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)

Fifteen patients with extensive small cell carcinoma of the lung and no prior therapy were treated with a chemotherapeutic regimen similar in intensity to the approach used in acute myelocytic leukemia. The patients received intensive induction therapy with cyclophosphamide, adriamycin, and VP-16-213 followed by treatment with a combination of BCNU, vincristine, methotrexate, and procarbazine. The objective response rate was 87% (13 of 15 patients) with three complete responses and ten partial responses. With the exception of one patient, the maximal response to therapy was achieved during therapy with the intensive cyclophosphamide, adriamycin, and VP-16-213 regimen. The three complete responders remain in remission for 159, 351, and 285 days but seven of the ten partial responders have relapsed and five of these have died. There was no unexpected morbidity associated with the intensive chemotherapy despite marked bone marrow suppression. This study demonstrates that very intensive combination chemotherapy can be safely used to achieve a high objective response rate in patients with extensive small cell carcinoma, but the complete response rate is low. An analysis of treatment failures and future directions is presented.
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PMID:Intensive induction therapy for small cell carcinoma of the lung. 22 Nov 17

VP-16-213, a semisynthetic podophyliotoxin, was tested for antitumor and clinical toxicity in 126 children. The drug was administered iv daily x 5 days every 2 weeks at a starting dose of 75 mg/m2/day. The dose was increased by 25 mg/m2/day/course until clinical response or significant toxicity occurred. The only major toxicity was hematologic, with neutropenia as the most predominant feature. There was one local allergic reaction at the site of injection. No systemic allergic responses were reported. The drug demonstrated significant activity in acute myelomonocytic leukemia with four responses among 19 patients, less activity in acute myelocytic leukemia with two responses among 44 patients, and little activity in acute lymphocytic leukemia with only one partial response among 12 patients. Objective partial responses occurred in ten of 48 patients with solid tumors: two each with Wilms' tumor, lymphoma, and histiocytosis X, and one each with rhabdomyosarcoma, neuroblastoma, Ewing's sarcoma, and undifferentiated carcinoma. The inclusion of VP-16-213 in combination chemotherapy for childhood acute myelomonocytic leukemia and acute myelocytic leukemia appears indicated in patients relapsing after initial therapy. For solid tumors this is an interim report, with further patient accrual required before specific comments can be made.
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PMID:Phase II study of VP-16-213 in childhood malignant disease: a Children's Cancer Study Group Report. 29 6

Myeloperoxidase (MPO)- and Sudan Black B-not more than 3%-positive, esterase staining-negative, lymphoid, megakaryocyte lineage and erythroid surface marker-negative and electron microscopic platelet peroxidase-negative acute leukemia (AL) was diagnosed as acute undifferentiated leukemia (AUL), and myeloid marker (CD13, CD33), electron microscopic MPO (EMMPO), and DNA analysis of immunoglobulin heavy chain and T cell receptor as well as chemotherapy and its reactivity were examined. Of 239 cases of AL, 10 (4.2%) were AUL, and of these 10 cases, 9 were CD13 or CD33-positive AML-MO (MO) cases. Of 9 cases examined for EMMPO, 4 (44%) were positive, and of 3 cases of MO subjected to DNA analysis, 1 and 1 showed rearrangements of immunoglobulin heavy chain and T cell receptor beta chain, respectively. Of 6 cases of MO on myeloid induction therapy, 1 and 1 showed complete remission (CR) and partial remission (PR), respectively, each having lymphoid genotype, and 4 showed no remission (NR), being 3 of them EMMPO-positive. Of 2 cases on lymphoid induction therapy, 1 and 1 showed CR and NR, respectively, the former being EMMPO-positive MO. BHAC-EM therapy with behenoyl cytosine arabinoside, VP-16 and mitoxantrone performed on 2 cases refractory to any one of both these myeloid and lymphoid induction therapies led to CR in all these 2 cases.
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PMID:[Acute undifferentiated leukemia from the viewpoints of diagnosis and therapy]. 133 62

