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)

Cisplatin appears to be the major cause for long-term toxicity in patients treated for testicular cancer. Long-term side effects consist mainly of nephrotoxicity, ototoxicity, and neurotoxicity as well as gonadal damage. Following standard-dose chemotherapy approximately 20% to 30% of patients will be affected by long-term side effects, although not all these side effects will cause an impaired quality of life. Several strategies have been or currently are being evaluated to reduce acute and long-term complications including the introduction of equally effective, but less toxic regimens, or the use of cytoprotective agents such as amifostine. Secondary acute myeloid leukemia and secondary myelodysplastic syndrome probably represent the worst possible long-term complications of cancer therapy in those patients who originally were cured of their primary testicular cancer. Therapy-related solid tumors are mainly associated with the use of radiation therapy and the risk for developing a therapy-related solid tumor is increased approximately two to three times compared to the general population. In contrast, therapy-related leukemias are predominantly associated with chemotherapy, particularly with the use of topoisomerase-II inhibitors and alkylating agents. In general, the cumulative incidence of therapy-related leukemia following treatment of germ cell cancer is low. It is approximately 0.5% and 2% at 5 years of median follow-up for patients receiving etoposide at cumulative doses< or = 2 g/m(2) and >2 g/m(2), respectively. The risk-benefit analysis in patients with testicular cancer clearly favors the use of current treatment regimens including high-dose chemotherapy. However, even the acceptably low number of therapy-related long-term complications should encourage the search for equally effective but less toxic therapies. This review will highlight important available data about therapy-related toxicity and particularly, therapy-related malignancies following cisplatin-etoposide-based chemotherapy.
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PMID:Late toxicity following curative treatment of testicular cancer. 1058 57

Although the prognosis for adults with acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) has improved over the past 10 years, overall results remain modest. Current research areas in the treatment of AML include dose-intensive therapy and stem-cell transplantation (SCT), immunotherapy, modulation of leukemia resistance (eg, multidrug resistance [MDR] Inhibitors), differentiation therapy (eg, retinolds), exploitation of different disease pathophysiology (eg, angiogenesis inhibitors, apoptosis-inducing agents), targeted therapy (eg, monoclonal antibodies, gene therapy), and the development of additional active chemotherapeutic agents with different mechanisms of action. Topotecan, a topoisomerase-I Inhibitor, may potentially enhance the activity of standard induction chemotherapy with cytosine arabinoside (cytarabine) and topoisomerase-II inhibitors. Topotecan is being investigated as salvage and front-line therapy for AML in combination with etoposide, cytarabine, or cyclophosphamide. The role that topotecan will eventually play In the treatment of AML is not yet clear, but encouraging results from triple combination induction therapy In patients with unfavorable prognoses warrant further investigation.
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PMID:New developments in the treatment of acute myeloid leukemia: focus on topotecan. 1062 25

The mixed lineage leukemia (MLL) gene located at chromosome band 11q23 is frequently rearranged in patients with therapy-related acute monocytic leukemia who received topoisomerase II inhibitors. We have identified a novel fusion partner of MLL (FAB M5b) in a patient who developed t-AML 9 years after treatment for acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). The leukemic cells had a sole karyotypic abnormality of t(3;11) (p21;q23). Screening of a genomic DNA library, prepared from leukemic cell DNA, identified rearranged clones composed of MLL and a novel gene on chromosome 3p21 (AF3p21). The AF3p21 gene encodes a protein of 722 amino acids, which contains an Src homology 3 (SH3) domain, a proline-rich domain, and a bipartite nuclear localizing signal (NLS). RNA analysis demonstrated that exon 6 of the MLL gene fused to exon 2 of the AF3p21 gene. The resulting chimeric protein consists of AT-hooks, methyltransferase, and transcription repressor domains of MLL in addition to the AF3p21 proline-rich domain and NLS but not the AF3p21 SH3 domain.
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PMID:Novel SH3 protein encoded by the AF3p21 gene is fused to the mixed lineage leukemia protein in a therapy-related leukemia with t(3;11) (p21;q23). 1064 23

Therapy related acute myeloid leukemia occurs after exposure to various cytotoxic agents. Among typical chemotherapeutic agents are the alkylating agents and topoisomerase II inhibitors. This type of leukemia has been reported after the use of antimetabolites. We report here a patient who developed therapy related acute myeloid leukemia secondary to the use of 5-fluorouracil.
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PMID:Therapy related acute myeloid leukemia after exposure to 5-fluorouracil: a case report. 1065 Nov 18

