor mutations in these diseases. CAMT is a rare disease characterized by severe hypomegakaryocytic thrombocytopenia during the first years of life that develops into pancytopenia in later childhood. In patients with CAMT, we found inherited mutations in c-mpl, the gene coding for the thrombopoietin receptor, in 8 out of 8 cases. The type of mutation seems to correlate with the clinical course seen in the patients. Functional studies demonstrated defective thrombopoietin (TPO) reactivity in hematopoietic progenitor cells and platelets in CAMT patients. CN is a group of hematopoietic disorders characterized by profound, absolute neutropenia due to a maturation arrest of myeloid progenitor cells. About 10% of all patients develop secondary MDS/leukemia. The malignant progression is associated with acquired nonsense mutations within the G-CSF receptor gene that lead to the truncation of the carboxy-terminal cytoplasmic domain of the receptor protein involved in maturation of myeloid progenitor cells. This seems to be one important step in leukemogenesis in CN patients. CAMT is caused by inherited mutations in c-mpl, the gene for the thrombopoietin receptor, which lead to reduced or absent reactivity to TPO. In contrast, mutations in the G-CSF receptor in CN are acquired and are most probably connected with progression of the neutropenia into MDS/leukemia as a result of a loss of differentiation signaling.
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PMID:Implications of mutations in hematopoietic growth factor receptor genes in congenital cytopenias. 1145 19

Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) is a rare disease in Japan. Recent advances in molecular biology, diagnostic criteria and classification of CLL have reinforced the concept of each category of CLL as a distinct entity. Since there have been no recent studies on the incidence and prevalence of CLL in Japan, the Kyushu Hematology Organization for Treatment (K-HOT) Study Group conducted two studies of CLL. One study is a prospective registration of newly diagnosed hematological disorders, which gave us some idea of the incidence of CLL in our region (Kyushu island) where adult T-cell leukemia is endemic. A total of 677 patients with hematological disorders were registered over a 6-month period and 11 patients were diagnosed as having CLL among 182 leukemia patients. This amounts to 6% of all leukemias, which is twice as frequent as previously reported in Japan. The other study is a retrospective analysis of CLL. Eleven institutions of the K-HOT Group analysed their diagnostic records of chronic lymphoid leukemia, and 145 patients with CLL were found over a period of 3-12 yr. After the data were reviewed 11 patients were excluded through having a different type of leukemia. The proportion of chronic B-cell lymphoid leukemia was 73% (98/134), while that of T-cell leukemia was 18% (24/134). The proportion of T-cell chronic leukemia was 5-6 times higher than that in Western countries. Two institutions had a complete database on hematological disorders. From this database, the annual incidence of CLL was estimated to be 0.48 per 100 000. Thus, the incidence of CLL in Japan is at least 4-5 times lower than that in Western countries, suggesting that chronic B-cell leukemia is really rare, but chronic leukemia of T-cell lineage develops in Japan as frequently as in Western societies. Further investigation is required to delineate why the incidence of B-CLL is so low in Japan.
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PMID:Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) is rare, but the proportion of T-CLL is high in Japan. 1173 47


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