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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 initial features, response to therapy, complications, cause of death, and prognostic factors of 171 consecutive children with ANLL are described and compated to historical data for adults with ANLL and for children with ALL. Major differences between children and adults with ANLL include a higher frequency of CNS leukemia and a lower frequency of early deaths in the children. The most important differences between children with ANLL and ALL are the absence of a peak age of incidence in ANLL and the far better response to therapy in ALL. Among features present at 100,000/mm3 or above, and no palpable hepatomegaly had significantly longer survivals, while patients with platelet counts below 10,000/mm3 had significantly shorter survivals. The frequency and duration of remission were significantly better with three protocols used since 1968 than previously. However, even with these protocols, the results were far from satisfactory, with a complete remission frequency of 66%, a median duration of hematological remission of 6 months, and a median duration of survival of 10 months. The striking contrast of these results in childhood ANLL with current results in childhood ALL underscores the need for novel, imaginative therapeutic approaches for ANLL.
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PMID:Acute nonlymphocytic leukemia in 171 children. 78 98

The relationship of a variety of initial features and the outcome of therapy was analyzed for 363 children with acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL). All had entered "total therapy" studies between 1962 and 1971. The standard for comparing outcome of therapy was whether patients with a given feature attained or exceeded the median duration of complete remission, hematologic remission or survival for the group. The results showed that, in general, the more massive or extensive the disease at diagnosis, the poorer the outcome. Factors associated with a significantly poorer prognosis included: initial leukocyte count above 100,000/mm; spleen enlargement greater than 5 cm; mediastinal involvement and early CNS involvement. Children over 10 years old at diagnosis and Negro children also had a poor prognosis. From another viewpoint features were examined for patients who attained at least 3 years of continuous complete remission. This confirmed some earlier findings and, in addition, showed that children under 2 years of age at diagnosis or with hepatomegaly over 5 cm were less likely to attain this goal. With the exception of early CNS involvement, however, patients with excellent responses to therapy were found with each factor of poor prognosis. Two major factors were not analyzed because their relationship to prognosis is generally accepted: therapeutic differences and acute nonlymphocytic leukemia.
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PMID:Initial features and prognosis in 363 children with acute lymphocytic leukemia. 106 May 5

Report of five cases of juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia; authors describe an hemopathy of the young child with important splenomegaly, hepatomegaly and adenopathies; anemia with erytroblastemia; hyperleucocytosis with myelemia and monocytosis, rich and granulous bone marrow. Also remarkable is evolution, as it fatal outcome often occurs before a two year evolution, without remission looking like acute myeloblastic leukemia, a few patients have remission of most the symptoms, ending in an apparent recovery, which may be spontaneous.
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PMID:[Myelomonocytic leukemia in childhood (author's transl)]. 106 64

Tender hepatomegaly and ascites occurred in a young woman receiving cytosine arabinoside and daunorubicin for acute myelogenous leukemia. Whereas veno-occlusive disease was suspected clinically, liver biopsy showed nodular regenerative hyperplasia with no evidence of hepatic vein abnormalities. It is postulated that nodular regenerative hyperplasia can be initiated by hepatotoxicity of chemotherapy agents used to treat leukemia and/or that these agents exacerbate clinical manifestations of this histological abnormality. Nodular regenerative hyperplasia should be added to the list of liver problems occurring in patients with leukemia.
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PMID:Nodular regenerative hyperplasia: a cause of ascites and hepatomegaly after chemotherapy for leukemia. 198 59

A series of 27 patients with myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) was analysed to determine the clinical and pathologic features, the natural history and the prognostic factors. The clinical features of these patients included the following: mean age 53.77 years; symptoms due to cytopenias 100 per cent; hepatomegaly 44.5 per cent; splenomegaly 11 per cent. Almost all patients with MDS presented anemia; additional cytopenias were present in many patients. The bone marrow was hypocellular in 1/3 of cases. The patients have been classified according to the French-American-British (FAB) Group criteria: there were 11 patients with refractory anemia, 11 patients with refractory anemia with sideroblasts and 5 patients with refractory anemia with excess of blasts. The mean survival was 19 months, 9 patients died: death was due to infection or hemorrhage in 7 cases and to evolution to acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) in 2 cases (10.5%). Thrombocytopenia, the Bournemouth scoring system and FAB classification were independent prognostic factors.
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PMID:[Myelodysplastic syndromes. A clinico-biological analysis of 27 cases]. 207 37

3 patients with acute nonlymphocytic leukemia (ANLL) and an isochromosome (17q) as the sole chromosomal defect are reported. Besides this cytogenetic pattern, they shared several clinical and hematological features such as male sex, advanced age, spleno- and/or hepatomegaly and a suspected preceding myeloproliferative syndrome. Bone marrow cytology was characterized by hypercellularity, prominent baso- and eosinophilia, decreased erythropoiesis and marked increase of dysmorphic megakaryocytes. We suggest that some or most patients with ANLL and i(17q) as the sole cytogenetic defect represent blastic transformation of an underlying chronic myeloproliferative disorder rather than de novo ANLL.
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PMID:Acute nonlymphocytic leukemia (ANLL) with isochromosome i(17q) as the sole chromosomal anomaly: a distinct entity? 236 43

