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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (
leukemia
)
93,477
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The number of survivors of childhood
leukemia
treated with
growth hormone
for growth retardation is increasing. The debate about the direct or indirect relationship of GH and insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) to the occurrence or recurrence of malignancy, especially in the case of GH therapy in patients with
leukemia
, is still unresolved. We, therefore, studied the effect of GH and IGF-I on bone marrow of patients with acute leukemia (ALL and AML) in diagnosis and recurrence and in chronic leukemia patients (CML) in remission. GH increased blast colony numbers by a mean of 68% and 77% at GH concentrations of 250 and 300 ng/ml, respectively. IGF-I increased blast colony numbers in ALL patients by 50, 93 and 105%, and in AML patients by 33, 58 and 65%, at IGF-I concentrations of 0.05, 0.25 and 0.5 ng/ml, respectively. In 3 CML patients in remission a granulocyte-macrophage colony forming assay did not reveal stimulation of peripheral blood blast colony formation by GH or IGF-I. Our in vitro data (as previously reported) suggest that GH and IGF-I may promote blast cell proliferation, and the supplemental administration of these peptides in
leukemia
patients in remission must be carefully monitored for early relapse. Additional studies on bone marrow cells of leukemic patients in remission are needed in order to examine the effects of GH and IGF-I on these cells.
...
PMID:The effect of growth hormone and IGF-I on clonogenic growth of hematopoietic cells in leukemic patients during active disease and during remission--a preliminary report. 837 94
The number of reported cases of
leukemia
developing in
growth hormone
(GH) users worldwide has reached 31. Twelve Japanese cases are briefly reviewed; five each of AML and ALL, and one each of CML and malignant histiocytosis. The underlying diseases of these patients consisted of 8 idiopathic disease, 3 tumors and one Fanconi's anemia.
Leukemia
occurred during GH treatment in 9 cases and after cessation of GH in 3. The longest interval from the cessation of GH therapy was 10 years. GH administration from a younger age tended to be linked to myeloid type. Risk factors and possible mechanisms of leukemogenesis by
growth hormone
are discussed, and proposals for the future have been made by the Foundation for Growth Science in Japan.
...
PMID:Leukemia and other malignancies among GH users. 837 97
The X region of human T-cell
leukemia
virus type I (HTLV-I) encodes two proteins that regulate viral gene expression. The tax protein is the product of the transactivator gene and has been shown to up-regulate the expression of some cellular genes controlling T-cell replication, including that of the interleukin-2 (IL-2) T-cell
growth hormone
and the alpha chain of its receptor (IL-2R). Several studies have shown that tax transactivation of the IL-2R alpha-chain promoter is mediated by binding sites for the transcriptional activator NF-kappa B, and this mechanism has also been implicated in the tax activation of IL-2 promoter activity. The rex gene product of HTLV-I regulates viral protein production by influencing mRNA expression and has been implicated in the stabilization of IL-2R alpha-chain mRNA. In the present studies, the ability of the tax and rex proteins to transactivate IL-2 gene expression has been reinvestigated. The ability of the tax protein to transactivate IL-2 promoter activity appears, at least in part, to be mediated by the recognition sequence for a DNA-binding complex known as CD28RC. Consistent with this hypothesis is the observation that tax-mediated activation of IL-2 gene expression is resistant to the immunosuppressive affects of cyclosporin A, a property postulated for the CD28RC binding complex. Unexpectedly, this tax-mediated up-regulation of IL-2 expression is synergized by the presence of the rex protein. These findings demonstrate that transactivation of IL-2 gene expression by tax is augmented by mechanisms distinct from NF-kappa B and raise the possibility that rex, as well as tax, contributes to the oncogenic capability of HTLV-I by altering the expression of the IL-2 gene in T cells infected with this retrovirus.
...
