Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0023467 (acute myeloid leukemia)
35,200 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Osteolytic lesions rarely occur in acute myeloid leukemia (AML). We reported an atypical form of the disease, with marrow fibrosis and osteolytic lesions, in a 17-year-old patient, whose main symptom was lumbar pain. Diagnosis of AML was established by bone marrow and lymph node histological analysis. Computed tomography (CT) scan and 99mTc-MDP bone scintyscan revealed osteolytic lesions. After remission-induction, bone marrow aspirate and biopsy showed no evidence of leukemic infiltration, nevertheless bone abnormalities persisted on 99mTc-MDP bone scintyscan, suggesting residual disease. Suspect bone areas were irradiated with symptomatic improvement and 99mTc-MDP bone scintyscan showed the appearance of more condensed bone compared with the pre-radiotherapy pattern. Twelve months later he was readmitted to the hospital due to relapse of AML and died of sepsis within a few weeks. This report illustrates the usefulness of histological studies to establish diagnosis of AML in atypical cases, as well as the importance of CT scan and bone scintigraphy scan for the identification of osteolytic lesions. It also provides additional data as evidence that although osteolytic lesions indicate an adverse prognosis in AML, local irradiation results symptomatic relief.
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PMID:Osteolytic lesions as a presenting sign of acute myeloid leukemia. 1120 32

Effective presentation of tumor antigens is fundamental to strategies aimed at enrolling the immune system in eradication of residual disease after conventional treatments. Myeloid malignancies provide a unique opportunity to derive dendritic cells (DCs), functioning antigen-presenting cells, from the malignant cells themselves. These may then co-express leukemic antigens together with appropriate secondary signals and be used to generate a specific, antileukemic immune response. In this study, blasts from 40 patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) were cultured with combinations of granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor, interleukin 4, and tumor necrosis factor alpha, and development to DCs was assessed. After culture, cells from 24 samples exhibited morphological and immunophenotypic features of DCs, including expression of major histocompatibility complex class II, CD1a, CD83, and CD86, and were potent stimulators in an allogeneic mixed lymphocyte reaction (MLR). Stimulation of autologous T-cell responses was assessed by the proliferative response of autologous T cells to the leukemic DCs and by demonstration of the induction of specific, autologous, antileukemic cytotoxicity. Of 17 samples, 11 were effective stimulators in the autologous MLR, and low, but consistent, autologous, antileukemic cytotoxicity was induced in 8 of 11 cases (mean, 27%; range, 17%-37%). This study indicates that cells with enhanced antigen-presenting ability can be generated from AML blasts, that these cells can effectively prime autologous cytotoxic T cells in vitro, and that they may be used as potential vaccines in the immunotherapy of AML.
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PMID:Stimulation of autologous proliferative and cytotoxic T-cell responses by "leukemic dendritic cells" derived from blast cells in acute myeloid leukemia. 1131 69

Multiparameter flow cytometry (MFC) has the potential to allow for sensitive and specific monitoring of residual disease (RD) in acute myeloid leukemia (AML). The use of MFC for RD monitoring assumes that AML cells identified by their immunophenotype at diagnosis can be detected during remission and at relapse. AML cells from 136 patients were immunophenotyped by MFC at diagnosis and at first relapse using 9 panels of 3 monoclonal antibodies. Immunophenotype changes occurred in 124 patients (91%); they consisted of gains or losses of discrete leukemia cell populations resolved by MFC (42 patients) and gains or losses of antigens on leukemia cell populations present at both time points (108 patients). Antigen expression defining unusual phenotypes changed frequently: CD13, CD33, and CD34, absent at diagnosis in 3, 33, and 47 cases, respectively, were gained at relapse in 2 (67%), 15 (45%), and 17 (36%); CD56, CD19, and CD14, present at diagnosis in 5, 16, and 20 cases, were lost at relapse in 2 (40%), 6 (38%), and 8 (40%). Leukemia cell gates created in pretreatment samples using each 3-antibody panel allowed identification of relapse AML cells in only 68% to 91% of cases, but use of 8 3-antibody panels, which included antibodies to a total of 16 antigens, allowed identification of relapse AML cells in all cases. Thus, the immunophenotype of AML cells is markedly unstable; nevertheless, despite this instability, MFC has the potential to identify RD in AML if multiple antibody panels are used at all time points. (Blood. 2001;97:3574-3580)
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PMID:High frequency of immunophenotype changes in acute myeloid leukemia at relapse: implications for residual disease detection (Cancer and Leukemia Group B Study 8361). 1136 53

