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Query: UMLS:C0023467 (
acute myeloid leukemia
)
35,200
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Hydroperoxidase-positive Phi bodies and rods are much more prominent and prevalent than rods visualized with a Romanovsky-type stain (Auer rods) in immature leukocytes of patients with active
acute myelogenous leukemia
(
AML
). They are readily observed with the light microscope in peripheral blood or marrow films of
AML
patients stained to show their peroxidatic activity. In many of these patients, Auer rods, which apparently constitute only a small subpopulation of the hydroperoxidase-positive Phi bodies and rods, were detected with difficulty, if at all. The hydroperoxidase-positive Phi bodies and rods were observed in 92% of 36 patients with active disease. They were never observed in leukocytes of patients with other hematopoietic disorders or of normal individuals. Thus, they facilitated the distinction of
AML
from acute lymphocytic leukemia and chronic granulocytic leukemia in blast crisis. They were absent in full clinical remission after chemotherapy and were greatly diminished in partial remission. They were present in disease relapse and reappeared in five patients who had been in full remission. These results suggest that these hydroperoxidase-positive enlarged particles are pathognomonic of
AML
and that monitoring them with the light microscope may aid in guiding its clinical management.
Cancer
Res 1979 May
PMID:Facilitated light microscopic cytochemical diagnosis of acute myelogenous leukemia. 8 86
Leukemic blasts from a patient with
acute myelogenous leukemia
(
AML
) and peripheral blood T- and B-lymphocyte subpopulations from his genetically identical normal twin were analyzed with the use of the simian antiserum-defining
AML
antigens and a rabbit antiserum to immune response-associated (la)-like antigens. Blast cells from the patient consistently reacted with both reagents, whereas the B-lymphocyte populations from the patient's normal identical twin reacted only with the rabbit anti-la serum and in no instances reacted with the antiserum to
AML
cell antigens. Blast cells from the
AML
patient significantly stimulated the lymphocytes of his normal twin and his own remission leukocytes, whereas the cells from the normal twin failed to stimulate the cells of the patient. These results suggested the existence on
AML
cells of tumor-associated antigens that are distinct from various other well-characterized normal human alloantigens and differentiation antigens including B-cell antigens. Changes were reported in the expression of leukemia-associated antigens and Ia-like antigens on the cells of an
AML
patient undergoing chemotherapy as well as in the ability of the simian antisera to distinguish antigens specific for myeloid leukemias from lymphocytic types of leukemias.
J Natl
Cancer
Inst 1979 May
PMID:Human acute myelogenous leukemia antigens defined by simian antisera: evidence for leukemia-associated antigens distinct from immune response-associated alloantigens. 8 33
Identification of a "cluster" of cases of
acute myeloid leukaemia
and chronic myeloproliferative disorders in Lytham St. Annes, Lancashire, prompted an analysis of the incidence of myeloid leukaemias in Lancashire (excluding Ormskirk Health District), as recorded by the Manchester
Cancer
Registry. Although statistically there was no significant difference in the trend of incidence between the whole former borough of Lytham St. Annes and the other districts studied, the reported incidence of these diseases in the area as a whole had almost doubled, and in two districts nearly trebled, between two consecutive 6 year periods, beginning in 1965. This represents a substantially larger increase than mortality data suggests has occurred nationally in the same period, and is unlikely to be due solely to more accurate diagnosis or reporting.
...
PMID:Incidence of myeloid leukaemia in Lancashire. 8 57
Electrofocusing patterns of plasma fucosyltransferases provide information concerning marrow status of patients with myeloproliferative disorders. Three enzymes were detected in normal plasmas using an acceptor terminating in the sequence N-acetylglucosamine-galactose. The enzyme which focused at pH 4.7 was elevated during rapid proliferation of myeloid cells, e.g., acute myelogenous leukemias and certain infectious diseases. Activity at pI = 5.1 was decreased in
acute myelogenous leukemia
patients, and from other observations, appears related to the level of erythropoietic activity. Acceptor studies show this enzyme to be specified by the H gene. A third enzyme focused at pH 5.5 and appeared to be correlated with a later step in granulocytes maturation. Two other plasma fucosyltransferases (pl = 5.6 and 8.3) were detected with a high-molecular-weight acceptor terminating in N-acetylglucosamine. This activity was markedly elevated during regeneration of a normal marrow population during drug-induced remission of
acute myelogenous leukemia
. Additional isoenzymes were detected, using this acceptor, in plasma of patients with certain solid tumors and multiple myeloma. However, the new isoelectric points observed (pH 6.0, 6.9, and 7.8) suggest these enzymes are probably not derived from hematopoietic tissues.
Cancer
Res 1979 Sep
PMID:Electrofocusing patterns of fucosyltransferases in plasma of patients with neoplastic disease. 8 96
Cyclocytidine, a slow-release form of cytosine arabinoside, was evaluated in 69 children with advanced acute leukemia and solid tumors. One child with acute lymphocytic leukemia attained a complete remission. This child had received intrathecal cytosine arabinoside prior to the cyclocytidine. Eighteen of the 31 patients with acute lymphocytic leukemia/acute undifferentiated leukemia who did not respond received two or more courses of the drug. There were no responses in 15 children with
acute myelogenous leukemia
, in 11 children with neuroblastoma, or in 11 children with various solid tumors of childhood. A dose of 600 ng/m2/day for 10 consecutive days is tolerated in children.