PMID:Influence of human T-cell leukemia virus type I tax and rex on interleukin-2 gene expression. 838 12
A
leukemia
cell transplant model and both in situ and in vitro bioassays were used to assess the roles of endogenous factors in mediating diet restriction (DR)-induced inhibition of mononuclear cell
leukemia
(MNCL) in Fischer 344 rats. DR-treated male rats (n = 35), which were fed 75% of ad libitum (AL) intake of NIH-07 open formula diet, had lower transplanted MNCL incidence (54 versus 77%; P = 0.039) with longer latency (P = 0.015) and decreased severity (P = 0.01) than AL-treated rats 12 weeks after inoculation with MNCL cells. Five-day proliferation rates of cultured MNCL (CRNK-16) cells in diffusion chambers implanted in DR-treated rats were 22% less than in AL-treated rats (P = 0.03), indicating that DR-dependent diffusible factor(s) modulate in situ MNCL cell growth. Serum from DR-treated rats supported lower in vitro CRNK-16 cell proliferation rates relative to serum from AL-treated rats. Serum levels of both
growth hormone
(GH) and insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1) were over 50% lower in DR- versus AL-treated rats. An evaluation of the in vitro cell proliferative activity of a panel of purified factors showed that GH and IGF-1, but not 15 other growth factors, stimulated thymidine incorporation in CRNK-16 cells. Infusion of either GH or IGF-1 via osmotic minipumps restored in situ and in vitro CRNK-16 cell proliferation in DR-treated rats up to rates measured in AL-treated rats. Splenocytes from DR-treated rats, relative to AL-treated rats, were more sensitive to mitogen stimulation, displayed increased cell surface expression of receptors for class 1 and 2 major histocompatibility complex molecules, and were more cytotoxic to target tumor cells. Infusion of either GH or IGF-1 in DR-treated rats further enhanced mitogen responsiveness and natural cytotoxicity but reversed the DR-induced increase in major histocompatibility complex receptors. We conclude that DR modulates MNCL progression in Fischer 344 rats through both its influence on MNCL cell proliferation via suppression of the GH:IGF-1 axis and its enhancement of host defenses against tumor cells.
...
PMID:The growth hormone: insulin-like growth factor 1 axis is a mediator of diet restriction-induced inhibition of mononuclear cell leukemia in Fischer rats. 838 43
Ten girls with early puberty secondary to cranial irradiation as a part of the treatment for acute lymphoblastic
leukaemia
(ALL) were treated with either gonadotropin-releasing hormone analogue (GnRHa) and human
growth hormone
(GH) (8 girls) or with GnRHa alone (2 girls). After 4 years of treatment, height SDS for bone age was improved in the group who received combined treatment (from -0.97 to +0.07, p < 0.001), in contrast to the 2 patients who received GnRHa alone in whom height standard deviation scores for bone age decreased (from -1.10 to -1.33). Sitting height in all patients was relatively shorter than leg length, and there was no significant alteration during the 4 years of treatment.
...
PMID:Gonadotropin releasing hormone analogue and growth hormone therapy in precocious and premature puberty following cranial irradiation for acute lymphoblastic leukaemia. 840 36
In 1988 several reports described
leukemia
in former/present
growth hormone
(GH)-treated children, and a doubled incidence of
leukemia
in GH-treated children was concluded in a workshop in Bethesda. A mouse strain (AKR/O) with a high incidence of
leukemia
was used as a model. AKR/O-mice in the preleukemic adult age and younger mice during rapid growth were treated with recombinant human GH (rhGH) in human therapeutic doses to see whether this treatment would affect the time and presentation of malignant disease. The malignant development did not appear earlier or in a different way in the animals receiving rhGH from day 6 to 50 than in their appropriate controls. A borderline protective effect to the development of
leukemia
was seen in the adult group receiving rhGH; in this group antibodies to hGH also developed. We conclude that in this experimental model human therapeutic doses of rhGH do not influence the development of malignancy in the AKR/O mice.
...
PMID:Growth hormone treatment and development of malignancy: recombinant human growth hormone does not induce leukemia in AKR/O-mice. 844 52
A 12 year-old girl developed a late relapse of acute lymphoblastic
leukaemia
(ALL) 10 years from first presentation. Initial chemotherapy included vincristine, methotrexate, prednisolone, and L-asparaginase with cranial radiotherapy (18 Gy) for central nervous system prophylaxis. Documented growth failure led to recombinant human
growth hormone
(rhGH) replacement therapy being instituted in May 1989, 6 years from end of therapy and 2 years prior to relapse. Three independent experiments demonstrated no increased cell proliferation in vitro when the patient's thawed cryopreserved fresh leukemic cells were incubated with rhGH. However, a pre-T ALL cell line (PER-255) consistently demonstrated enhanced proliferation when incubated with rhGH (132.1 +/- 13.4%, P < 0.01). Growth hormone has been associated with an increased incidence of
leukemia
and may be implicated in the late relapse of this child. The use of
growth hormone
in children with a past history of ALL needs to be examined critically in the light of the potential risk of inducing leukemic relapse.
