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)

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

Pretherapy bone marrow (BM) aspirates of 143 patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) were incubated simultaneously with bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) and tritiated cytosine arabinoside ([3H]Ara-C) to determine the labeling index (LI) and extent of [3H]Ara-C incorporation. Of 143 AML patients, 121 received high-dose Ara-C (HDAra-C) as a single agent for induction therapy (55 newly diagnosed, 66 in first relapse), whereas 22 received HDAra-C plus mAMSA. The data demonstrate that a subset of patients who will fail HDAra-C remission induction therapy because of drug-resistant disease can be prospectively identified on the basis of the low amount of Ara-C incorporated by their leukemia cells.
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PMID:Relationship of [3H]Ara-C incorporation and response to therapy with high-dose Ara-C in AML patients: a Leukemia Intergroup study. 142 99

Thirty-four consecutive patients with either relapsed (n = 28) or primary refractory AML (n = 6) were treated with one or two cycles of intermediate-dose (ID) cytosine arabinoside (Ara-C) (1 g/m2 i.v. q 12 h days 1-6) and amsacrine (m-AMSA) (120 mg/m2 i.v. days 5-7). Patients reaching complete remission (CR) were consolidated with one cycle of Ara-C 3 g/m2 i.v. q 12 h days 1-4 and m-AMSA 120 mg/m2 i.v. day 5. The median duration of the preceding remission was 8 months and median time from last chemotherapy until relapse 3.1 months. Of the relapsed patients, 22/28 (79%) achieved CR regardless of the type of prior intensive maintenance (HD Ara-C/m-AMSA/5-azacytidine) (AZA) or daunorubicin (DNR/CD-Ara-C). Three of the 28 (11%) patients died during hypoplasia; 3/28 (11%) were refractory to 2x ID-Ara-C/m-AMSA. Three of the 28 patients died in CR during hypoplasia after intensive consolidation with HD-Ara-C. Predictive factors for remission were duration of preceding remission and the time from last chemotherapy to relapse. Three patients were transplanted in second CR. One of the six refractory patients reached CR, two remained refractory, and three died during hypoplasia. The median duration of disease-free survival (DFS) of relapsed patients was 3.3 months without further treatment; median survival of responding patients (20 relapsed patients, 1 refractory patient) was 4.5 months, overall survival (n = 29) was 4.8 months. Patients receiving BMT were censored at the time of BMT. Seven patients experienced lung toxicity due to Ara-C, four of whom died.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Intermediate-dose Ara-C/m-AMSA for remission induction and high-dose Ara-C/m-AMSA for intensive consolidation in relapsed and refractory adult acute myelogeneous leukemia. 169 Nov 34

The role of amsacrine in inducing remission in patients with cardiac disease and acute leukemia was evaluated. There were 17 patients with acute myelogenous leukemia (AML), six with acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL), and one with biphenotypic leukemia. In this series of 24 patients whose disease had relapsed and who had reduced left ventricular ejection fraction, nine had a complete remission, seven with AML and two with ALL. In addition, four of six with newly diagnosed acute leukemia and reduced left ventricular ejection fraction also responded. Among nine patients who underwent endomyocardial biopsy, none had morphologic changes of sufficient degree to account for drug-induced heart failure. Patients with preexisting arrhythmias received amsacrine without incident if their serum potassium level was higher than 4.0 mEq/l at the time of drug administration. Amsacrine is safe and effective therapy for patients with acute leukemia and cardiac disease.
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PMID:Amsacrine is safe and effective therapy for patients with myocardial dysfunction and acute leukemia. 187 70

Twenty-two patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML), having a median age of 48.3 years (range 26-70; 10 male, 12 female), were treated with 4'-(9-acridinylamino) methanesulphon-m-anisidide (m-AMSA) 100 mg/m2 and cytosine arabinoside (AraC) 2 x 1000 mg/m2i.v. on days 1-5. There were 2M1,8 M2, 9 M4, 2M4 Eo, and 1 M5a. Of these, 12 achieved a complete remission, 3 a partial remission and 6 did not respond. The median remission duration was 9.0 months and the median overall survival 8.1 months. Side-effects of induction consisted mainly of haematological toxicity and infections with a median duration of WHO-grade-4 granulopenia and thrombopenia of 20 and 28 days respectively. Organ toxicity was mild with mucositis and cutaneous and liver toxicity being experienced by only a few patients. There was one treatment-related death. Five-day m-AMSA and intermediate-dose AraC is an easy-to-handle condensed treatment schedule with tolerable toxicity. Its effectiveness in relapsed and refractory AML is comparable to combinations of high-dose AraC with m-AMSA, anthracyclines or etoposide.
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PMID:Five-day 4'-(9-acridinylamino)methanesulphon-m-anisidide and intermediate-dose cytosine arabinoside in high-risk relapsing or refractory acute myeloid leukemia. 189 Jan 42

