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Query: UMLS:C0023467 (
acute myeloid leukemia
)
35,200
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The classification of acute leukemia has almost invariably been based on the morphologic diagnosis into two broad categories: acute lymphocytic and
acute myeloid leukemia
. Despite the wide range of morphologic variation in both groups, strict criteria to define the subgroups have only recently been proposed. The conventional markers for B and T cells are now being applied to leukemic cells as are cytochemistry and electron microscopy, terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase, serum lysozyme, and surface markers, E-rosettes, membrane immunoglobulin, antinull acute lymphocytic leukemia antiserum, and Fc and C3 receptors. The myelodysplastic syndromes may mimic acute leukemia and it is important that they be identified and treated appropriately. The high incidence with which
chronic myelomonocytic leukemia
terminates in acute leukemia suggests that it is a preleukemic condition, whereas refractory anemia with excess blasts and acquired idiopathic sideroblastic anemia may have long, drawn-out courses. Only a small population of patients with the latter conditions develop acute leukemia.
...
PMID:Classification of acute leukemia. 33 70
Hypoplastic acute leukemia (HAL) is characterized by pancytopenia and by hypocellularity of the bone marrow. The marrow contains equal to or more than 30% myeloblasts. Absence of tissue infiltrates and/or tumor masses is mandatory. Eight patients are described here. They do not fit into the FAB classification for either
acute nonlymphocytic leukemia
(
ANLL
) or myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS), except for one patient who subsequently proved to have a
chronic myelomonocytic leukemia
(
CMML
). The median age is 65 years. Two patients, including the
CMML
patient, are alive, 22 and 6 months from diagnosis. Six patients have died. The median survival is 8 months. Normal bone marrow cells cultured either with HAL sera or with HAL peripheral blood mononuclear cells as feeders and exogenous GM-CSF yielded subnormal CFU-GM counts. This might indicate inhibitory activity of HAL serum and defective stimulatory activity of HAL peripheral blood mononuclear cells.
...
PMID:Hypoplastic acute leukemia: description of eight cases and search for hematopoietic inhibiting activity. 145 85
A total of 56 patients were diagnosed as primary myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) at Chang Gung Memorial Hospital, Kaohsiung from April 1986 to December 1991. The median age was 65 years with an equal sex ratio. All patients presented with anemia and 52% with pancytopenia. The overall median survival for the entire group was 7 months, in which the
chronic myelomonocytic leukemia
(CMMoL) was 7 months, and 4 months for each of the refractory anemia with excess of blasts (RAEB) or the refractory anemia with excess of blasts in transformation (RAEB-T), however, the median survival had not been reached at 27 months for refractory anemia (RA) and at 33 months for refractory anemia with ring sideroblasts (RARS). Low-does arabinosyl cytosine (Ara-C) was administered in 9 patients with RAEB and RAEB-T, but no survival benefit was noted. Infection, especially pneumonia, was the most common cause of death. In 61 febrile episodes with clinically suspected sepsis, 10 (17%) were documented to associate with bacteremia. Twelve patients (7 RAEB, 4 RAEB-T, and 1 CMMoL) evolved to
acute myelogenous leukemia
(
AML
), the median interval from diagnosis to evolution was 4.8 months. This series indicates that only two groups of FAB subtypes could be clearly separated in terms of morphological findings and clinical outcome; RA and RARS constitute a good prognostic group, whereas RAEB, CMMoL, and RAEB-T constitute a poor prognostic group.
...
PMID:Primary myelodysplastic syndrome: an analysis of 56 patients. 146 34
This report describes 2 patients who developed
acute myelocytic leukemia
(
AML
) type M2 and
chronic myelomonocytic leukemia
(
CMML
) of the FAB classification, respectively 2 months and 2 weeks after diagnosis of operable breast cancer. The patient with
AML
showed pancytopenia 2 months before the diagnosis of
AML
, had a normal karyotype, and showed a good response to chemotherapy. The patient with
CMML
had a normal karyotype, and she was treated with hydroxyurea and supportive therapy. The 2 patients had no previous exposure to irradiation or cytotoxic therapy. These cases show that breast cancer and either leukemia or myelodysplastic syndrome may be associated even without previous irradiation or combination chemotherapy.
...
