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)

Most of the circulating lymphocytes from three asymptomatic adults (one male, two female, age range 61-67 years) with isolated persistent lymphocytosis of between 7.1 and 10 x 10(9)/l possessed characteristic villous projections of the cell membrane. Morphological, histochemical, ultrastructural, immunological, and genotypic studies confirmed a clonal proliferation of tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP)-negative CD5-CD10-CD25- and CD11c+ B-cells. In addition to CD11c, these cells expressed other adhesion receptors (LFA-1/CD11a, VLA-4/CD29/49d, ICAM-1/CD54, and LAM-1) and produced detectable amounts of interleukin-1 beta, interleukin-6, and in one case tumour necrosis factor-alpha mRNA. This monoclonal villous lymphocytosis (MVL) could be differentiated from B-cell chronic lymphocytic, prolymphocytic, and hairy cell leukaemias, and from previously recognized CD11c+ chronic B-cell leukaemia. A rare splenomegalic non-Hodgkin's lymphoma variant with circulating villous B-lymphocytes (SLVL), usually CD10+ and sometimes CD11c- and TRAP+, appears to be a closely related disorder. In all three patients the lymphocyte count increased very slowly, at a rate less than 5 x 10(9)/l per year, over 3-7.5 years of follow up, and a moderate splenomegaly eventually developed in one of the patients. Chemotherapy was never required. MVL may be a relatively benign clinical entity akin to SLVL within the group of CD11c+ B-cell lymphoproliferative disorders.
Leukemia 1991 Sep
PMID:Monoclonal lymphocytosis with villous lymphocytes: a chronic lymphoproliferative disease of CD11c+ B-cells. 168 36

This article presents data from the phase I and II clinical investigations of Fludara I.V. (fludarabine phosphate) (NSC 312887), which is the 5'-phosphorylated derivative of the novel antimetabolite, 9-beta-D-arabinofuranosyl-2-fluoroadenine. The comprehensive phase I evaluation of this new antitumor agent was conducted in 51 patients with advanced malignancy and 15 additional patients with aggressive forms of leukemia. Three separate phase I schedules of drug administration were examined. Myelosuppression was the dose-limiting toxicity on each schedule administered to patients with solid tumors. The drug was also examined at higher doses in patients with leukemia, and the dose-limiting toxicity on the high-dose protocol was unacceptable: serious neurologic toxicity. The observation of antitumor responses in patients with advanced non-Hodgkin's lymphoma prompted additional phase II investigation in patients with lymphoproliferative malignancy. The encouraging phase II data demonstrate that Fludara I.V. has promise for patients with low-grade histologic subtypes of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and chronic lymphocytic leukemia. While interesting additional basic and clinical research projects regarding Fludara I.V. remain, it is important to expeditiously pursue approval for this drug. Adequate data exists to demonstrate that the low-dose administration of Fludara I.V. is both safe and effective. While the development of this drug has stimulated renewed interest in the clinical investigation of the chronic lymphoproliferative malignancies, the time for making it readily available to these patients has arrived.
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PMID:A comprehensive phase I and II clinical investigation of fludarabine phosphate. 169 82

In 1978, Cancer and Leukemia Group B initiated a randomized study to determine the usefulness of the addition of bleomycin and/or high-dose methotrexate to standard therapy for the treatment of certain adult non-Hodgkin's lymphomas. Between 1978 and 1985, 177 patients with diffuse large cell lymphoma (DLCL) and 97 patients with other intermediate-grade non-Hodgkin's lymphoma were randomized to receive therapy with three courses of cyclophosphamide, adriamycin, vincristine, and prednisone (CHOP) every 3 weeks with or without low-dose bleomycin by continuous IV infusion. Responders after three courses were further randomized to 3 weeks of therapy with either high-dose methotrexate (3 gm/m2/week intravenously with leucovorin rescue) or standard-dose methotrexate (30 mg/m2/week orally without rescue). Therapy was concluded with three additional courses of CHOP. Neither the addition of low-dose infusion bleomycin nor the use of high-dose rather than low-dose methotrexate had significant effects on response for patients with DLCL; complete response rates for the four treatment programs ranged from 47% to 51%. Median failure-free survival (FFS) for the entire group of DLCL patients was 12 months; 5-year FFS was 27%. There was no significant effect on FFS from the addition of either low-dose bleomycin to CHOP (5-year FFS: CHOP, 28%; CHOP-B, 26%, P = 0.81), or from the use of different doses of methotrexate (5-year FFS: high-dose, 34%; standard-dose, 33%, P = 0.51). Patients with follicular large cell lymphoma, with or without diffuse areas, had a better FFS (5-year FFS, 47%) than patients with DLCL (5-year FFS, 27%), while the patients with the other histopathologic subtypes of diffuse lymphomas had the poorest FFS (5-year FFS, 16%).
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PMID:A randomized comparison of methotrexate dose and the addition of bleomycin to CHOP therapy for diffuse large cell lymphoma and other non-Hodgkin's lymphomas. Cancer and Leukemia Group B study 7851. 169 53

