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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (
leukemia
)
93,477
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Bcl-2, Bcl-xL, and Mcl-1 are three related intracellular polypeptides that have been implicated as negative regulators of apoptosis. In contrast, the partner protein Bax acts as a positive regulator of apoptosis. Based on the observation that all four of these polypeptides are expressed in a variety of acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) and acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL) cell lines, cellular levels of these polypeptides were examined by immunoblotting in bone marrow samples harvested from 123 adult AML patients and 36
adult ALL
patients before initial antileukemic therapy. Levels of Bcl-2, Mcl-1, Bcl-xL, and Bax each varied over a more than 10-fold range in different pretreatment
leukemia
specimens. When the 54 AML and 23 ALL samples that contained greater than 80% malignant cells were examined in greater detail, it was observed that pretreatment levels of Bcl-2 and Mcl-1 correlated with each other (R = .44, P < .001 for AML and R = .79, P < .0001 for ALL). In addition, a weak negative correlation between Bax expression and age was observed in AML samples (R = -0.35, P < .02) but not ALL samples. There was no relationship between pretreatment levels of these polypeptides and response to initial therapy. However, examination of 19 paired samples (the first harvested before chemotherapy and the second harvested 23 to 290 days later at the time of leukemic recurrence) revealed a greater than or equal to twofold increase in Mcl-1 levels in 10 of 19 pairs (7 of 15 AML and 3 of 4 ALL) at recurrence. In contrast, 2 of 19 pairs contained twofold less Mcl-1 at the time of recurrence. Approximately equal numbers of samples showed twofold increases and decreases in Bcl-2 (5 increases, 3 decreases) and Bcl-xL (1 increase, 4 decreases) at recurrence. Bax levels did not show a twofold decrease in any patient. these results, coupled with recent observations that cells overexpressing Mcl-1 are resistant to a variety of chemotherapeutic agents, raise the possibility that some chemotherapeutic regimens might select for
leukemia
cells with elevated levels of this particular apoptosis inhibitor.
...
PMID:Elevated expression of the apoptotic regulator Mcl-1 at the time of leukemic relapse. 944 61
On the basis of a previous experience suggesting that daunorubicin dose in induction was an independent prognostic factor in
adult ALL
, we designed a chemotherapeutic regimen (ALLVR589) characterized by high doses of daunorubicin (270 mg/m2) in induction and by high-dose Ara-C in post-remission. The protocol was otherwise conventional: induction and post-remission therapy were followed by chemo-radio prophylaxis of the central nervous system (CNS) and periodical reinductions over a 3-year maintenance period. Sixty consecutive patients (male 42, female 18, median age 34 years, range 14-71; B-lineage, 35; T-lineage, 25; Ph' and bcr/abl positive, 7) recruited between 1989 and 1996, were evaluated for treatment outcome. Complete remissions were 56 (93%), one patient had refractory disease, early deaths were five (8%); 19/56 (34%) patients relapsed, five of whom were Ph'+. Median time to relapse was 11 months (range 3-47); 68% of relapses occurred within 12 months from CR. No CNS relapses were observed. After a median follow-up of 44 months (1-100), 33/60 (55%) patients remain event-free; 23/60 (38%) are off-therapy in continuous CR (median follow-up from diagnosis: 63 months; range 38-100). These results suggest that increasing DNM dosage in induction is one of the possible approaches to improve the outcome of
adult ALL
by decreasing the relapse occurrence.