Acute promyelocytic leukemia (AML M3) is a well-defined subtype of leukemia with specific and peculiar characteristics. Immediate identification of t(15;17) or the PML/RARA gene rearrangement is fundamental for treatment. The objective of the present study was to compare fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH), reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) and karyotyping in 18 samples (12 at diagnosis and 6 after treatment) from 13 AML M3 patients. Bone marrow samples were submitted to karyotype G-banding, FISH and RT-PCR. At diagnosis, cytogenetics was successful in 10 of 12 samples, 8 with t(15;17) and 2 without. FISH was positive in 11/12 cases (one had no cells for analysis) and positivity varied from 25 to 93% (mean: 56%). RT-PCR was done in 6/12 cases and all were positive. Four of 8 patients with t(15;17) presented positive RT-PCR as well as 2 without metaphases. The lack of RT-PCR results in the other samples was due to poor quality RNA. When the three tests were compared at diagnosis, karyotyping presented the translocation in 80% of the tested samples while FISH and RT-PCR showed the PML/RARA rearrangement in 100% of them. Of 6 samples evaluated after treatment, 3 showed a normal karyotype, 1 persistence of an abnormal clone and 2 no metaphases. FISH was negative in 4 samples studied and 2 had no material for analysis. RT-PCR was positive in 4 (2 of which showed negative FISH, indicating residual disease) and negative in 2. When the three tests were compared after treatment, they showed concordance in 2 of 6 samples or, when there were not enough cells for all tests, concordance between karyotype and RT-PCR in one. At remission, RT-PCR was the most sensitive test in detecting residual disease, as expected (positive in 4/6 samples). An incidence of about 40% of 5' breaks and 60% of 3' breaks, i.e., bcr3 and bcr1/bcr2, respectively, was observed.
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PMID:Acute promyelocytic leukemia: the study of t(15;17) translocation by fluorescent in situ hybridization, reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction and cytogenetic techniques. 1137 61

The detection of chimerism, residual molecular and cytogenetic disease following transplantation of peripheral blood stem cells (PBSCT) with a nonmyeloablative conditioning (n = 9) and the transplantation of highly purified CD34(+) stem cells (CD34(+) PBSCT) (n = 16) were compared to unmanipulated bone marrow transplantation (BMT) (n = 69) and unmanipulated PBSCT (n = 50) after myeloablative conditioning in patients with first chronic phase of chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) (n = 137), second chronic phase of CML (n = 4), acute lymphoblastic leukemia (n = 2) and acute myeloid leukemia (n = 1). A molecular relapse (MR) as defined by two consecutive positive polymerase chain reaction assays for the detection of M-bcr-abl transcripts (n = 141) and cbfbeta-myh11 transcripts (n = 1) in a 4-week interval was found in 10 of 16 patients (63%) after CD34(+) PBSCT, and in 27 of 69 patients (39%) after BMT, whereas only three of 50 patients (6%) after PBSCT (P < 0.001) and one of eight patients (13%) after PBSCT with reduced conditioning suffered from a MR. A cytogenetic relapse occurred in five of 16 patients (31%) after CD34(+)PBSCT and 21 of 69 patients (30%) after BMT (NS) compared to two of 50 patients (4%) after PBSCT and none of the eight patients after PBSCT with reduced conditioning (P < 0.05). The lowest treatment-related mortality was seen in the 16 patients after CD34(+) PBSCT, who are all currently alive with a median follow-up of 15 months, whereas the survival rate for BMT, PBSCT and PBSCT with reduced conditioning were 65%, 63% and 58%, respectively. Multivariate analysis including all potential influential factors of post-transplant residual disease recurrence showed that patients after CD34(+) PBSCT had a significantly higher risk (two times) to develop a MR than patients after BMT (P < 0.03), whereas patients after unmanipulated PBSCT had a significant lower risk (eight times) for the occurrence of a MR post transplant (P < 0.001). Patients after BMT and CD34(+) PBSCT had the lowest rates of complete chimerism (CC) at 3 months after transplant. Only five of nine patients (55%) after CD34(+) PBSCT and 19 of 33 patients (58%) after BMT achieved CC compared to 19 of 22 (86%) patients after PBSCT and seven of eight (88%) patients after PBSCT with reduced conditioning (P < 0.05).
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PMID:A comparison of chimerism and minimal residual disease between four different allogeneic transplantation methods in patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia in first chronic phase. 1147 37