Cancer
Treat Rep 1979 Aug
PMID:Evaluation of cyclocytidine in children with advanced acute leukemia and solid tumors. 8 7
Seventy-eight patients with Hodgkin's disease were treated with radiation therapy between July 1966 and July 1976 (30 Stage I, 28 Stage II, 20 Stage III). The mean follow-up period is greater than 5 years. 90% of Stage I, 86% of Stage II, 65% of Stage III, and 82% (64/78) of all patients are NED after radiotherapy alone. Since laparotomy option (1970) 89% (50/56) of patients are NED. Fourteen patients were failures. Chemotherapy "rescued" 6 of 14. Seven have died, 1 is alive with disease, and 1 died of leukemia. Absolute survival is 90% (70/78). Failures were more frequent in patients with unfavorable histological types (9/14), and Stage III disease, primarily IIIS+ or B category (7/14). Sites of failures were mainly extranodal, primarily lung (10/14) and bone (2/14), and are consistent with hematogenous dissemination. Laparotomy performed in 41 patients identified unsuspected splenic involvement in 9 cases (22%), but was a distinct failure in confirming most "small node" positive lymphangiograms. Two patients developed
acute myelocytic leukemia
, both while NED 5 years posttherapy. One patient had also received adjunctive MOPP. There has been no impairment in the quality of survival that could be directly attributed to radiotherapy.
Cancer
1978 Sep
PMID:Hodgkin's disease: radiotherapeutic management at a cancer oriented community hospital. 10 Jan 96
In this study of children with
acute nonlymphocytic leukemia
an attempt was made to prevent central nervous system relapse and to determine whether this therapy, coupled with multiagent chemotherapy, would be successful in prolonging durations of complete remission. Central nervous system relapses were prevented by irradiation, although patients who received this therapy did no better than those who did not receive irradiation. A small group of patients received irradiation to the liver and spleen, but this modality also failed to improve the duration of remission. Control of extramedullary leukemia, in this study, failed to improve remission duration because bone marrow relapse was not prevented or delayed. It is unlikely that focal therapy will have a significant impact in
acute nonlymphocytic leukemia
until longer marrow remissions are achieved.
Cancer
1978 Nov
PMID:Preventive central nervous system irradiation in children with acute nonlymphocytic leukemia. 10 18
Cancer
chemotherapeutic agents and antibacterial antibiotics are often given concomitantly. Daunorubicin, cytosine arabinoside, and three antibiotics (gentamicin, amikacin, and ticarcillin) were tested individually and in combinations to determine their antimicrobial activity against Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Klebsiella pneumoniae, and Escherichia coli. These cytotoxic agents are commonly employed in the therapy of
acute nonlymphocytic leukemia
for remission induction therapy, and these antimicrobial agents are used in infection therapy. The maximum concentrations of the two cytotoxic drugs were chosen to be twice the known peak plasma levels of commonly employed dosage schedules. Neither of the
cancer
chemotherapeutic agents, alone or in combination, demonstrated bactericidal activity at the levels tested. However, in the presence of these agents, the antimicrobial activity of gentamicin and amikacin, although not that of ticarcillin, was depressed for 11 of 15 K. pneumoniae strains and 8 of 15 P. aeruginosa strains, but for none of the strains of E. coli. This level of decreased activity occasionally resulted in a minimal inhibitory concentration of the tested aminoglycoside well above the standard serum levels. Daunorubicin was more likely to antagonize gentamicin than was cytosine arabinoside.
...
PMID:Effect of two cancer chemotherapeutic agents on the antibacterial activity of three antimicrobial agents. 10 94
Aspergillosis in
cancer
patients is a problem. Because not all patients can undergo invasive procedures, we sought other methods for diagnosis. We reviewed the data from all patients with
acute nonlymphocytic leukemia
treated at our center during a 3-year period. Of 125 patients, 18 had invasive aspergillosis (cases). Eleven patients had nose cultures growing Aspergillus flavus or A. fumigatus; 10 of these 11 had aspergillosis, whereas only eight of 114 without such nose cultures had invasive disease (P less than 0.000001). Thus, A. flavus on nose culture appears "predictive" for aspergillosis. Absence of such a culture does not preclude infection. Of 125 patients, 61 had sterile nose culture(s) and 14 of the 18 cases had such a sterile nose culture. Only four of the 64 patients without sterile nose cultures developed aspergillosis (P less than 0.008), suggesting a relation between sterile nose culture and aspergillosis. Carbenicillin was used for a longer period among cases and patients with predictive nose cultures than among patients without aspergillosis. These data may help identify patients at risk of aspergillosis and help determine antifungal therapy when invasive procedures are contraindicated.
...
PMID:Invasive aspergillosis in acute leukemia: correlation with nose cultures and antibiotic use. 10 57
A series of 24 patients with severe neutropenia, most of whom had
acute myeloblastic leukemia
, were treated in an isolation unit with oral nonabsorbable antibiotics and were compared to 21 similar patients receiving oral antibiotics alone. The frequency of bacterial infections was lower in the patients receiving both isolation and oral antibiotics compared to the patients who received only oral antibiotics. The responses to chemotherapy in terms of remission rates were identical for the two groups.
Cancer
Treat Rep 1979 Mar
PMID:Comparative randomized study of protected environment plus oral antibiotics versus oral antibiotics alone in neutropenic patients. 10 63
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