Leukemia
1998 Feb
PMID:Estimated 6-year event-free survival of 55% in 60 consecutive adult acute lymphoblastic leukemia patients treated with an intensive phase II protocol based on high induction dose of daunorubicin. 951 75
The purpose of the study was to examine the influence of age on outcome in a large cohort of children and adults with lymphoblastic
leukaemia
who were treated on two similar trials. Factors influencing outcome were examined in 2204 patients aged over 1 year treated between 1985 and 1992 on the parallel Medical Research Council Trials UKALL X and XA, for children and adults, respectively. There was a progressive worsening in survival with increasing age from 85% (95% CI 83-87) at 5 years for children aged 1-9 to 24% (CI 17-31) for patients over 40. Induction failures, deaths in remission and bone marrow relapses increased significantly with age. Analysis of clinical and biological features showed dominance of early B-ALL in childhood and increasing incidence of the Ph' chromosome with age. Over 80% of eligible children, but a much lower proportion of adults especially those over 40, was entered. Compliance was stricter in the paediatric trial but most deviations in adults involved giving more treatment. Analysis of results in a proportional hazards model confirmed the overwhelming independent influence of age; with all other factors equal a 10 year old had half the risk of treatment failure of a 20 year old and a 44 year old double the risk. Selective entry to therapeutic trials and increased treatment-related toxicity are features of
adult ALL
but age itself remains a dominant prognostic factor. While improved supportive care and refinements of conventional therapy may have some effect on prognosis, new understandings and treatment approaches to
adult ALL
are needed.
Leukemia
1998 Apr
PMID:The impact of age on outcome in lymphoblastic leukaemia; MRC UKALL X and XA compared: a report from the MRC Paediatric and Adult Working Parties. 955 2
The use of intensive induction chemotherapy, primarily with combinations of an anthracycline and cytarabine, allows complete remission rates of greater than 70% in patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). However, with currently available standard-dose therapy, only 20% of young adults are cured. In order to substantially increase the cure rate, adequate post-remission therapeutic strategies are mandatory. Three different therapeutic options are currently available: (i) dose-intensified chemotherapy; (ii) allogeneic stem cell transplantation; (iii) autologous stem cell transplantation. These therapeutic options should be carefully evaluated according to prognostic information, including cytogenetic and molecular abnormalities as well as phenotypic characterization. Randomized trials of intensive postremission therapy have now confirmed improved
leukemia
-free survival with the use of allogeneic or autologous transplantation. Autologous transplantation appears to be the most promising treatment modality in AML. Improved preparative regimens and purging techniques may be critical factors in determining the effectiveness of autologous transplantation in AML patients. In
adult ALL
, the role and optimal methods of stem cell transplantation are still under investigation.
...
PMID:High-dose therapy in acute leukemia. 957 Jun 81
Relapsed or refractory
adult acute lymphoblastic leukemia
(ALL) carries a grave prognosis. The most promising strategy for curing these patients is through re-induction chemotherapy followed by successful allogeneic transplant. We studied a new high-dose induction regimen in order to improve the outcome for these patients. Eighteen adult patients with relapsed/refractory ALL were treated on a phase I study of high-dose cytarabine combined with a single escalating dose of idarubicin. Five patients had primary refractory disease and 13 were treated in refractory relapse. Nine patients (50%) had Ph+ ALL. The induction regimen was cytarabine 3 g/m2/day intravenously days 1-5 and idarubicin as a single intravenous dose on day 3. G-CSF 5 microg/kg subcutaneously every 12 h was started on day 7. The initial idarubicin dose was 20 mg/m2 with dose escalations of 10 mg m2. Cohorts of three patients were treated at each idarubicin dose level. Unacceptable toxicity was encountered at 50 mg/m2 with one death from infection and one death from cardiotoxicity in a patient with significant prior anthracycline exposure. There were no instances of grade 4 non-hematologic toxicity encountered at idarubicin doses of 20 mg/m2, 30 mg/m2, or 40 mg/m2. The data suggest a dose-response relationship for increasing doses of idarubicin with 0/3 complete responses (CR) at 20 mg/m2, 1/3 CR at 30 mg/m2, and 7/12 (58%) CR at idarubicin doses > or = 40 mg/m2. We conclude that concomitant administration of cytarabine 3 g/m2/day x 5 and high-dose idarubicin at 40 mg/m2 as a single dose on day 3 can be administered safely to patients with refractory and relapsed ALL.
