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)

Growth and growth hormone (GH) were investigated every year in 24 children after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT) for severe aplastic anemia (SAA) or leukemia. Conditioning included total body irradiation (TBI) in all cases of leukemia. The young leukemic children grew poorly. At 4 years after BMT, the mean standard deviation score for attained height had decreased from 0 to -1.73. GH deficiency was diagnosed with provocation tests. Three years after BMT, 10/18 children had a subnormal response. Ten children were further investigated with 24-hour GH profiles. Children with SAA had normal growth and GH levels. TBI seemed to be the major factor responsible for impaired growth.
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PMID:Growth and growth hormone in children after bone marrow transplantation. 307 33

The growth response to growth hormone (GH) therapy has been studied in 12 children who received irradiation to the cranium alone either for brain gliomas, distant from the hypothalamic-pituitary axis, or as prophylaxis against CNS leukaemia. Seven children have completed GH treatment (mean duration 4 years) and five are presently on GH (mean duration 1.2 years). This response has been compared to that seen in 14 children with isolated idiopathic GH deficiency (IGHD), following GH therapy. Before treatment, the cranially irradiated patients (C-PRGHD) had higher standard deviation scores (SDS) for standing height, sitting height and leg length, and less bone age (BA) retardation, but started treatment at a similar age, and with a similar pre-treatment growth velocity and GH peak to standard provocative tests, compared to IGHD patients. GH produced a significant and similar increase in growth velocity (cm/year and SDS for BA) over the first 2 years' treatment in both groups. However C-PRGHD patients entered puberty and thus completed growth earlier than the IGHD group. As a result, cranially-irradiated children showed no change in height SDS with GH therapy, compared to catch-up growth in IGHD. Nevertheless, GH has enabled C-PRGHD patients to maintain their centile position and to achieve a more acceptable final height.
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PMID:Growth response to growth hormone therapy following cranial irradiation. 318 Nov 99

We have studied 41 children with early or precocious puberty who have been treated for acute lymphoblastic leukaemia with prophylactic cranial irradiation (1,800-2,400 cGy) accompanied by intrathecal methotrexate and systemic chemotherapy. Mean age at radiotherapy was 3.9 years (range 1.7-7.7) in the girls and 4.8 years (range 2.6-7.8) in the boys. Mean age at the onset of puberty was 8.6 years (range 6.7-9.7) in the girls and 9.3 years (range 7.8-10.3) in the boys. Of the 41 children with early puberty (greater than 1.4 SD from the mean) 36 were females and 5 were males. 21 of the 36 girls had an absent or inadequate growth acceleration of puberty. 7 of 12 girls who had a pharmacological test of growth hormone (GH) secretion had GH insufficiency (peak level less than 20 mU/l). Early or precocious puberty combined with GH insufficiency may produce severe growth failure and we have used a treatment regimen of a gonadotrophin-releasing hormone analogue, in order to reduce the rate of epiphyseal maturation, combined with biosynthetic GH to increase or sustain growth rate. We have treated 4 girls in this manner. During a mean treatment period of 0.86 years, height SDS for bone age rose from a mean of -1.06 to -0.59. Longer treatment periods will be required to assess the effect on final height.
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PMID:Precocious or early puberty and growth failure in girls treated for acute lymphoblastic leukaemia. 324 80

Seventeen children (11 M, 6 F) with acute leukaemia and myeloproliferative disorders were investigated for growth and endocrine dysfunction. All had undergone bone marrow transplantation prepared with cyclophosphamide and single fraction total body irradiation (900-1000 cGy) between 1.5 and 3.8 (mean 2.2) years previously. The majority of children exhibited growth failure, which was of multiple aetiology. Ten patients, of whom eight had had previous prophylactic cranial irradiation, had evidence of growth hormone deficiency based on the reduced growth hormone response to insulin induced hypoglycaemia. Three patients had evidence of hypothalamic damage as shown by their growth hormone response to 200 micrograms GHRH (1-29) NH2 intravenously. Gonadal failure was common, assessed clinically, and biochemically by basal gonadotrophin and sex steroid concentrations. All four girls of adolescent age (10.6-14.1 years) had ovarian failure requiring sex steroid replacement. Of the eight boys of adolescent age (12.3-18.3 years), two had testicular failure requiring sex steroid supplements. Both of these had had previous testicular irradiation. Five others had compensated gonadal failure, and one had normal Leydig cell function. Abnormalities of the TSH response to TRH occurred in 10 patients but only three had overt hypothyroidism. Unlike growth hormone deficiency, gonadal and thyroid dysfunction showed no correlation with previous cranial radiotherapy.
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PMID:The effect of total body irradiation and bone marrow transplantation during childhood and adolescence on growth and endocrine function. 332 61

An 11-yr-old girl, who had been treated with human growth hormone (h-GH) for 31 months, developed acute myeloblastic leukemia with an inv(3)(q21q26). Since GH has been suggested to influence the genesis of leukemia, and the inversion 3 has been reported only in adult leukemia patients, the GH treatment may have caused the development of leukemia or accelerated the proliferation of the leukemia cells.
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PMID:Possible association of human growth hormone treatment with an occurrence of acute myeloblastic leukemia with an inversion of chromosome 3 in a child of pituitary dwarfism. 342 34