Detailed immunophenotypic analyses of immunologically classified leukemias and lymphomas showed that CD40 displays an exquisite B-lineage specificity within the human lymphopoietic system. Notably, 82% of B-lineage chronic lymphocytic leukemias (CLLs), 82% of B-lineage hairy cell leukemias (HCLs), 86% of B-lineage non-Hodgkin's lymphomas (NHLs), and 29% of B-lineage acute lymphoblastic leukemias (ALLs) were CD40+. Quantitative analyses of the correlated expression of CD40 and other B-lineage differentiation antigens on fetal lymphoid precursor cells by multiparameter two-color/three-color flow cytometry, combined with analyses of sequential antigen expression on fluorescence-activated cell fluorescence activated cell sorter (FACS) isolated immunologically distinct fetal B-cell precursor subpopulations during in vitro proliferation and differentiation, provided evidence that the acquisition of CD40 antigen in human B-cell ontogeny occurs subsequent to the expression of CD10 and CD19 antigens but before the surface expression of CD20, CD21, CD22, CD24, and surface immunoglobulin M (sIgM). Some leukemic pro-B cells from ALL patients as well as normal pro-B cell clones from fetal livers displaying germline Ig heavy chain genes were CD40+, indicating that the acquisition of CD40 antigen likely precedes the rearrangement of Ig heavy chain genes. CD40+ FACS-sorted malignant cells from B-lineage ALL as well as B-lineage NHL patients were capable of in vitro clonogenic growth, indicating the CD40 antigen is expressed on clonogenic leukemia and lymphoma cells. This hypothesis was confirmed by the ability of an anti-CD40 immunotoxin that we used as an antigen-specific cytotoxic probe to effectively kill clonogenic B-lineage ALL and NHL cells.
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PMID:Temporal association of CD40 antigen expression with discrete stages of human B-cell ontogeny and the efficacy of anti-CD40 immunotoxins against clonogenic B-lineage acute lymphoblastic leukemia as well as B-lineage non-Hodgkin's lymphoma cells. 170 26

Using a monoclonal antibody specific to the Lewis X antigen (anti-Lex), the authors studied 103 cases of Hodgkin's disease (HD) in comparison with 57 cases of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL); three cases of granulocytic sarcoma (GS); two cases of malignant histiocytosis (MH); one case of monoblastic leukemia (ML); one case of interdigitating reticulum cell sarcoma (IRCS); six cases of histiocytosis X (HX); one case of reticulohistiocytoma (RH); 44 various reactive conditions of the lymph node (LN). Reed-Sternberg and related (R-S) cells stained selectively in 80 of 92 cases of HD (87.0%), excluding 11 cases of lymphocyte predominance type. The stain was better in B-5-fixed specimens than in formalin-fixed specimens, showing a dense deposit of reaction products at a paranuclear site and on the cell surface. The staining results were compared with those of Leu-M1 and found to be superior both qualitatively and quantitatively (detection rate of R-S cells: 87.0% versus 68.5% of Leu-M1). Granulocytes, rare epithelioid histiocytes, and some endothelial and/or erythrocytes also stained with anti-Lex. The stain had positive results in three cases of GS showing a diffuse cytoplasmic staining pattern. Of NHL, two of 29 peripheral T-cell lymphomas stained to show rare paranuclear deposits without cell surface staining. The stain had negative results in MH, ML, IRCS, HX, and RH. Of 45 reactive LN, minute subcapsular collections of Lewis X+, altered-appearing Langerhans'-like cells, were observed in all ten LN from human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-associated persistent generalized lymphadenopathy (PGL). The stain had negative results in all other various reactive conditions of LN. In conclusion, Lewis X staining is useful as a marker for R-S cells in paraffin sections with staining results superior to those of Leu-M1. Lewis X staining also detects subcapsular clustering of altered-appearing Langerhans'-like cells in PGL, which has not been described previously and warrants additional study.
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PMID:The Lewis X antigen. A new paraffin section marker for Reed-Sternberg cells. 170 18