PMID:Acute myelocytic leukemia and chronic myelomonocytic leukemia simultaneously with resectable breast cancer: a report of two cases. 149 12
The surface expression of the alpha 2-macroblobulin receptor (alpha 2MR), detected by a monoclonal antibody, A2MR alpha-2, was determined on mononuclear blood cells from 90 cases of malignant blood disease. Flow cytometric analyses combined with immunoblotting and ligand binding experiments revealed that alpha 2MR was expressed on malignant cells from patients with acute and chronic myelomonocytic leukemias, while no significant expression was found on malignant cells from acute and chronic lymphatic leukemia, lymphomas, plasma cell leukemias or hairy cell leukemia. In
acute myeloid leukemia
, alpha 2MR was expressed in 50% of the M4-M5 cases, but only in three of thirty of the morphologically undifferentiated or non-monocytic cases (M1-M3 and M6). In
chronic myelomonocytic leukemia
five of seven cases were alpha 2MR-positive, while only one of seven cases of chronic myeloid leukemia was positive. The monocytic nature of the hematopoietic cells reacting with A2MR alpha 2 was further confirmed by a close correlation with CD14 surface expression.
...
PMID:Surface expression of the alpha 2-macroglobulin receptor on human malignant blood cells. 156 Jun 72
Activating ras mutations are frequent (25-60%) in
chronic myelomonocytic leukemia
(
CMML
) and in
acute myeloid leukemia
(
AML
) (30%), in contrast to chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) in which the incidence is very low (0-3%). This might reflect that the leukemic cell in CML is at a level of differentiation in which ras gene activation is not involved or, alternatively, might be due to the presence in CML of the bcrlabl fused gene. We have analyzed the presence of point mutations in codons 12, 13, 59, 61 and 63 of N-, K-, and H-ras genes, in 26 cases of Philadelphia-chromosome-positive, bcrlabl-positive acute leukemia (Ph+ AL), and in eight
CMML
cases by using the polymerase chain reaction. Aberrant ras genes were detected in a single Ph+ AL case, and in four out of eight
CMML
patients. The Ph+ AL showing altered ras allele had an unusual point mutation in H-ras gene, substituting leucine for glutamine. This mutation has not been previously found in any hematological disease. Our findings suggest that ras mutations are probably not involved in the pathogenesis of those leukemias in which blast cells contain bcrlabl oncogene activation.
...
PMID:Low frequency of ras oncogene mutations in Philadelphia-positive acute leukemia and report of a novel mutation H61 Leu in a single case. 158 96
Two patients with
acute myeloid leukemia
(
AML
) developed a
chronic myelomonocytic leukemia
(CMMoL)-like state after chemotherapy. Both patients showed morphological evidence of myelodysplasia together with acute leukemia at presentation (Case 1: M5b with trilineage myelodysplasia and Case 2: M4 with dysmegakaryocytopoiesis). They also showed persistent monocytosis without prominent blast cell proliferation after induction therapy. The possibility was suggested that these two patients were in acute transformation from CMMoL at presentation and returned to a CMMoL-like state after induction therapy.
...
PMID:Two cases of acute myeloid leukemia evolving into a chronic myelomonocytic leukemia-like state after induction therapy. 160 Feb 70
Myelodysplastic syndromes originate from a pluripotent stem cell. This view, previously suggested by G-6-PD and cytogenetic investigations, has been established unequivocally by X-chromosome inactivation analysis based on DNA polymorphisms and by studies of mutated oncogenes. Two genomic alterations associated with MDS have been analyzed in more detail. Activation of the RAS oncogenes, preferentially N-RAS, is demonstrated in approximately 35% of MDS patients. Mutations in the FMS gene, encoding the CSF-1 receptor, are found in 16% of cases. Interestingly, RAS and FMS mutations are predominantly observed in disorders of myelomonoctic differentiation, i.e., the
CMML
subtype in MDS and the
AML
FAB type M4. Moreover, homozygous deletion of the FMS gene may be an important event in the genesis of the MDS variant 5q- syndrome. Preliminary data indicate that defects in tumor-suppressor genes, namely p53, may also contribute to the development of MDS. Different lines of evidence suggest that clinical preleukemia is preceded by a phase in which genetic alterations accumulate without any hematologic change. Cases in point are the detection of RAS and FMS mutations in healthy individuals who had been treated in the past with cytotoxic therapy for lymphoma, the frequent observation of clonal remission in
AML
patients, or the identification of oncogene mutations in healthy individuals without even a history of malignancy or chemotherapy. Possibly, either germline mutations of oncogenes or tumor-suppressor genes and the process of genomic imprinting may constitute additional factors that predispose hematopoietic stem cells to malignant transformation. Limited as they are, the currently available data suggest that accumulation of genomic lesions, rather than their precise order of development with respect to one another, characterize the multistep process of leukemogenesis in which MDS already represent more advanced stages. The prognostic significance of oncogene mutations in MDS patients is controversially discussed. This issue awaits prospective analyses taking into account the influence of treatment modalities. However, the clinical relevance of molecularly defined parameters has already been established for their use as clonal markers in determining the mode of action and efficiency of different therapeutic approaches.