After completion of treatment with growth hormone (GH) 19 patients with isolated 'idiopathic' GH deficiency and 15 with post-irradiation GH deficiency underwent retesting of GH secretion with an insulin tolerance test or an arginine stimulation test, or both. Patients with post-irradiation GH deficiency comprised 13 patients with central nervous system tumours distant from the hypothalamo-pituitary axis and two with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia, who had received cranial or craniospinal irradiation. All 15 patients with post-irradiation GH deficiency remained GH deficient (peak GH response less than 7 mU/l (n = 10) and 7-15 mU/l (n = 5)). Of the 19 retested patients with idiopathic GH deficiency, however, five (26%) had peak GH responses of greater than 15 mU/l (regarded now as transient or false idiopathic GH deficiency) and were indistinguishable from the remainder (permanent or true idiopathic GH deficiency, peak GH responses less than 7 mU/l (n = 12) and 7-15 mU/l (n = 2)), by pretreatment anthropometry and post-treatment height standard deviation score, but had a lower first year height velocity (mean (SD) velocity 5.6 (0.5) cm/year for false idiopathic deficiency v 8.7 (1.75) cm/year for true idiopathic deficiency, p less than 0.01) and height increment on treatment (mean (SD) increment 2.2 (1.5) cm/year for false idiopathic deficiency v 5.2 (2.3) cm/year for true idiopathic deficiency, p less than 0.05). By current practices two patients with false idiopathic deficiency may have been distinguished by sex steroid priming. Thus post-irradiation GH deficiency seems to be permanent, but errors in diagnosis in idiopathic GH deficiency are common.
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PMID:Growth hormone state after completion of treatment with growth hormone. 356 14

An elastase-human growth hormone (hGH) fusion gene containing 205 base pairs of elastase 5' flanking region is expressed exclusively in pancreatic acinar cells of transgenic mice. This paper shows that the promoter region (-72 to +8) and the enhancer (-205 to -73) function independently of each other. The elastase enhancer can activate the heterologous mouse metallothionein gene and the hGH gene promoters; conversely, enhancers from the thymocyte-specific murine leukemia virus MCF13 and the metal regulatory elements from the metallothionein gene can activate the elastase promoter in a variety of cell types. Combinations of immunoglobulin and elastase enhancers with a heterologous promoter and the hGH gene result in expression in all of the tissues predicted by the sum of each enhancer acting alone. Thus these enhancer elements act independently of each other, suggesting that they do not have silencing activity in cells in which they are normally inactive.
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PMID:Promoter and enhancer elements from the rat elastase I gene function independently of each other and of heterologous enhancers. 368 90

Five male children who received cranial irradiation for extrahypothalamic intracranial neoplasms or leukemia and subsequently developed severe growth hormone (GH) deficiency were challenged with synthetic growth hormone-releasing factor (GRF-44), in an attempt to distinguish hypothalamic from pituitary dysfunction as a cause of their GH deficiency, and to assess the readily releasable GH reserve in the pituitary. In response to a pulse of GRF-44 (5 micrograms/kg intravenously), mean peak GH levels rose to values higher than those evoked by the pharmacologic agents L-dopa or arginine (6.4 +/- 1.3 ng/mL v 1.5 +/- 0.4 ng/mL, P less than .05). The peak GH value occurred at a mean of 26.0 minutes after administration of GRF-44. These responses were similar to those obtained in children with severe GH deficiency due to other etiologies (peak GH 6.3 +/- 1.7 ng/mL, mean 28.0 minutes). In addition, there was a trend toward an inverse relationship between peak GH response to GRF-44 and the postirradiation interval. Prolactin and somatomedin-C levels did not change significantly after the administration of a single dose of GRF-44. The results of this study support the hypothesis that cranial irradiation in children can lead to hypothalamic GRF deficiency secondary to radiation injury of hypothalamic GRF-secreting neurons. This study also lends support to the potential therapeutic usefulness of GRF-44 or an analog for GH deficiency secondary to cranial irradiation.
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PMID:Effect of growth hormone-releasing factor on growth hormone release in children with radiation-induced growth hormone deficiency. 392 54

The effect of cranial irradiation with doses of 2,400 and 4,800 rad on the pituitary function of children with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia was studied. The plasma growth hormone level after arginine simulations was normal in 13 out of 15 children. The rise of TSH after TRH stimulation and the metyrapone test were also normal. The growth of 40 children during an observation period of 3 or more years was also normal.
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PMID:[Pituitary function and growth in children under treatment for leukemia (author's transl)]. 610 41

Two hundred and thirty six children with untreated lymphoblastic leukaemia were compared for height with the normal population by calculation of their mean standard deviation score. As a group, they proved to be significantly taller (P less than 0.0001), which gives support to the theory that growth hormone or a somatomedin may be involved in the development of the disease.
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PMID:Height and lymphoblastic leukaemia. 657 71


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