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)

The blast cells of 19 patients with Ph1-positive chronic granulocytic leukaemia (CGL) in blast crisis (BC) were studied by means of several techniques: morphology, cytochemistry, ultrastructure, surface markers and the enzyme terminal transferase. Cells of BC were, in most case, extremely undifferentiated by morphology and cytochemistry. Our data showed that in 80% of cases the cells in BC were myeloid and in 20% they were "lymphoblastic". The M1, M2 and M3 forms (FAB classification) were rare in CGL BC compared with acute myeloid leukaemia (AML). A megakaryoblastic type was seen in 15% of BC cases; the existence of this form could only be demonstrated by electron microscopy. The limphoblastic BC cells were, as in acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL), positive with Greaves' anti-ALL serum and had elevated levels of terminal transferase. A case of a 17-year old boy presenting as ALL, reverting to chronic-phase CGL after complete remission and developing terminally a myeloid BC is described in detail. This case helps to illustrate a new form of natural history of CGL unveiled by the present study.
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PMID:Ultrastructural, cytochemical and surface marker analysis of cells during blast crisis of chronic granulocytic leukaemia. 28 4

The results of intensive chemotherapy given to 247 adults at the University of Maryland Cancer Center with previously untreated de novo acute myeloid leukemia (AML) were reviewed with respect to expression of terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (TdT) and CD34. Of the 228 patients with data for TdT, 32 (14%) had > 5% of the leukemia cells positive by an immunofluorescence assay. The median age of the TdT-positive patients was approximately 10 years less than the TdT-negative patients (50 versus 60 years). Patients with TdT-positive AML had similar median survival (12 versus 10.5 months) and complete remission (CR) rates (53 versus 59%), but a greater frequency of long-term complete responders (60 of complete remitters versus 20%, p = 0.08) than TdT-negative patients. Of 126 patients tested, 59% were CD34-negative (< 20% reactivity with leukemia cells). These 74 patients (median age 60 years) had a greater CR rate (71 versus 48%, p = 0.008) than the 52 CD34-positive patients (median age 60 years), and improved survival (p = 0.013 by Wilcoxon) although there was no difference in the duration of CR between the CD34-positive and negative groups. Of CD34-positive patients 12/52 remain in continuous CR, and 16/74 CD34-negative patients remain in continuous CR. None of eight patients strongly positive for CD34 (> 70% reactivity) remain disease-free. Positivity for TdT or CD34 was associated with less differentiated AML. Of CD34-positive patients, 44% had FAB M0/M1 morphology versus 13% of CD34-negative patients (p = 0.0001); similarly, 47% of TdT-positive patients were FAB M0/ML1 versus 25% of TdT-negative patients (p = 0.01). Of seven patients with FAB M4E0, five were CD34-positive. Of the 12 CD34-positive survivors, four had FAB M4E0. Thus CD34 expression predicts for CR rate and overall survival in adults with AML. TdT expression does not significantly affect overall outcome but may be associated with longer CR durations.
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PMID:The significance of CD34 and TdT determinations in patients with untreated de novo acute myeloid leukemia. 127 24

From May 1985 to June 1990, 94 newly diagnosed cases of acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) were treated at the Institut Gustave-Roussy, of which four (4.3%) demonstrated mixed cell lineage. All these cases were morphologically and cytochemically considered as myelogenous leukemias according to the FAB classification. Immunophenotyping revealed in all four cases that the blast population had T-lymphoid (CD2, CD5, CD7 and cytoplasmic CD3) markers. In three of these cases, blast cells co-expressed myelogenous CD13 and CD33 markers. Cytogenetic analysis of the blast cells revealed a normal karyotype in all cases. The response to therapy has been poor. The two patients initially treated with a regimen usually used for AML did not achieve complete remission. By contrast, in three cases, complete remission was obtained with a drug combination used for lymphoblastic leukemia (in one case after failure of first line AML regimen). Only one patient remained disease-free for more than 18 months. We conclude that this form of leukemia is a distinct biological and clinical entity and may benefit form alternative therapy.
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PMID:Acute myelogenous leukemia with T-cell features. 130 36

