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)

Hairy-cell leukaemia may be difficult to diagnose in bone marrow biopsies, especially in the early stages or in its residum after complete clinical remission. To consider the impact of published data on immunophenotyping hairy-cell leukaemias, a total of 50 diagnostic biopsies were systematically analysed with a panel of eight antibodies and compared with cases of chronic lymphatic leukaemia (CLL), 20 follicular centre lymphomas, 20 lympho-plasmacytoid immunocytomas, 10 small-cell T-cell non-Hodgkin lymphomas and 20 cases of benign nodular lymphatic hyperplasia. The panel of eight antibodies comprised DBA44, CD45, CD20, CD45R, CD45RO, CD43 and the CD68 antibodies KP1 and Ki-M1P. The hairy-cell leukaemias were staged histologically into four categories of bone marrow infiltration. DBA44 reacted positively in 47/50 cases. CD45 and the B-cell markers CD20 and CD45R reacted in 49/50 and 43/50 cases, respectively. One CD68 marker, KP1, was positive in 38/50 cases but the other-Ki-M1P-only in 1/50 cases. Chronic lymphatic leukaemia cases, the other B-cell NHLs and lymphatic hyperplasias showed strong positivity for CD20 and CD45R, but only the immunocytomas reacted with DBA44 in 7/20 cases. The T-cell NHLs and hyperplasias showed a strong positivity for the T-cell markers CD45RO and CD43. The CD68-marker Ki-M1P revealed a high specificity since it was negative in all NHLs and positive only in one hairy-cell leukaemia. Methyl-methacrylate embedding of bone marrow biopsies under cold polymerization produces a high quality of histo- and cytomorphology, resulting in greater diagnostic reliability and the detection of low-stage infiltration of hairy-cell leukaemia. DBA44 appears as a highly specific antibody to mark hairy-cells since only immunocytomas reacted positively in a few cases. A small panel of antibodies including DBA44. CD20, CD45R and Ki-M1P may serve to distinguish small-cell. NHL from hairy-cell leukaemia even at an early stage or when there are minimal residual tumour cells.
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PMID:Immunophenotype of hairy-cell leukaemia after cold polymerization of methyl-methacrylate embeddings from 50 diagnostic bone marrow biopsies. 906 39

Acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) is a type of acute leukemia showing unique clinical, morphological and cytogenetic features. A skin infiltration by APL cells is an extremely rare occasion, but there have been several case reports of leukemia cutis in APL, in which all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) may have induced the skin infiltration. However, no immunohistochemical analyses of the APL cells in the skin have been done to date. A 30-year-old woman with APL developed multiple reddish purple nodules on the extremities in her second complete remission. Histological findings revealed a dense infiltration of medium to large atypical cells, which were positive for myeloperoxidase, throughout the dermis. Despite the conventional chemotherapy and ATRA therapy she died from disseminated intravascular coagulation during her third relapse. Leukemic cells in the peripheral blood before the treatment with ATRA revealed CD3-/CD4-/CD5-/CD7-/CD8-/CD10-/CD13++/CD14-/CD19 -/ CD20-/CD33++/CD38++/CD41-/Ia-, but they expressed CD3-/CD4-/CD5-/CD7++/ CD8-/CD10-/CD13++/CD14-/CD19-/CD20-/CD33++ /CD38++/CD41+/Ia+ after the treatment. We suggest that the alternation of the surface molecules on the tumor cells is closely associated with the skin infiltration of APL cells.
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PMID:Skin infiltration in acute promyelocytic leukemia. 909 68

The availability of monoclonal antibodies with well-defined specificities to lymphoma-associated antigens promises to open new therapeutic opportunities in the treatment of patients with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. Monoclonal antibodies against lineage-specific surface markers such as CD19, CD20 or CD22 have been generated and employed in native or modified forms in clinical phase I/II trials. Modified versions such as toxin-conjugated antibodies or antibodies with dual specificities (bispecific antibodies) were introduced to enhance the cytotoxicity of monoclonal antibodies since native antibodies were not able to induce long-lasting remissions in patients with advanced disease although responses were seen and side-effects were usually mild. Future efforts should concentrate on patients with minimal residual disease employing genetically engineered antibody fragments.
Leukemia 1997 Apr
PMID:Monoclonal antibodies in the treatment of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma: recent results and future prospects. 917 42