The human leukocyte adhesion molecule-1 (LAM-1, TQ1, Leu-8) is involved in the binding of human leukocytes to high endothelial venules (HEV) of peripheral lymph nodes (LN). The regulation of LAM-1 expression is unique in that leukocyte stimulation induces a rapid down-modulation of LAM-1 from the cell surface. In this study, the regulation and function of LAM-1 was studied in detail in normal lymphocytes and compared with the LAM-1 of malignant leukocytes. Modulation of LAM-1 from the cell surface occurred concomitantly with the appearance of LAM-1 in the culture medium indicating that LAM-1 is cleaved from the cell surface. Shedding of LAM-1 was decreased in the presence of protein kinase C (PKC) inhibitors. As with normal lymphocytes, cells transfected with the LAM-1 cDNA and chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) cells also shed LAM-1 following phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) exposure. CLL cells expressed the same Mr LAM-1 protein as normal lymphocytes and LAM-1+ CLL cells were able to specifically bind to HEV. In addition, normal lymphocytes and LAM-1+ CLL cells were capable of binding polyphosphomonester core polysaccharide (PPME) derived from yeast cell wall, a carbohydrate which mimics an essential component of the natural ligand for LAM-1, and PPME and HEV binding was specifically blocked by a new monoclonal antibody (mAb) reactive with LAM-1. The expression of LAM-1 and other adhesion molecules was examined on cells of 118 hematopoietic malignancies. LAM-1 was most frequently expressed on CLL and follicular or diffuse small cleaved cell lymphomas, whereas most other malignancies were LAM-1-. Thus, most CLL cells and some non-Hodgkin's lymphoma cells express a functionally active LAM-1 molecule which may correlate with their capacity to migrate through the circulation and disseminate into peripheral LN.
Leukemia 1991 Apr
PMID:Regulation of leukocyte adhesion molecule-1 (TQ1, Leu-8) expression and shedding by normal and malignant cells. 170 44

The monoclonal antibody termed SN10 (IgG1-k) which was generated and characterized in the present study shows a highly selective reactivity with fresh (uncultured) human leukemia-lymphoma cells. The antigen defined by SN10 is a cell surface glycoprotein composed of a single polypeptide chain of Mr 36,000 and designated as gp36. The primary reactivity of SN10 is against mature B-lineage leukemia-lymphoma cells. For instance, SN10 reacted with all of the 17 B non-Hodgkin's lymphoma specimens, all of the 15 B chronic lymphocytic leukemia specimens, both of the 2 B prolymphocytic leukemia specimens, all of the 3 B hairy cell leukemia specimens, and 2 of the 3 B acute lymphoblastic leukemia specimens tested. Of normal peripheral blood cells, only a marginal reactivity of SN10 was detected with a minor subpopulation (less than 1-4% among different specimens) of isolated B-cells from healthy donors. No significant reactivity of SN10 was detected against any other isolated normal peripheral blood cells which include T-cells, granulocytes, monocytes, erythrocytes, and platelets. Furthermore, no significant reactivity of SN10 was detected against normal bone marrow specimens. In immunohistological studies using frozen tissue sections, SN10 reacted well with malignant lymphomas and showed varying patterns of reaction with hyperplastic reactive lymph nodes. Various normal human tissues tested were unreactive with SN10. In general, glycoprotein 36 was more abundantly expressed on fresh (uncultured) leukemia-lymphoma cells than on cultured leukemia-lymphoma cell lines. No significant amount of circulating SN10 antigen was detected in the plasma of leukemia-lymphoma patients or normal healthy donors. Scatchard plot analysis of direct binding of radiolabeled SN10 to a fresh (uncultured) B non-Hodgkin's lymphoma cell specimen, a fresh B chronic lymphocytic leukemia cell specimen, and DND-39 (an American Burkitt's lymphoma cell line) showed equilibrium constants of 5.2, 5.8, and 6.8 x 10(8) liters/mol, respectively. Thus, SN10 shows a high binding avidity to each of the 3 B leukemia-lymphoma cell specimens tested. Ricin A chain conjugate of SN10 killed leukemia-lymphoma cells effectively, whereas the same conjugate showed no cytotoxicity against control cells. Thus, SN10 bound to target antigen on the cell surface was effectively internalized into the cell. The present results suggest the potential of SN10 for therapy as well as for diagnosis of various forms of leukemia-lymphoma, particularly mature B-lineage leukemia-lymphoma.
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PMID:Monoclonal antibody SN10 which shows a highly selective reactivity with human B leukemia-lymphoma and is effectively internalized into cells. 170 87