Myelodysplastic features and myeloperoxidase (MPO) deficiency have been investigated in a series of 336 cases of de novo acute myeloid leukemia (AML) to clarify their impact on the outcome of such patients and to compare with the previous results from the literature. Dysplastic features were defined according to the FAB criteria. Trilineage disease (TLD) was observed in 11.6% of patients (39 cases), and the complete remission rate (CR) was 56.4% for TLD patients compared to 74.4% for patients without any dysplastic features (p = 0.03). The effects of dysgranulopoiesis (DysM) alone or in combination were assessed using a logistic regression analysis. This analysis revealed that only DysG had any effect on CR rate (p = 0.013). The CR rate for patients with DysG was 56.6% and 71.5% for patients without DysG. We were unable to find any correlation between MPO deficiency, dysplastic features and CR rate. Cytogenetic analysis could be assessed for 119 patients. For patients with DysG, 10 karyotypes were normal and 20 were abnormal compared to 48 normal and 41 abnormal for patients without DysG (p = 0.05). We conclude that the presence of DysG in de novo AML exerts a negative effect on the ability to achieve a CR and is related to a higher frequency of cytogenetic abnormalities.
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PMID:Evaluation of the dysmyelopoiesis in 336 patients with de novo acute myeloid leukemia: major importance of dysgranulopoiesis for remission and survival. 1288 28

The immunophenotype of leukaemia cells from 60 patients with acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) was analysed with the APAAP technique using a panel of anti-myeloid and lymphoid associated monoclonal antibodies (McAb). Cells from all cases, including three with negative cytochemical features, were labelled by at least one of the anti-myeloid McAb CD13, anti-myeloperoxidase (anti-Mpo), and/or CD14. The most sensitive marker was CD13, since it was positive in 90% of cases. In two out of three AML cases defined as M0-AML, CD13 was expressed in the cytoplasm but not on the membrane; in these three cases peroxidase (Mpo) was not detected by conventional cytochemistry, but could be demonstrated in all of them using the McAb anti-Mpo. The simultaneous expression of CD14 and CD68 McAb was often confined to the M4 and M5 FAB AML subtypes (92% cases) as compared to the others: M1, M2, M3 (18% cases). Lymphoid antigens were rarely positive (TdT+: 13%, CD7+: 15%, CD19+: 5%) and none of the AML cases were CD3+ or CD10+. By contrast, CD4 was expressed in blasts from 44% of cases and this was not restricted to AML with a monocytic component (M4, M5) but also found in other subtypes. There were no significant differences in the clinical or prognostic features according to the positivity or negativity with TdT and CD4. By contrast, expression of CD7 was associated with refractoriness to the treatment or short complete remission duration, although the number of patients is too small to draw firm conclusions. Our findings support the clinical and diagnostic relevance of immunophenotypic studies in AML.
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PMID:The value of detecting surface and cytoplasmic antigens in acute myeloid leukaemia. 132 89

Blood samples from 40 adult patients with untreated acute leukaemia were processed through the Technicon H*1 blood autoanalyser which gives a complete white cell differential count using flow cytochemistry and provides white cell cytograms as well. We examined the differences in the percentage differential counts and the white cell cytograms of various FAB types of acute leukaemia in an attempt to estimate the usefulness of this easily obtainable data for the identification of acute leukaemias. Differentiation of the 33 acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) cases from the 7 acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) cases was possible on the basis of lymphocyte percentage (AML mean 29.6 vs. ALL mean 67.1, p < 0.01), monocyte percentage (AML mean 12.5 vs. ALL mean 3.3, p < 0.001), mean peroxidase activity value (AML mean -12.6 vs. ALL mean -0.6, p < 0.01) and the absence of IG flag (circulating immature granulocytes) in ALL. Interestingly, the FAB subtypes of AML could be distinguished from each other on the basis of characteristic patterns of cell distribution in the peroxidase cytogram when the total white cell count was over 10 x 10(9)/l. Even with lower counts the differences were distinctive providing that circulating blasts were present.
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PMID:Use of flow cytochemistry via the H*1 in FAB identification of acute leukaemias. 133 11