Eighty-five patients with acute myeloblastic leukemia (AML) presenting with hyperleukocytosis (HL) were analyzed to assess morbidity and mortality in early induction. Patients who failed to achieve remission were older and more often had pulmonary leukostasis (62% vs 23%, p = .01) and hepatomegaly (54% vs 31%, p = .06) at presentation. Thirty-seven patients (44%) did not achieve complete remission (CR); 17 (54%) died early in induction therapy, 11 directly as a result of pulmonary hemorrhage with respiratory failure, while 5 had both pulmonary hemorrhage with respiratory failure and CNS hemorrhage. Early death patients were older and more often had pulmonary leukostasis (88% vs 29%, p less than .0001), hepatomegaly (71% vs 34%, p = .01), hyperbilirubinemia (60% vs 16%, p = .01) and hypofibrinogenemia (47% vs 12%, p less than .01) at presentation. Primarily for technical reasons, preinduction leukapheresis was not employed as often in this very-high-risk group as in other patients (56% vs 82%, respectively). Thus, sufficient heterogeneity exists in patients presenting with HL to define a subset of patients at particularly high risk for early mortality. Preinduction leukapheresis applied in a prospective controlled fashion should be evaluated to assess if such treatment may decrease early mortality in this group.
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PMID:Acute myeloblastic leukemia with hyperleukocytosis: risk factors for early mortality in induction. 316 45

We determined the clinical and biological correlates of coagulopathy in a large series of patients with untreated childhood acute leukemia. Twenty-five of 805 children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) (3.1%) and 27 of 195 with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) (13.8%) met any two of three requirements for a coagulation disorder: fibrinogen level less than 150 mg/dL; fibrin degradation products greater than 10 micrograms/mL; and prolongation of prothrombin time (PT) greater than 12 seconds, activated partial thromboplastin time (PTT) greater than 45 seconds, or thrombin time (TT) greater than 18 seconds. Patients with ALL complicated by abnormal coagulation were more likely to be boys and to have a T-cell immunophenotype, a high leukocyte count, a mediastinal mass, leukemic involvement of the CNS, hepatosplenomegaly, and L2 blast cell morphology. These features were highly interrelated, with only T-cell markers and CNS involvement achieving independent significance in a multivariate logistic regression model. Hepatomegaly, blast cell morphological subtype (French-American-British [FAB] M3, M4, and M5) and age less than 2 years were each associated with coagulopathy in patients with AML, although age failed to retain importance after logistic regression analysis. The presence of coagulopathy at diagnosis of ALL did not influence the rate of remission induction (P = .55). By contrast, only 14 of 27 children with coagulopathy at diagnosis of AML achieved a complete remission (CR), compared with 129 of 168 other patients who lacked this complication (P = .003). After multivariate analysis, coagulopathy remained independently associated with failure to attain remission in AML (P = .02). Fatal hemorrhagic complications arising in the CNS or lungs accounted for nine of the 13 induction failures in this group. The presence or absence of coagulopathy had no discernible influence on treatment outcome among patients with either ALL or AML who attained a CR. Laboratory evidence of a coagulation defect may be useful in identifying patients with AML who have a greater risk of induction failure and, hence, require close surveillance and intensive replacement therapy to prevent fatal hemorrhagic complications.
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PMID:The clinical and biological correlates of coagulopathy in children with acute leukemia. 352 66

Nineteen cases of canine acute leukemia were diagnosed during a 4-year period. Two main categories were identified on the basis of cytologic, hematologic, and clinical features: acute lymphoid leukemia and acute myelogenous leukemia. Clinical features included history of weight loss, anorexia, shifting limb lameness, and incoordination. Physical findings were characterized by hepatomegaly, splenomegaly, mild generalized lymphadenopathy, and pallor. Ocular lesions were found in 29% of dogs with acute myelogenous leukemia. Hematologic abnormalities included anemia, thrombocytopenia, pancytopenia, leukemia, and leukoerythroblastic reactions. Results of therapy were discouraging.
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PMID:Clinicopathologic aspects of acute leukemias in the dog. 385 21

Review of 5406 children with acute lymphoblastic (ALL) or nonlymphoblastic leukemia (ANLL) registered with Childrens Cancer Study Group (CCSG) since 1972 identified 115 patients (2.1%) with Down syndrome. The proportion of patients with Down syndrome was the same for ALL (2.1%) and ANLL (2.1%). Patients with ALL with and without Down syndrome did not differ significantly with respect to age at diagnosis, sex, race, morphology (FAB classification), cell surface markers, initial white blood cell count, pretreatment hemoglobin value, hepatomegaly, lymphadenopathy, presence of mediastinal mass, CNS disease at diagnosis, or prognostic group as defined by age and initial white blood cell count. Patients with ALL-Down syndrome less frequently had splenomegaly, had lower pretreatment platelet counts, and more often had normal or elevated IgG or IgA levels. In addition, they had a significantly lower rate of remission (81% versus 94%), a higher mortality during induction therapy (14% versus 3%), and a poorer overall survival with 5-year life table rates of 50% versus 65% (P less than 0.001). If an initial remission was achieved, there were no significant differences with respect to remission duration, survival, or disease-free survival. Patients with ANLL-Down syndrome were younger at diagnosis than those without Down syndrome. There was no significant difference in the remission rates between these patients. Analysis of findings in patients with ANLL provided results similar to those obtained for patients with ALL with regard to clinical outcome after achievement of an initial remission.
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PMID:Down syndrome and acute leukemia in children: a 10-year retrospective survey from Childrens Cancer Study Group. 623 37


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