Minimal residual disease in patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) with inversion(16) can be monitored by CBFbeta/MYH11 RT-PCR. While the association between molecular remission (MR) in bone marrow (BM) and peripheral blood (PB) and long-term clinical remission (CR) seems to be established, there are insufficient data on the kinetics of CBFbeta/MYH11. We have performed a prospective study in order to generate a reasonable and sufficient schedule for PCR-monitoring. 11 patients with AML and inversion (16) in complete hematological remission have been prospectively monitored by CBFbeta/MYH11 RT-PCR in their BM and PB during an observation period of 7 to 67 months (median 32 months). Patients were followed during consolidation chemotherapy with repetitive cycles of high-dose Ara-C and after autologous or allogeneic stem cell transplantation in 2nd CR or refractory AML. MR never coincided with achievement of CR but occurred between 2 and 8 months after hematological remission. All patients in continuous CR were PCR-negative after 1-8 (median 4) months. Two patients relapsed despite MR for 10 to 15 months. Molecular relapse preceded hematological relapse by 3 to 5 months. Three out of four patients who were not in MR after 8 months relapsed. Allogeneic stem cell transplantation was able to eradicate minimal residual disease in 4/4 patients. In 2 patients a temporary reconversion to PCR-positivity was reversed by reduction of immunosuppression. 1 patient did not become PCR-negative until compete withdrawal of immunosuppression. We suggest that BM and PB should be examined after the last consolidation treatment. In case of MR, PB should be examined every 1 to 2 months and BM examination should be done only in case of PCR-positivity in PB in order to confirm the molecular relapse and to identify an impending cytogenetic and/or hematological relapse. CBFbeta/MYH11 RT-PCR monitoring is able to predict relapse 3 to 5 months prior to overt hematological relapse, offers a window of opportunity for preemptive therapy of molecular relapse and confers implications for immunotherapy in the setting of allografting.
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PMID:Prospective monitoring of minimal residual disease in acute myeloid leukemia with inversion(16) by CBFbeta/MYH11 RT-PCR: implications for a monitoring schedule and for treatment decisions. 1169 47

The use of all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) in combination with chemotherapy has markedly improved the prognosis for patients with acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL); the higher complete remission (CR) and survival rates now reported in this disease almost approach those obtained for other highly curable hematologic malignancies. Of 77 patients with APL who were consecutively treated at a single institution and who achieved CR after induction and consolidation therapy, 5 (6.5%) acquired therapy-related myelodysplasia (tMDS), acute myelogenous leukemia (AML), or both (tMDS-AML). Of these, 3 of 46 (6.5%) patients received front-line chemotherapy with or without ATRA and acquired tMDS-AML while in first remission of APL. Two underwent repeated chemotherapy cycles with ATRA because of APL relapse and acquired tMDS-AML while in the second or third remission of APL. In 2 patients, clinical and biologic characteristics of tMDS-AML were as expected for postalkylating forms (long latency, MDS phase preceding AML, karyotypic aberrations involving chromosomes 5 or 7), even though one of them had not previously received alkylating drugs. Three of the 5 patients died shortly after tMDS-AML diagnosis, one is alive with tMDS, and one is alive and in CR after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. The occurrence of tMDS-AML after successful therapy for APL is an emerging problem. The availability of prognostic score systems at initial diagnosis and monitoring of residual disease by polymerase chain reaction might allow better tailoring of treatment intensity in APL to spare unnecessary toxicity and to minimize the risk for tMDS-AML in patients who are presumably cured.
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PMID:Therapy-related myelodysplastic syndrome-acute myelogenous leukemia in patients treated for acute promyelocytic leukemia: an emerging problem. 1221 Nov 97