We examined the feasibility of maintaining specific plasma concentrations of ara-C and VP-16 in children with AML. Sixty-one children were treated with 6 sequential cycles of intensive chemotherapy consisting of: (1) cytarabine (ara-C)/VP-16, (2) ara-C/daunorubicin (Dauno), (3) VP-16/amsacrine (m-AMSA), (4) VP-16/5-azacytidine (5-Az), (5) ara-C/Dauno, and (6) ara-C/VP-16. Fifty-nine children had de novo AML, and 2 had a previous myelodysplastic syndrome. The number of patients with each specific FAB subtype was: M0-1; M1-7; M2-24; M3-7; M4-5; M5-11; and M7-6. Simultaneous continuous infusions of ara-C and VP-16 (cycle 1) given at individualized doses to achieve drug plasma concentrations of 1 microM and 30 microM, respectively, produced complete remission (CR) in 26 of 61 patients (43%); an additional 17 patients entered CR after Dauno/ara-C (cycle 2), and one patient required 4 cycles of chemotherapy to achieve CR (total CR rate = 72%). The preliminary 2-year event-free survival (EFS) for patients with FAB-M1 and -M2 AML was only 15% versus 40% for those with FAB-M4 and -M5 AML. Overall, 21 of the 61 patients remain in CR (2-yr EFS = 29%). We conclude that intense treatment with ara-C and VP-16 at doses individualized to achieve target plasma concentrations is feasible although severely myelosuppressive. It results in an acceptable CR rate, but does not improve EFS.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Current strategies for treatment of acute myeloid leukemia at St Jude Children's Research Hospital. 137 92

Between 1976 and 1988 we treated 228 children age 18 years or less with AML on three consecutive protocols: Vapa, 80-035 and Hi-C Daze. All three protocols used intensive consolidation chemotherapy. VAPA and 80-035 used an anthracycline with standard dose cytosine arabinoside (ara-c) for remission induction followed by twelve to fourteen months of intensive sequential chemotherapy. Results were similar for these two treatment protocols. 90/125 (72%) of the patients achieved a complete remission with 45% projected disease free survival for the complete responders, and an event free survival of 31%. 8/26 (VAPA) and 3/21 (80-035) relapses were primary CNS. No factor significantly influenced the rate of complete remission, but M4 and M5 FAB subtypes and WBC greater than 100,000/ul predicted for shorter remission duration. 103 children received Hi-C DAZE. The protocol differed by utilizing high-dose ara-c during induction and consolidation and pairing VP-16 with azacytidine. Hi-C DAZE was modified after the first 33 patients (group 1) because of CNS toxicity; VP-16/azacytidine were substituted for high dose ara-c/daunorubicin as the second induction course for the next 70 patients (group 2). Twenty eight of 33 (85%) of group 1 and 54/70 (77%) of group 2 entered remission.
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PMID:Intensive sequential chemotherapy for children with acute myelogenous leukemia: VAPA, 80-035, and HI-C-Daze. 137 93

10 patients between the ages of 5 and 40 yrs with myeloid leukemia (4 acute, 6 chronic) in early (5 cases) or intermediate stage of the disease were given Cyclophosphamide and Busulfan (6 cases) or Cyclophosphamide, Busulfan and VP-16 (4 cases with CML) and bone marrow transplants from HLA-matched donors (in 9 cases from siblings and in one case from HLA phenotypically matched father). There was one transplant related death and 3 relapses in CML cases. In cases which relapsed GvHD was not observed. Altogether acute GvH and chronic GvHD was seen in 2 and 4 cases, respectively. All grafted cases with AML survive in continuous remission lasting more than 2 years (median 30.5 month).
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PMID:[Allogeneic bone marrow transplantation in myeloid leukemia: chemical conditioning, clinical course and results]. 148 72

Etoposide (VP16-213), a topoisomerase II inhibitor, has produced complete responses in 17% of previously treated patients with acute nonlymphocytic leukemia (ANLL) but has little activity in acute lymphoblastic leukemia. As salvage therapy for relapsed ANLL etoposide produces 28% complete responses in combination with amsacrine, 49% with 5-azacytidine, and 51% with anthracycline. It has been successfully combined with high-dose cytarabine as a salvage treatment. In a randomized trial in previously untreated patients with ANLL, etoposide significantly prolonged remission duration. Etoposide has been used to intensify postinduction therapy with or without bone marrow rescue, but its exact role in that setting has not been clarified. Because of its schedule dependency in other tumors, etoposide should be investigated using different schedules in ANLL.
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PMID:Etoposide in the treatment of leukemias. 149 26