...
PMID:Molecular genetic aspects of myelodysplastic syndromes. 161 6
Forty-three patients with myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) were retrospectively analyzed for its prognostic factors. We evaluated the relationship of the clinical, biochemical, and hematological data, as well as colony-forming unit myeloid (CFU-C) culture, Bournemouth score, modified Bournemouth score, and modified Dutcher score to the prognosis. The median age was 65 years. Eighteen patients had refractory anemia (RA), 4 had refractory anemia with ringed sideroblasts (RARS), 15 had refractory anemia with excess blasts (RAEB), 2 had refractory anemia with excess blasts in transformation (RAEB-t), and 4 had
chronic myelomonocytic leukemia
(CMMoL). The median survival of all patients was 482 days. The median survival for each subtype was as follows: RA, 628 days; CMMoL, 350 days; RAEB, 240 days; RAEB-t, 90 days. For RARS, no data have yet been obtained, because only one out of 4 patients with RARS has died. We subdivided all patients into two groups: one group included patients with RA or RARS and the other group included patients with RAEB, RAEB-t or CMMoL. The former group had a median survival of 677 days and the latter group 240 days, p = 0.0035. In the former group, 3 out of 22 patients (13.6%) developed
acute myeloid leukemia
(
AML
), as compared to 8 out of 21 patients (38.1%) in the latter group, p = 0.0661. Twenty-five of the 43 patients died: 10 from
AML
and 15 from infection and/or bleeding.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Myelodysplastic syndrome: a study of prognostic factors. 167 97
In an attempt to identify prognostic factors for survival and leukemic transformation, 235 untreated patients with primary myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) were analyzed in a single center retrospective study. To the well known FAB classification of MDS a supplementary group of patients with pure sideroblastic anemia (PSA) was added, characterized by the absence of dysplastic features of non-erythroid cells. Accordingly, the morphological subtypes were refractory anemia (RA), n = 55; PSA, n = 40; RA with ring sideroblasts (RARS), n = 33; RA with excess of blasts (RAEB), n = 53; RAEB in transformation (RAEB/T) n = 29; and
chronic myelomonocytic leukemia
(
CMML
), n = 25. Having screened 28 clinical, cytological, and laboratory parameters by univariate analysis, multiple regression analysis identified six variables with independent prognostic value: percentage of bone marrow blasts, serum LDH activity, PSA, hemoglobin concentration, age, and platelet count. If patients with PSA were excluded, the FAB classification no longer contributed independent prognostic information. Based on the results of this multivariate analysis, a simple scoring system was devised for predicting the survival of patients with MDS. A score of unity was allocated to each of the following parameters: bone marrow blasts greater than or equal to 5%, LDH greater than 200 U/I, hemoglobin less than or equal to 9 g/dl, and platelets less than or equal to 100 x 10(9)/I. As a function of their total score, patients were divided into three risk groups (group A, score 0; group B, score 1-2; group C, score 3-4), which differed significantly in both survival and rates of leukemic transformation. The cumulative survival 2 years after diagnosis was 91% in group A, 52% in group B, and 9% in group C (p less than 0.00005). The actuarial risk of transformation to
acute myeloid leukemia
at 2 years was 0, 19, and 54%, respectively (p less than 0.05). The inclusion of LDH enzyme levels qualified this scoring system for an accurate assessment of patients with
CMML
whose prognosis is viewed too favorably when rated by other scores. Furthermore, this score was able to identify those patients with RA and RARS who, without showing an excess of marrow blasts, have an unfavorable prognosis.
...
PMID:Primary myelodysplastic syndromes: analysis of prognostic factors in 235 patients and proposals for an improved scoring system. 173 14
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