Leukemia
1998 Jun
PMID:A phase I trial of a single high dose of idarubicin combined with high-dose cytarabine as induction therapy in relapsed or refractory adult patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia. 963 12
In order to gain insight into immunoglobulin (Ig) and T cell receptor (TCR) gene rearrangements in
adult acute lymphoblastic leukemia
(ALL), we studied 48 adult patients: 26 with precursor-B-ALL and 22 with T-ALL. Southern blotting (SB) with multiple DNA probes for the IGH, IGK, TCRB, TCRG, TCRD and TAL1 loci revealed rearrangement patterns largely comparable to pediatric ALL, but several differences were found for precursor-B-ALL patients. Firstly, adult patients showed a lower level of oligoclonality in the IGH gene locus (five out of 26 patients; 19%) despite a comparable incidence of IGH gene rearrangements (24 out of 26 patients; 92%). Secondly, all detected IGK gene deletions (n = 12) concerned rearrangements of the kappa deleting element (Kde) to Vkappa gene segments, which represent two-thirds of the Kde rearrangements in pediatric precursor-B-ALL and only half of the Kde rearrangements in mature B cell leukemias. Thirdly, a striking predominance of immature Ddelta2-Ddelta3 cross-lineage recombinations was observed (seven out of 16 TCRD rearrangements; 44%), whereas more mature Vdelta2-Ddelta3 gene rearrangements occurred less frequently (six out of 16 TCRD rearrangements; 38% vs >70% in pediatric precursor-B-ALL). Together these data suggest that the Ig/TCR genotype of precursor-B-ALL is more immature and more stable in adults than in children. We also evaluated whether heteroduplex analysis of polymerase chain reaction (PCR) products of rearranged Ig and TCR genes can be used for identification of molecular targets for minimal residual disease (MRD) detection. Using five of the major gene targets (IGH, IGK, TCRG, TCRD and TAL1 deletion), we compared the SB data and heteroduplex PCR results. High concordance between the two methods ranging from 96 to 100% was found for IGK, TCRG and TAL1 genes. The concordance was lower for IGH (70%) and TCRD genes (90%), which may be explained by incomplete or 'atypical' rearrangements or by translocations detectable only by SB. Finally, the heteroduplex PCR data indicate, that MRD monitoring is possible in almost 90% of adult precursor-B-ALL and >95% of adult T-ALL patients.
Leukemia
1998 Jul
PMID:Immunoglobulin and T cell receptor gene rearrangement patterns in acute lymphoblastic leukemia are less mature in adults than in children: implications for selection of PCR targets for detection of minimal residual disease. 966 94
We report two patients with acute lymphoblastic
leukaemia
(ALL) who were entered into the current MRC
adult ALL
trial (UKALL XII) in whom unusually severe vincristine induced neurotoxicity developed. This appeared to be the result of an interaction with itraconazole suspension.
...
PMID:Severe vincristine toxicity in combination with itraconazole. 968 Dec 24
This review addresses diagnosis of CNS involvement, incidence and treatment of CNS disease at time of diagnosis, prophylaxis and treatment of CNS relapse and risk factors for meningeal recurrence in adult acute lymphoblastic
leukaemia
(ALL). At the time of diagnosis meningeosis leukaemica is present in about 6% (1-10%) of the
adult ALL
patients with a higher incidence in ALL subgroups T-ALL (8%) and B-ALL (13 %). With the invention of early additional CNS directed therapy it no longer represents an unfavourable prognostic factor. In the absence of prophylaxis meningeal relapses occur in approximately one third of adults with ALL. A literature review including more than 4000
adult ALL
patients showed for the different prophylactic treatment approaches the following CNS relapse rates: intrathecal therapy alone 13% (8-19%), intrathecal therapy and CNS irradiation 15% (6-22%), high dose chemotherapy 14% (10-16%), high dose chemotherapy and intrathecal therapy 8% (2-16%) and high dose chemotherapy, intrathecal therapy together with CNS irradiation 5% (1-12%). It became obvious that the early onset of intrathecal therapy and CNS irradiation and the continuation of intrathecal administrations throughout maintenance are essential. The most favourable results where achieved with high dose chemotherapy combined with intrathecal therapy and/or CNS irradiation. The majority of treatment regimens in
adult ALL
already include high dose chemotherapy in order to reduce the risk of bone marrow relapse. The outcome of patients with CNS relapse is still poor. Although a remission can be induced in the majority of patients (> 60%) it is usually followed by a bone marrow relapse and the survival is poor (< 5-10%). Bone marrow transplantation might be in adults at present the only curative approach.