We report a nonmyeloablative allogeneic bone marrow transplant (allo-BMT) from an HLA-matched unrelated donor in a case of acute myeloid leukemia (AML), M2 with t(8;21)(q22;q22) and the presence of orbital granulocytic sarcoma (GS), who had residual tumor after conventional chemotherapy. The course of BMT was well tolerated, with no major procedure-related toxicity. The residual orbital GS regressed completely 4 months after BMT. She is currently 19 months post BMT, disease-free. To our knowledge, this is the first reported pediatric patient with AML, GS and t(8;21)(q22;q22) who received a nonmyeloablative allo-BMT.
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PMID:Nonmyeloablative allogeneic bone marrow transplantation for orbital granulocytic sarcoma associated with t(8;21)(q22;q22) in acute myeloid leukemia. 1184 Jan 47

New therapeutic approaches are needed to improve the cure rates in acute myeloid leukaemia (AML). The present study was designed to investigate whether: (1) cytotoxic lymphocytes could be expanded from AML patients in complete remission; (2) their signal transduction machinery was preserved; (3) these cells were capable of producing cytokines involved in the cytolytic process; and (4) these cells showed cytotoxic activity against allogeneic and autologous blasts. By co-culturing blood mononuclear cells with feeder cells, we obtained an average 5.3-fold increase in the total cell number and a 35-fold increase in natural killer (NK) cells. Expression of the zeta chain and of tyrosine kinases of the Src and Syk-ZAP families involved in the triggering of NK functions was analysed on expanded cells. The results demonstrated a signal transduction apparatus preserved and quantitatively similar to that of normal donors. After phorbol myristate acetate and ionomicin stimulation, the ability of expanded cells to produce interferon gamma and tumour necrosis factor alpha was documented. Patients' expanded cells showed a cytotoxic activity against target lines and allogeneic blasts which was similar to that of normal donors. Purification experiments indicated that the NK cell fraction was responsible for most of the lytic effect. More significantly, these cells also exerted a lytic effect against autologous blasts that could be further enhanced following incubation with low-dose interleukin 2. These findings document the possibility of expanding cytotoxic effectors with preserved signal transduction machinery and autologous killing capacity from AML patients in remission, and suggest a new potential immunotherapeutic strategy for the management of early disease recurrence or of residual disease.
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PMID:Expansion of cytotoxic effectors with lytic activity against autologous blasts from acute myeloid leukaemia patients in complete haematological remission. 1184 30

Accurate assessment of residual disease is important for the prediction of outcome in patients with acute leukaemia in complete remission (CR). To investigate whether abnormalities on magnetic resonance (MR) images of femoral marrow in adult patients with acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) in CR can predict outcome, 28 newly diagnosed patients with AML underwent MR imaging when bone marrow aspiration or biopsy was performed to verify the state of CR after induction therapy. MR abnormalities on short TI (inversion time) inversion recovery (STIR) techniques persisted in all four patients who did not achieve CR. In 13 CR patients abnormalities on STIR images resolved, to result in normal appearance at the time CR was achieved. All 13 patients remained in CR for 3-104 months (median, 73 months). In the other 11 CR patients, STIR abnormalities persisted at the time CR was achieved. Seven of them relapsed between 1 and 28 months (median, 3 months) after MR evaluation. Disease-free survival of patients with persistent abnormal STIR images was significantly shorter than that of patients with normal STIR images (P < 0.01). MR imaging of femoral marrow may predict outcome in adult patients with AML in CR.
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PMID:Magnetic resonance imaging of femoral marrow predicts outcome in adult patients with acute myeloid leukaemia in complete remission. 1191 35


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