...
PMID:Late leukemic relapse 10 years from diagnosis in a child on recombinant human growth hormone. 844 49
Final height, body proportions, pubertal growth and body mass index were studied retrospectively in 142 survivors of acute lymphoblastic
leukaemia
(ALL). Treatment consisted of combination chemotherapy and cranial irradiation (18 or 24 Gy). Significant standing height loss and disproportion, with a relatively short back, was seen in both radiation dose groups. Girls were more severely affected than boys. Pubertal growth was adversely affected, with a reduction in peak height velocity in both sexes. Puberty occurred early in girls but at the normal time in boys. Nearly half the group were obese at final height, with no significant difference in incidence between the sexes. The relative roles of cranial irradiation and chemotherapy in the disturbance of growth, puberty and body composition observed in survivors of childhood ALL remain unclear. The aetiology is almost certainly multifactorial, with radiation-induced
growth hormone
insufficiency, early puberty, steroids and chemotherapy all having a role.
...
PMID:Growth, puberty and obesity after treatment for leukaemia. 856 69
Current data on patients treated with human
growth hormone
(GH) were analyzed for the following safety topics. New
leukemia
. Thirteen of 46 new cases of
leukemia
were in non-Japanese patients without risk factors for
leukemia
(compared with at least 13 new cases expected). A possible increased occurrence of
leukemia
with GH treatment appears to be limited to patients with risk factors. Nonleukemic extracranial neoplasms. The number of cases reported (10) does not differ significantly from the number expected. Acute pancreatitis. In five of the seven cases reported risk factors (renal failure, valproic acid use, insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus) were present. The available data do not indicate a clear cause-and-effect relation between GH therapy and pancreatitis. Prepubertal gynecomastia. Of 15 possible cases, two were pubertal, eight resolved or improved with continued GH therapy, and two resolved with the cessation of GH therapy. An effect of GH treatment on prepubertal gynecomastia remains unknown. Scoliosis. Scoliosis is reported in fewer than 1 percent of the patients in the National Cooperative Growth Study (general-population prevalence, 1.5% to 3%). Curvature progression can occur during growth acceleration, and a causal association with GH treatment is not substantiated. Pigmented nevi. Nevi growth may be increased with GH treatment. Biopsies have detected no neoplasia or premalignant nevi transformations.
...
PMID:Safety of human growth hormone therapy: current topics. 1124 Oct 65
Two methods, High-Performance Receptor Binding Chromatography (HPRBC) and Cell Proliferation (CP), have been developed as alternatives to the classical hypophysectomized rat weight gain bioassay for the determination of potency for recombinant human
growth hormone
(rhGH). In the HPRBC assay, rhGH is combined with an excess of the soluble extracellular domain of the recombinant human growth hormone receptor (referred to as 'receptor' in the discussion of the HPRBC assay). Nondenaturing size-exclusion chromatography is used to analyzed the resulting complex, which forms in a 2:1 receptor to rhGH ratio. The 2:1 complex is assayed at a concentration near the Kd (approximately 0.4 nM), providing high specificity for rhGH and detection of rhGH variants with reduced activity. In the CP assay, a mouse myeloid
leukaemia
cell line (FDC-P1) transfected with the full-length receptor is exposed to varying levels of rhGH for 16-20 h. The incorporation of 3H-thymidine into DNA is used as an index of cell proliferation. The results show that the HPRBC assay provides significantly improved precision with a relative standard deviation (RSD) of < or = 5% vs. an RSD of 23% for the rat bioassay. The CP assay has RSDs of 4-16%. Analysis of rhGH variants and mutants shows that the potencies measured by both the HPRBC and CP assays are in general agreement with the rat weight gain bioassay. Both of the HPRBC and CP assays are sufficiently rugged for operating in a Good Manufacturing Practices (GMP) routine batch release testing environment. In vitro alternatives such as the HPRBC and CP assays build a foundation for replacing the hypophysectomized rat weight gain bioassay by correlating receptor dimerization, binding specificity and signal transduction with the biological activity of rhGH.
...
PMID:Novel assays based on human growth hormone receptor as alternatives to the rat weight gain bioassay for recombinant human growth hormone. 873 99
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