Vitamin A (retinol) and retinoic acid, its natural derivative, play an important role in the growth, differentiation and development of known normal tissues. Retinoids have recently become of interest to research in areas as diverse as dermatology, embryonal development and cancer research. Retinol is the major retinoid transported in the blood and tissues by its specific carrier retinol binding protein (RBP). The normal level of retinol in plasma is regulated very precisely by retinol homeostasis. RBP-retinol circulation supplies target cells, which then activate retinol into retinoic acid (RA) if they possess the NAD-dependent enzymatic oxidation system. RA, which is one of the most active metabolites of retinol, is also present in low concentration in the blood and the RA rate formation varies from tissues depending on specific need of the cell. The cellular transport and biological activity of retinoids may be mediated by their specific cytoplasmic binding proteins cellular retinol binding protein (CRBP) and the cellular retinoic acid binding protein (CRABP) which may function as shuttles targetting RA to nucleosol fraction and/or as regulator of cellular concentration of RA. The nuclear proteins RARs (retinoic acid receptors), which are members of the nuclear receptor superfamily are likely to be the final transducers of the RA signal at the gene expression. All-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) is able to specifically differentiate the malignant cells from leukemic patients with APL in short-term culture. For this reason, APL patients were successfully treated with ATRA (Chinese and French results). Acute promyelocytic leukemia M3 (French-American-British FAB classification) is a rare disease (10% of AML), characterized by a reciprocal chromosome 15-17 translocation. It has been shown that the chromosome 17 breakpoint of the translocation is localized within the RAR alpha gene. Due to the t(15;17) RAR alpha gene translocated to a gene PML on chromosome 15 resulting in synthesis of PML/RAR alpha fusion messenger RNA. Detection of PML/RAR alpha transcript is now a molecular marker of the disease. The abnormal PML/RAR alpha protein exhibits altered transcription activation properties when compared with RAR alpha. Clinical trials have demonstrated that ATRA is extremely efficient in inducing complete remission in APL patients. The morphologic finding of maturing elements in the bone marrow and peripheral blood during retinoic acid treatment indicates that the remission is obtained without hypoplasia and suggests that a differentiating mechanism is involved.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:[Mechanism of action of retinoids in a new therapeutic approach to acute promyelocytic leukemia]. 133 41

The value of the hypervariable X-linked probe M27 beta for use in the analysis of X-chromosome inactivation patterns in normal blood and bone marrow cells and in the assessment of clonality in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) blast cells has been determined. By electrophoresing samples for 30 h, heterozygosity of the M27 beta locus was demonstrable in 324/415 females (78%) and this value could be increased to 93% by electrophoresing for 50 h. Determination of the X-chromosome inactivation patterns in blood and bone marrow samples from hematologically normal females was possible in approximately 90% of heterozygous individuals. The X-chromosome inactivation ratios obtained with M27 beta were comparable with phosphoglycerate kinase or hypoxanthine phosphoribosyl transferase in 46 individuals heterozygous for one of these genes in addition to M27 beta. The results obtained were closely correlated (r = 0.89). In 21 of 35 (60%) AML blasts, however, there was hypermethylation of the M27 beta locus and clonal analysis was not possible. Hypermethylation was not related to FAB type.
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PMID:Assessment of X-chromosome inactivation patterns using the hypervariable probe M27 beta in normal hemopoietic cells and acute myeloid leukemic blasts. 135 60

Inversion of chromosome 16 was found in a 73-year-old female with acute myeloblastic leukemia (FAB:M2). Complete remission was achieved by combined chemotherapy (DNR, Ara-C, 6-MP, Prednisolone), but she relapsed 6 months later without CNS involvement and died of respiratory failure presumably due to cerebrovascular accident during remission reinduction chemotherapy. Biphenotypic surface markers (CD2+ and CD13+) were observed on relapse. Eosinophilia was not observed throughout. Our patient and the other reported case suggest that biphenotypism and the lack of eosinophilia and monocytosis in inv (16) leukemia may be correlated with a poor prognosis.
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PMID:[Inversion of chromosome 16 observed in acute myeloblastic leukemia (M2) with biphenotypic surface markers lacking monocytosis and eosinophilia]. 135 70

CD54/Intercellular Adhesion Molecule-1 (ICAM-1) is a cell adhesion molecule largely distributed among normal and neoplastic tissues. Through the binding to its ligand(s) CD54 plays a key role in cell to cell interactions leading to the immune response. Recently, CD54 expression has been investigated on hematopoietic cells: the antigen is predominantly expressed in the early stages of normal hematopoiesis and during the activation of blood cells. As regards to hematological malignancies, CD54 is strongly expressed on neoplastic cells from "stem cell derived" neoplasms. In AML, CD54 expression is related with other differentiation-linked molecules such as CD34 and HLA-DR and is significantly correlated with FAB morphological classification. In lymphoproliferative disorders, a high CD54 expression is associated with germinal centre lymphomas. This review summarizes our current understanding of CD54 with emphasis on recent advances and reference to unresolved issues such as its prognostic role in the clinical outcome of oncohematological diseases.
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PMID:Expression and functional role of CD54/Intercellular Adhesion Molecule-1 (ICAM-1) on human blood cells. 136 19


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