The mononuclear cells in the peripheral blood are implicated in the myeloma process especially with the presence of peripheral blood plasma cells (PBPC) and clonal B lymphocytes found using phenotypic or gene rearrangement techniques. The purpose of this study was to look for aneuploidy in the two main B cell components of the peripheral blood: PBPC and CD20-positive B lymphocytes. Conventional cytogenetics (CC) or DNA content analysis and fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) with centromeric probes were performed on bone marrow plasma cells (BMPC) of 21 patients with multiple myeloma and peripheral blood cells were studied as follows: immunostaining to look for PBPC and to assess their number, image analysis cytometry for the determination of their DNA content, and FISH chromosomes analysis. FISH was performed using probes against the chromsomes that were lost or gained in BMPC and was coupled with immunostaining of the relevant light chain or CD20 antigen to study PBPC or B lymphocytes, respectively. Monotypic PBPC were found in 16 patients. Their DNA content was the same or nearly the same as for BMPC and they exhibited the same monosomies or trisomies as those found within their BM counterpart. By contrast, DNA content of mononuclear cells other than PBPC was within normal ranges, and in 13 of 15 patients CD20-positive B lymphocytes failed to show chromosomal changes by FISH analysis. In two patients however, a few CD20+ cells with lymphoid morphology exhibited chromosome changes, hypothesizing that a few cytogenetically abnormal B cells without plasmocytic morphology may circulate. From these data, we conclude that PBPC share the same genetic abnormalities as BMPC and thus belong to the malignant clone, whereas most peripheral blood B lymphocytes are unrelated to the tumor clone.
Leukemia 1997 Jul
PMID:Involvement of peripheral blood cells in multiple myeloma: chromosome changes are the rule within circulating plasma cells but not within B lymphocytes. 920 87

A new cell line (LR10.6) with pre-B cell phenotype has been established from bone marrow cells obtained from a child with B lineage acute lymphoblastic leukemia in complete clinical remission. The line expresses nuclear TdT enzyme, cytoplasmic Ig lambda-chain and membrane mu-chain and other B but no T or myeloid markers. The cells also show activation antigens CD69 and CD71, adhesion molecules CD54, CD50 and CD56 and the tyrosine kinase receptor CD117. No expression of multidrug resistance phenotype MDR-1 is observed on these cells which nevertheless express the transcriptional factor p53 protein in a mutant form. Cytogenetic study shows a translocation t(5;12)(q31;p13) involving breakpoints which contain the growth factor interleukin 3 gene (5q31) and the recently identified TEL/ETV6 gene (12p13). Activation of the cells with phorbol-12 myristate 13-acetate (PMA) up-regulates the expression of the CD69 activation antigen and down-regulates the CD117 molecule. In addition, PMA fails to induce the CD20 B cell antigen.
Leukemia 1997 Jul
PMID:A new human cell line with pre-B cell phenotype and t(5;12). 920 88

We have identified ten patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and one patient with chronic myeloid leukemia with megakaryocytic crisis who displayed an inv(3)(q21q26). Seven of them had an additional monosomy 7. Most of them had a myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) preceding AML, normal or increased platelet counts, increased number of megakaryocyte, megakaryocytic dysplasia, and erythroid dysplasia. There was a high incidence of resistance to induction chemotherapy, short remission time, and early relapse. Seven patients were immunologically analyzed. The main immunophenotypes were as follow: CD7+, CD34+, HLA-DR+, CD38+, CD13+, CD33+, CDw65+, CD2-, CD3-, CD4-, CD8-, CD19+, CD20-, CD11b-. Our results suggest that the leukemia with inv(3)(q21q26) represents a new cytogenetic-clinicopathologic subtype, characterized by 1) abnormal megakaryopoiesis and multiple hematopoietic lineage involvement; 2) an antecedent MDS; 3) poor response to conventional chemotherapy; and 4) expression of CD7, CD34, CD38, HLA-DR, CD13, and CD33 antigens. We propose that the malignant transformation in patients with inv(3)(q21q26) occurs in an early stem cell prior to lineage commitment.
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PMID:Chromosomal abnormality inv(3)(q21q26) associated with multilineage hematopoietic progenitor cells in hematopoietic malignancies. 920 72

We studied the differentiation profiles of B cell precursors (BCP) in normal and post-chemotherapy pediatric bone marrow (BM) using multiparameter flow cytometry. The goal of our study was to draw a comprehensive phenotypic map of the three major maturational BCP stages in BM. By correlating lineage-associated markers, CD45RA, and several adhesion molecules, the stage-specific patterns were found to differ in certain details from previously published concepts. Among the earliest BCP, a subset of CD34+ CD10(lo) precursors was repeatedly observed in addition to the well characterized CD34+ CD10(hi) CD19+ majority of cells. Only two-thirds of these CD34+ CD10(lo) cells expressed CD19. However, uniformity of phenotypic features, absence of T lineage markers, and the regeneration kinetics after chemotherapy suggest the B lineage affiliation of the CD34+ CD10(lo) precursors in general. In the more mature BCP, expression of CD10, CD20, cytoplasmic and surface mu chains (c mu and s mu) was observed to overlap more than previously recognized. We found that CD20 and c mu appear early during B cell ontogeny (already on CD34+ BCP), and that CD10 is lost late, following the onset of s mu expression. Differences between normal and post-chemotherapy BM specimens regarding the phenotypic appearance of BCP were exclusively due to differences in the subset composition, as post-chemotherapy samples showed a preponderance of immature stages. Our observations may build a framework for comparing leukemic cells with their normal counterparts to define possible leukemia-associated aberrations useful for residual disease studies.
Leukemia 1997 Aug
PMID:Multiparameter phenotype mapping of normal and post-chemotherapy B lymphopoiesis in pediatric bone marrow. 926 80