Etoposide has been used in the treatment of a wide variety of neoplasms, including small cell lung cancer. Kaposi's sarcoma, testicular cancer, acute leukemia, and lymphoma. Its current therapeutic use is limited by myelosuppression, particularly neutropenia. Pharmacodynamic studies of etoposide show that this toxicity can be modeled using a modified Hill equation, and that the dose intensity of etoposide can be successfully increased by adaptive control using this model. Significant influences on the degree of myelosuppression include pretreatment leukocyte count, performance status, extent of prior erythrocyte transfusions, and serum albumin level. In the past 5 years, interest has developed in a distinct subset of acute nonlymphocytic leukemia that is associated with prior exposure to etoposide. This syndrome has been described in several studies, and is characterized by the lack of a preleukemic phase, M4 or M5 morphology, and distinct translocations involving the chromosome 11q23 region.
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PMID:New perspectives on the toxicity of etoposide. 149 30

In this study, we evaluated the individual in vitro sensitivity of fresh acute myeloid leukemia (AML) cells to VP-16, and attempted to correlate VP-16 cytotoxicity with AML cell growth characteristics and drug-induced DNA single-strand breaks (SSB). Primary (PE1) colony inhibition assays allowed us to characterize two distinct groups of AML: group I (patients 1 through 6), which displayed sensitivity to VP-16 similar to that of normal CFU-GM (IC90 of 20.52 +/- 2.44 micrograms/mL v 20.48 +/- 2.23 micrograms/mL after 1 hour drug exposure, respectively); and group II (patients 7 through 11), which was more sensitive to VP-16 (IC90 of 7.26 +/- 2.93 micrograms/mL, P = .004). Subsequently, groups I and II were termed normosensitive and hypersensitive, respectively. This objective VP-16 sensitivity classification, as determined by PE1, remained unaltered when assessed by secondary (PE2) colony inhibition assay (evaluating the self-renewal fraction of AML progenitors), or by cytofluorometric viability assay (evaluating the ultimately differentiated blast cell population). These findings would suggest that individual sensitivity to VP-16 of a particular cell population is maintained throughout CFU-AML differentiation. Finally, we report that sensitivity of AML cells to VP-16 did not correlate either with cell growth characteristics or with SSB generation. Indeed, AML cell sensitivity to VP-16 appeared more closely related to DNA repair kinetics after drug removal, ie, hypersensitivity being essentially characterized by a prolonged retention of SSB during the posttreatment period. Interestingly, the established HL-60 cell line, which presented greater sensitivity to VP-16 cytotoxicity than KG1, HEL, and K562, was also found to exhibit delayed DNA SSB repair kinetics, as compared with the other AML cell lines. These results suggest that hypersensitivity to VP-16 of some AML cells may be related to a deficient DNA-repair mechanism.
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PMID:Sensitivity of fresh acute myeloid leukemia cells to etoposide: relationship with cell growth characteristics and DNA single-strand breaks. 151 45

Study AML-BFM-87 compared prospectively if cranial irradiation could be abandoned by adding two blocks of intensification with high dose ARA-C and VP-16 after consolidation and furthermore, improve prognosis compared to study -83. 210 children were enrolled in study AML-BFM-87 until March 31, 1991. 164 (78%) achieved complete remission. Probabilities for event-free survival (EFS) and event-free interval (EFI) of 5 years were: .45 (SD .04) and .57 (SD .05). In the first 2.5 years of the study irradiation was randomized (n = 31), selected or refused (n = 24). However, during this period irradiation was mandatory in patients with leukocyte count greater than 70,000/mm3, and also in children with initial CNS involvement. Since July 1989 prophylactic cranial irradiation was abandoned. Patients of the group with mandatory irradiation (n = 39) presented with more unfavourable risk parameters than the group of non-irradiated children, who were enrolled in the study after randomisation had been stopped. Nevertheless, results showed in randomized and selected patient groups as well as in the total cohort a longer relapse-free interval (RFI) in irradiated (n = 66) compared to non-irradiated (n = 94) patients (RFI of 5 years: .70, SD .04 vs. .51, SD .07, p less than .05). Relapses in non-irradiated children occurred mainly in the bone marrow and less often in the CNS. The increase in relapse rate was seen especially in non-irradiated patients of the low risk group as defined in study AML-BFM-83 (RFI: .40, SD .14 vs. .79, SD .09 with irradiation, p less than .01). In the high risk group, however, the differences were not significant. Our results suggest that cranial irradiation is an important part of therapy in childhood AML, and that the good prognosis of the low risk group in study AML-BFM-83 was probably based on the combination of intensive chemotherapy and cranial irradiation.
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PMID:[Effect of cranial irradiation on rate of recurrence in children with acute myeloid leukemia. Initial results of the AML-BFM-87 study. The AML-BFM Study Group]. 151 59


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