We have shown that the TARDIS assay (trapped in agarose DNA immunostaining) can be used to detect DNA-topoisomerase I (topo I) cleavable complexes in situ in individual cells following treatment with topo I-targeting drugs. This assay is a modification of the assay for DNA-topoisomerase II (topo II) cleavable complexes (Willmore et al., Mol Pharmacol 53: 78-85, 1998). Drug-stabilised topo I-DNA complexes were detected in situ by topo I-specific primary antibodies and then visualised using fluorescein isothiocyanate conjugated second antibodies. Immunofluorescence was then quantified using a cooled slow-scan coupled device camera and image analysis procedures. Camptothecin (CPT) was shown to stabilise topo I-DNA cleavable complexes in whole cells in a dose-dependent manner in both CCRF-CEM and K562 cells and in lymphoblasts from an adult with newly diagnosed acute myeloid leukaemia treated ex vivo with CPT. In K562 cells, cleavable complexes were found to be maximal between 30 and 90 minutes continuous exposure of CPT, and approximately 78% of cleavable complexes formed in these cells were found to be reversed within 5 minutes of drug removal. It has also been shown that the immunofluorescence detected by the TARDIS assay was specific for topo I-targeting agents. Hence, the TARDIS assay provides a powerful tool to determine the levels of drug-stabilised cleavable complexes in whole cells and thereby aid in the understanding of the mechanism of interaction between topo I-targeting drugs and their target.
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PMID:Camptothecin-stabilised topoisomerase I-DNA complexes in leukaemia cells visualised and quantified in situ by the TARDIS assay (trapped in agarose DNA immunostaining). 1067 79

We describe a boy with Fanconi anemia (FA) who developed acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) (FAB-LI) followed by acute myeloid leukemia (AML) (FAB-M5) at relapse. The patient was diagnosed with early pre-B-cell ALL without preceding aplastic anemia and was treated with ALL-oriented chemotherapy which included doxorubicin (a total dose of 140 mg/m(2) administered), which is a topoisomerase II inhibitor. Complete remission was obtained, but after 38 weeks AML developed. The karyotype of ALL cells at diagnosis showed 46,XY, and that of AML cells at relapse was 46,XY, t(11;16)(q23;p13). An MLL gene rearrangement and MLL-CBP chimeric mRNA were found in AML, but not in ALL. A diagnosis of FA was confirmed by an increased number of chromosomal breaks and rearrangements in peripheral blood lymphocytes cultured with mitogen in the presence of mitomycin C. We conclude that this FA patient developed ALL followed by a therapy-related t(11;16)-AML resulting in an MLL-CBP fusion. Further examination of such patients would shed light on leukemogenesis in FA patients. Genes Chromosomes Cancer 27:264-269, 2000.
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PMID:MLL-CBP fusion transcript in a therapy-related acute myeloid leukemia with the t(11;16)(q23;p13) which developed in an acute lymphoblastic leukemia patient with Fanconi anemia. 1067 15

Leukemias with MLL gene translocations are a complication of primary cancer treatment with DNA topoisomerase II inhibitors. How early translocations appear during primary cancer treatment has not been investigated. We tracked the leukemic clone with an MLL gene translocation during neuroblastoma therapy in a child who developed acute myeloid leukemia. The karyotype of the leukemic clone showed del(11)(q23). We used panhandle PCR-based methods to isolate the breakpoint junction involving MLL and an unknown partner gene. Marrow DNA from neuroblastoma diagnosis and DNA and RNA from serial preleukemic marrows were examined for the translocation. The karyotypic del(11)(q23) was a cryptic t(11;17). GAS7, a growth arrest-specific gene at chromosome band 17p13, was the partner gene of MLL. Two different MLL-GAS7 fusion transcripts were expressed. The translocation was already detectable by 1.5 months after the start of neuroblastoma treatment. The translocation was not detectable in the marrow at neuroblastoma diagnosis or in peripheral blood lymphocyte DNAs of six normal subjects. GAS7 is a new partner gene of MLL in treatment-related acute myeloid leukemia. MLL gene translocations can be present early during anticancer treatment at low cumulative doses of DNA topoisomerase II inhibitors. Although MLL has many partner genes and most have not been characterized, panhandle PCR strategies afford new means for detecting MLL gene translocations early during therapy when the partner gene is unknown.
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PMID:Detection of leukemia-associated MLL-GAS7 translocation early during chemotherapy with DNA topoisomerase II inhibitors. 1070 19