In our laboratory, a two-step procedure is used for purging precursor B ALL from autologous bone marrow grafts of children in second bone marrow remission. An immunorosette depletion method with CD19 and CD22 MAbs is followed by one cycle of complement-mediated cell lysis with CD9 and CD10 MAbs. The aim of the present study was to determine if the efficacy of this procedure could be further enhanced by including CD20 and CD72 MAbs in the current protocol. Leukemia-contaminated remission bone marrow was simulated by mixing cell line cells and normal bone marrow cells. The efficacy of purging of malignant cells was determined by culturing the cells in a limiting dilution assay. The effect of including CD20 and CD72 in the immunorosette depletion was limited. In contrast, when these MAbs were added during complement-mediated cell lysis, a significant increase in depletion of tumor cells was observed. This was true when complement lysis was carried out alone (0.4 versus 3.0 log depletion for Ros cells) and when it was preceded by immunorosette depletion (2.7 versus 4.1 log depletion for Ros cells). The loss of hematopoietic progenitor cells was not greater than with the current purging protocol.
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PMID:Optimization of purging of autologous bone marrow grafts for children with precursor B acute lymphoblastic leukemia. 936 86

A case of Hodgkin's disease (HD), lymphocyte depression (LD) type in an immunosuppressive patient is described. The patient was a 48-year-old male and his parents were born in the Kyushu area, which is an endemic area for adult T cell lymphoma/leukemia (ATL). He was seropositive for ATL virus (ATLV, also referred to as HTLV-I) and showed a marked immunosuppressive condition. He developed LD-HD and Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia, and died due to respiratory failure. The immunohistochemical and in situ hybridization analyses revealed that the Reed-Sternberg-like cells in the lymph node biopsy sample were positive for Ber-H2 (CD30), Leu-M1 (CD15), L-26 (CD20), Bcl-2, p53 and EBER, the viral genome of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV).
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PMID:Epstein-Barr virus-related Hodgkin's disease showing B cell lineage in an immunosuppressive patient seropositive for HTLV-I. 941 42

The number of long-term survivors of patients with acute myeloblastic leukemia (AML) has increased as a result of the progress of chemotherapy. We examined the recovery of peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) subset after chemotherapy to clarify the reconstitution of the immune system in AML. Thirty patients with AML in complete remission (CR) were entered into the study. There were 12 males and 18 females; one M0, six M1, 14 M2, three M3, two M4 and four M5 according to FAB classification. The age ranged from 21 to 78 years (median age, 46 years) and the duration of disease-free survival after completion of chemotherapy ranged from 5 to 122 months (median, 35 months). The chemotherapy was performed according to the protocol designed by the Japan Adult Leukemia Study Group (JALSG). PBL subsets were analyzed by flow cytometry with the use of monoclonal antibodies against CD2, CD3, CD4, CD5, CD8, CD16, CD20, CD45RA, CD56, CD57 and HLA-DR. There was a significant positive relationship between the absolute number of CD4+, CD45RA+ CD4+ cells and the duration of time post-therapy and a significant negative relationship between %CD5+ B, CD56+ cells and the duration of time post-therapy. The appearance of autoantibodies (rheumatoid factor and anti-DNA antibody) tended to increase after 2 years, however, there was no relationship between CD5+ B cells and the frequency of rheumatoid factor. These findings demonstrate that patients in CR have a low number of CD4+ and CD45RA+ CD4+ T cells at an early period after chemotherapy and that each subset recovered to a normal level in 2 years. %CD5+ B and CD56+ cells gradually decreased and returned to their normal level after 4 years. There were high numbers of DR+ T cells and NK cells for a long time, suggesting that activated T cells and NK cells may play a role in the immune surveillance system after chemotherapy.
Leukemia 1998 Jan
PMID:Reconstitution of peripheral blood lymphocyte subsets in the long-term disease-free survivors of patients with acute myeloblastic leukemia. 943 20


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