The New Zealand Acute Myeloid Leukaemia (AML-1) study ran from 1985 to 1988. Ninety-two patients with acute myeloid leukaemia between the ages of 13-65 were entered. Remission induction treatment consisted of cytosine arabinoside (Ara-C) 100 mg/m2 12 hourly for seven days and daunorubicin (DNR) 45 mg/m2 daily for three days. Fifty-six patients entered remission (61%). The patients were randomised at diagnosis to receive either three further courses of Ara-C (five days) and DNR (two days) in the same dosage or three courses of VP16 100 mg/m2 daily for five days and one dose of mAMSA of 200 mg/m2 as postremission consolidation. No difference in survival between these two consolidation treatments was seen (p = 0.96). The overall survival of the original 92 patients is 13% with a minimum follow up of two and a half years. However, for those patients solely treated with the trial protocol, disease free survival at 2% is poor. The poor long term results could reflect the relatively low intensity consolidation treatment used in this study. However, since a majority of patients presenting in New Zealand with acute myeloid leukaemia between these ages were entered into the trial, the results could also reflect the relative lack of selection bias which affects many published studies of acute leukaemia treatment.
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PMID:Acute myeloid leukaemia: results of the New Zealand AML-1 study. The Leukaemia Study Group of the New Zealand Society for Haematology. 192 3

We investigated m-AMSA or doxorubicin (Dx) induced DNA single-strand breaks (DNA-SSB) in myeloid leukemia cells obtained from 8 adult patients suffering from AML. Highly purified AML cells were stimulated to proliferate with the addition of the appropriate growth factor (GCT) and exposed to different concentrations of m-AMSA or Dx for 1 or 4 h, respectively. DNA-SSB were determined by alkaline elution techniques. Either the kinetics or the amounts of DNA-SSB caused by both topoisomerase II inhibitors were variable among different cases. By increasing m-AMSA concentrations there was a concomitant increase in DNA-SSB up to a plateau at the highest concentrations. Dx induced DNA-SSB followed a bell shape curve with a decrease in the number of breaks at the highest concentrations that was evident in most cases. The interindividual variability of Dx-induced DNA-SSB was not correlated with intracellular Dx concentrations as assessed by flow cytometry. No correlation was evident between the amount of DNA breaks induced by m-AMSA and that induced by Dx. These data suggest that AML cells derived from different patients are not necessarily cross-sensitive or cross-resistant to topoisomerase II inhibitors with different chemical structures such as amsacrine or anthracyclines.
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PMID:Doxorubicin and m-AMSA induced DNA damage in blast cells from AML patients. 199 42

Several new cytostatic drugs have entered clinical phase I-II studies for the treatment of leukemia: the most promising are pyrimidine analogs such as 5-aza-cytidine, 5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine, 5-aza-cytosine arabinoside, and 2',2'-difluorodeoxycytidine. Fludarabine, a fluorinated purine analog, appears to be active in CLL and multiple myeloma. Deoxycoformycin, an adenosine analog, showed good activity in the treatment of hairy cell leukemia and T-cell neoplasias. 2-chloro-deoxyadenosine has recently been introduced into the treatment of CLL and hairy-cell leukemia refractory to deoxycoformicin. Tiazofurin, an antimetabolite which interferes with nicotine-adenine-dinucleotide (NAD) metabolism, has been applied in CML blast crisis. Other agents include 13-cis retinoic acid and 1, 25-dihydroxy vitamin D3 as differentiation inducers, and homoharringtonine, an alkylating agent which is widely used for ANLL treatment in China. Among new anthracyclines, aclarubicin, idarubicin, THP-adriamycin and fluoro-adriamycin should be mentioned. Mitoxantrone, a substituted anthraquinone, has successfully been applied in the treatment of relapsed and refractory ANLL. Amsacrine (m-AMSA), finally, is a synthetic aminoacridine which intercalates into DNA and inhibits DNA topoisomerase II. m-AMSA is not cross-resistant to anthracyclines and has been particularly active in ANLL treatment. Studies using m-AMSA alone or in combination revealed comparable results to anthracycline--containing regimens. Cardiotoxicity of the anthracycline congestive type has not been observed with m-AMSA. The EORTC Leukemia Cooperative Group has successfully used m-AMSA in several trials prepositioning this drug stepwise: from relapsed and refractory ANLL, into intensive maintenance treatment during first remission in ANLL, and, still on-going, into intensive consolidation.
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PMID:New drugs in the treatment of acute and chronic leukemia with some emphasis on m-AMSA. 206 23