Mitoxantrone is a dihydroxyanthracenedione derivative which as intravenous mono- and combination therapy has demonstrated therapeutic efficacy similar to that of standard induction and salvage treatment regimens in advanced breast cancer, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, acute nonlymphoblastic leukaemia and chronic myelogenous leukaemia in blast crisis; it appears to be an effective alternative to the anthracycline component of standard treatment regimens in these indications. Mitoxantrone is also effective as a component of predominantly palliative treatment regimens for hepatic and advanced ovarian carcinoma. Limited studies suggest useful therapeutic activity in multiple myeloma and acute lymphoblastic leukaemia. Regional therapy of malignant effusions, hepatic and ovarian carcinomas has also been very effective, with a reduction in systemic adverse effects. Mitoxantrone inhibits DNA synthesis by intercalating DNA, inducing DNA strand breaks, and causing DNA aggregation and compaction, and delays cell cycle progression, particularly in late S phase. In vitro antitumour activity is concentration- and exposure time-proportional, and synergy with other antineoplastic drugs has been demonstrated in murine tumour models. Leucopenia may be dose-limiting in patients with solid tumours, whereas stomatitis may be dose-limiting in patients with leukaemia. Other adverse effects are usually of mild or moderate severity although cardiac effects, particularly congestive heart failure, may be of concern, especially in patients with a history of anthracycline therapy, mediastinal irradiation or cardiovascular disease. Mitoxantrone displays an improved tolerability profile compared with doxorubicin and other anthracyclines, although myelosuppression may occur more frequently. Thus, mitoxantrone is an effective and better tolerated alternative to the anthracyclines in most haematological malignancies, in breast cancer and in advanced hepatic or ovarian carcinoma. Further studies may consolidate its role in the treatment of these and other malignancies.
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PMID:Mitoxantrone. A review of its pharmacodynamic and pharmacokinetic properties, and therapeutic potential in the chemotherapy of cancer. 171 46

Beta 2-microglobulin (beta 2m) constitutes the common light chain of both the MHC-encoded HLA-ABC molecules and a group of structurally related glycoproteins recognized by antibodies of the first cluster of differentiation (CD1a, CD1b and CD1c). These CD1 antigens appear similar to murine T1 and Qa molecules in terms of structure and tissue distribution, although the question of inter-species homology is controversial. A further group of alloantigens expressed predominantly on T cells has been reported however, with immunogenetic characteristics more closely analogous to the murine T1/Qa system than the CD1 antigens, although their precise identity remains ill-defined. Having previously shown that malignant B cells may express membrane CD1c, we examined leukaemic B-cells corresponding to early lymphoblastic differentiation (null- and common acute lymphoblastic leukaemia) through to the terminal plasma cell stage for the expression of other non-HLA class I beta 2m-associated molecules. It was found that leukaemic B-cells at intermediate/late stages of differentiation, represented by non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (B-NHL) and 'hairy-cell' leukaemia (HCL), had significantly higher beta 2m:HLA-ABC ratios than did the cells from other types of B-cell malignancy. Although leukaemic B cells with a demonstrable non HLA-ABC-associated beta 2m component expressed detectable levels of CD1c, and insignificant levels of CD1a and CD1b, the antigen density was insufficient to account for the excess beta 2m. In vitro stimulation of leukaemic B cells by phorbol ester substantially increased the expression of HLA-ABC and CD1c, but also accentuated further the difference between the expression of these molecules and that of beta 2m. There was no detectable beta 2m other than that associated with HLA-ABC and CD1 on the surface of malignant T cells by contrast. Our findings strongly support the existence, at certain stages of leukaemic B-cell differentiation, of an additional beta 2m component(s) other than that associated with HLA-ABC and CD1.
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PMID:The MHC class I associated beta 2-microglobulin (beta 2m) light chain is expressed in a molar excess over HLA-ABC and CD1 on the membrane of leukaemic B cells but not leukaemic T cells: evidence for further beta 2m-associated molecules. 171 10

Cytostatic therapy is known to aggravate tumor-induced coagulopathy. Therefore, we have studied the effect of different chemotherapeutic regimens on the activation of coagulation and fibrinolysis in patients with non-Hodgkin's lymphomas or acute leukemias. In non-Hodgkin's lymphoma patients treated with an aggressive protocol (COL-BLAM) and in leukemia patients (TAD-9) fibrinopeptide A, prothrombin fragment (F1 + 2) and thrombin antithrombin III complexes (TAT) increased (Tables 4 and 6), while D-dimer did not deviate significantly. The ratio D-dimer/TAT consequently showed a significant decrease, indicating increased formation of thrombin after release of procoagulant factors, which is not paralleled by an activation of fibrinolysis. Both these groups were also characterized by an increase in uric acid and in C-reactive protein and plasminogen-activator inhibitor, two acute-phase reactants. In contrast, patients with non-Hodgkin's lymphomas treated with a less aggressive protocol (COP) showed no significant changes in hemostatic variables, uric acid, or acute-phase reactants. The release of procoagulant factors relates to the cytostatic sensitivity of the tumor and to a high tumor-cell destruction. Our results further emphasize the need for large-scale studies on antithrombotic prophylaxis in patients undergoing cytostatic treatment.
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PMID:Influence of cytostatic treatment on the coagulation system and fibrinolysis in patients with non-Hodgkin's lymphomas and acute leukemias. 171 7


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