...
PMID:Meningeosis leukaemica in adult acute lymphoblastic leukaemia. 969 68
Philadelphia chromosome positive (Ph+) acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is an aggressive form of acute leukemia that represents about one third of all
adult ALL
. Between 1984 and 1996, forty-three cases of Ph+ ALL (22 males and 21 females) were diagnosed in our institution by successful cytogenetic studies and/or molecular biology. Median age was 42 years (range, 20-71 years) with 28 patients aged below 50 years. Median leukocyte count was 39.7 x 10(9)/l on admission. Tumoral syndrome was seen only in 21 patients (49%) of which 4 cases presented with central nervous system (CNS) involvement. Among the 38 patients classified according to the French-American-British (FAB) criteria, 26 showed L1 and 9 L2 morphology. Three patients showed undifferentiated
leukemia
. Immunological study at diagnosis only showed B-cell lineage ALL with 95% of patients expressing CD10 and 50% expressing CD20. The Ph+ as sole anomaly was seen in 13 patients (31%), while additional chromosome changes were observed in 28 cases. Two patients were diagnosed only on molecular biology showing a Bcr/Abl rearrangement. Thirty-nine patients treated according to LALA protocols were eligible for the analysis of treatment outcome. Complete remission (CR) was achieved in 25 cases (64%, 95% CI: 47-79%). The median disease-free survival (DFS) and the median overall survival were 6 and 9 months respectively. Relapse was observed in 16 cases (64% of patients achieving CR). Initial parameters associated with a statistically significant worse prognosis were "blastic" fever, hyperuricemia, the presence of an extra Ph chromosome and patients whose marrow does not contain any normal mitosis (AA cases). As post-induction therapy, 13 cases followed a chemotherapy program (group 1) while 11 received early bone marrow (BM) or peripheral stem cell (PSC) transplantation (group 2) (5 allogeneic BM transplantation and 6 autologous BM or PSC transplantation). One patient did not receive any post-induction therapy. In group 1, the median DFS and overall survival were of 5 and 11 months respectively, while they were of 9 months and not reached respectively in group 2 with a 2-year survival rate of 51% (95% CI: 21-83%) confirming the requirement for intensified therapy in Ph+ ALL.
...
PMID:Philadelphia chromosome positive adult acute lymphoblastic leukemia: characteristics, prognostic factors and treatment outcome. 969 20
With the exception of childhood common acute lymphoblastic
leukaemia
(cALL), treatment of other hematopoietic B cell lineage tumours such as non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (B-NHL),
adult ALL
and multiple myeloma (MM) is unsatisfactory. Similarly, the therapeutic outcome of acute and chronic myeloid leukaemia (AML, CML) is frequently dismal. At the same time,
leukaemia
/lymphoma cells represent ideal targets for immunotherapy. The present review summarizes our preclinical experience with a novel type of cytotoxic T cell based immunotherapy for B-lineage and myeloid tumours. Staphylococcal enterotoxin-derived superantigens (SAgs) are among the most potent T cell activators known, linking the T cell receptor to HLA-DR on natural target cells. SAgs were genetically engineered to reduce DR binding and were then fused to Fab parts of tumour-directed monoclonal antibodies (mAbs). Using these "targeted" SAgs, highly efficient lysis of B-lineage (B-NHL, B-CLL, ALL, MM) and myeloid (AML, CML) tumour cells by T-cells was achieved in vitro and in an animal model. We are entering an interesting era of innovative cancer therapy based on novel man-made biotherapeutic agents.
...
PMID:Targeted superantigens for immunotherapy of haematopoietic tumours. 970 86
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