Of 115 adult patients with de novo acute myeloid leukemia (AML), 87 (75.5%) achieved complete remission (CR) after induction treatment with zorubicin and conventional doses of cytarabine (Ara-C). Patients under age 45 years with histocompatibility locus antigen-identical sibling underwent bone marrow transplantation (BMT). The others were treated with two courses of intensive consolidation chemotherapy (ICC): course 1 with 4 days of high-dose Ara-C and 3 days of amsacrine (m-AMSA); course 2 with carmustine (BCNU), Ara-C, cyclophosphamide, and etoposide. Forty-two patients received both planned courses, 15 received only the first, and 13 patients could only support conventional maintenance therapy. Four patients died during consolidation. With a median follow-up of 60 months, the disease-free survival (DFS) after ICC at 5 years is 40.3% (+/- 6.5%), with no statistically significant difference between patients receiving one or two courses. The DFS for the 17 transplanted patients is comparable (P = .72) and is lower for the 13 excluded patients (23% +/- 11.5%, P = .046). Age did not influence the probability of remaining in CR. In univariate analysis, three parameters had a negative impact on the 5-year DFS: a high initial WBC count (52% for patients with less than 30 x 10(9) WBC/L v 12% for patients with greater than 30 x 10(9) WBC/L, P = .01), a long delay between induction treatment and course 1 (+/- 60 days; 63% v 29%, P = .01), and a long delay between course 1 and course 2 (+/- 60 days, 61.5% v 28.5%, P = .05). In multivariate analysis (Cox model), only the WBC count remained significant. This study confirms the value of intensive postremission chemotherapy, which can be compared in AML with allogeneic or autologous BMT. It also demonstrates the prognostic value of the initial WBC count. The optimal modalities of ICC remain to be defined by further studies.
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PMID:Double intensive consolidation chemotherapy in adult acute myeloid leukemia. 207 46

From November, '85 to March, '87, 17 patients (12 males and 5 females, median 28 years) with resistant or relapsed ANLL received HiDAC (3 g/m2 c.i. 3 hs every 12 hs, day 1-4) + m-AMSA (100 mg/m2 i.v. day 5-7) as salvage therapy: 8/17 patients (47.1%) achieved CR, 7/17 (41.1%) were resistant and 2/17 (11.8%) died during induction; 8/10 relapsed patients achieved a 2nd CR, while all 7 primary resistant patients failed to. Median period of PMN less than 0.5 x 10(9)/l was 28 days, median period of PLTS less than 30 x 10(9)/l was 25 days. All patients had infections during aplasia. Median CR duration was 6.6 months, while median survival of responders was 10.6 months. Two patients with severe induction-related complications relapsed after 2 and 5 months, respectively: 1 patient underwent BMT and relapsed after 21 months; 5 patients, 4 of whom had received a prior ABMT during 1st CR, underwent ABMT: 3 died from ABMT related toxicity and 2 relapsed after 8 and 18 months, respectively. We conclude that HiDAC + m-AMSA is highly effective in relapsed, but not in resistant patients with acceptable hematologic and extra-hematologic toxicity. The role and modalities of ABMT in prolonging a 2nd CR are at present controversial.
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PMID:High doses of ara-C and m-AMSA in the treatment of refractory acute non lymphocytic leukemia. 222 22


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