It is known that alkylating agents and topoisomerase II inhibitors can cause distinct forms of therapy-related leukemia and myelodysplastic syndrome (TRL/MDS). Although several reports have been made on each of these agents separately, no study has yet been conducted to evaluate the effect of these two types of agents in the same population. In a nationwide, large-scale population study, the clinical and cytogenetic features as well as the prognostic factors in 256 patients with TRL/MDS were assessed. Median age was 61 years, and the median period of latency from primary malignancies was 47.9 months. The latency period was significantly shorter in patients undergoing chemotherapy, especially that of topoisomerase II inhibitors, for primary cancer. The morphological diagnosis of TRL/MDS was acute myeloid leukemia in 59% and MDS in 41% of patients. Chromosome abnormalities that frequently involved chromosomes 5, 7 or 11 were documented in 77% of the 189 patients examined. MLL gene rearrangements were detected in 11 of 58 subjects and were correlated with a borderline significance (P = 0.072) with topoisomerase II inhibitor administration. Overall median survival was only 9.7 months. Survival was similar in cases with or without MLL gene rearrangement. Multivariate analysis identified chromosome 5 abnormalities, hypoproteinemia, poor therapy outcomes for primary cancer, C-reactive protein, and thrombocytopenia as being significantly poor prognostic factors (P < 0.05). This large-population study provided a comprehensive update of TRL/MDS status in Japan, identified significant prognostic factors, and enabled the clinical significance of MLL gene rearrangement to be assessed.
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PMID:Therapy-related leukemia and myelodysplastic syndrome: a large-scale Japanese study of clinical and cytogenetic features as well as prognostic factors. 1074 24

Fas antigen, a cell surface molecule, directly mediates apoptosis, and is expressed on a limited number of human tissues. Blood or bone marrow samples from patients with acute myelogenous leukemia (AML), acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and mixed leukemia were examined qualitatively and quantitatively for the expression of Fas as well as its function using flow cytometry and the annexin V staining method. Fas expression was flow cytometrically unimodal with heterogeneous density, and showed quantitatively characteristic features in different diseases: undetectable in mixed leukemia, faint to weak in ALL, low in M0 and M1, and variable (low to strong) in M2, M3, M4, and M5. Both the full-length and the alternatively spliced truncated mRNAs were detected constitutively even in acute leukemia cells with qualitatively negative and quantitatively faint Fas, and the band density of the former transcripts detected by RT-PCR was correlated with the level of expression of the Fas protein. Short-term culturing of freshly isolated leukemia cells gave rise to an increase of Fas density. In acute leukemia cells, the apoptosis induced by anti-Fas MoAb was compared with that induced by etoposide (a topoisomerase II inhibitor). We found that fresh ALL and AML cells were resistant to the anti-Fas IgM antibody, while etoposide could trigger apoptosis in all types of leukemia tested. The combined effects of the anti-Fas MoAb and etoposide were not always synergistic. These results suggest that Fas is a biological marker for characterizing ALL and AML cells, and provide insight into creating a new therapeutic modality using cytotoxic drugs and cytokines together with modulation of Fas.
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PMID:Qualitative and quantitative characterization of Fas (CD95) expression and its role in primary human acute leukemia cells. 1078 66

The MLL gene at 11q23 is frequently disrupted by chromosomal translocations in de novo acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and acute lymphoid leukemia (ALL), and in secondary leukemia induced by treatment with inhibitors of topoisomerase II, including the epipodophylotoxins. The CBFA2 gene at 21q22 is also frequently disrupted in de novo ALL and AML and less commonly in secondary AML. Rearrangements of MLL and CBFA2 have been described in de novo and secondary myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS). There have been no previous descriptions of coexisting abnormalities of MLL and CBFA2 in cases of MDS or acute leukemia. We describe a patient who developed secondary MDS after chemotherapy for hyperdiploid ALL. At the time of conversion to MDS, the patient had 46 chromosomes, with an 11q23/MLL translocation involving a new partner breakpoint at 2p23 and a 21q22/CBFA2 translocation involving a new partner breakpoint at 6p22. This report is the first to describe new partner breakpoints at 2p23 and 6p22 for MLL and CBFA2 genes, respectively, and concurrent rearrangements of these genes in a patient with secondary MDS.
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PMID:Concurrent translocations of MLL and CBFA2 (AML1) genes with new partner breakpoints in a child with secondary myelodysplastic syndrome after treatment of acute lymphoblastic leukemia. 1082 8


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