Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0023473 (chronic myeloid leukemia)
18,916 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The phenomenon of premature chromosome condensation (PCC) was used to compare the bone marrow proliferation characteristics of 163 patients with various forms of leukemia prior to the initiation of new therapy. The proliferative potential index (PPI, or fraction of G1 cells in late G1 phase) and the fraction of cells in S phase was determined and compared to the type of disease and the bone marrow blast infiltrate for each patient. Previously untreated patients with acute leukemia exhibited an average PPI value three times that of normal bone marrow (37.5% for acute myeloblastic leukemia [AML], acute monomyeloblastic leukemia [AMML], or acute promyelocytic leukemia [APML] and 42% for acute lymphocytic leukemia [ALL] or acute undifferentiated leukemia [AUL]). Untreated chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) patients showed intermediate PPI values (25.2%), whereas CML patients with controlled disease exhibited nearly normal PPI values (14.6%). On the other hand, blastic-phase CML patients exhibited PPI values closer to that observed in patients with acute leukemia (35.4%). Seven patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) exhibited even higher PPI values. No correlations were observed between PPI values, fraction of cells in S phase, and marrow blast infiltrate. For untreated acute disease patients, PPI values were prognostic for response only at low and high PPI values. These results suggest that the PCC-determined proliferative potential is a biologic reflection of the degree of malignancy within the bone marrow.
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PMID:Premature chromosome condensation studies in human leukemia. I. Pretreatment characteristics. 29 41

Rearrangement of the breakpoint cluster region (bcr) was demonstrated by Southern blot analysis in the DNA in each of 68 patients with Ph chromosome-positive CML and in 3 of 7 patients with apparent Ph chromosome-negative CML. In contrast, no bcr rearrangement could be found in DNA from 17 normal individuals and 28 patients with various hematologic disorders other than CML or ALL. An analysis of the location of the breakpoints within the bcr indicated that 3' breakpoints were significantly more common in patients in blast crisis or accelerated phase disease compared to those with chronic phase disease. Patients with chronic phase disease and 3' breakpoints had shorter average disease duration than that for chronic phase patients with 5' breakpoints, although the difference between these two groups of patients was not statistically significant. For patients who had progressed to accelerated disease or blast crisis, a statistically significant difference in chronic phase disease duration could be demonstrated between 11 patients with 3' breakpoints (average chronic phase 30.2 months) and 15 patients with 5' breakpoints (average chronic phase 50.6 months). For 8 patients studied in both chronic phase and accelerated or blast crisis, the location of the breakpoint did not change. We suggest that the bcr-abl fusion protein associated with a 3' breakpoint could result in more rapid progression to acute disease, and this may account for differences in the relative frequency of 3' and 5' breakpoints at different disease stages. Although more studies are required, identifying CML patients with a higher propensity for early blast transformation may eventually prove to be of some clinical value.
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PMID:The location of breakpoints within the breakpoint cluster region (bcr) of chromosome 22 in chronic myeloid leukemia. 317 41

Chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) is a myelo-proliferative disorder which, after a chronic phase which lasts an average of 3 years, evolves into an acute disease which is resistant to chemotherapy. Nevertheless, a few studies have reported cases in which partial or complete hematologic, cytogenetic and/or molecular remission of the disease were observed either spontaneously or after non intensive chemotherapy, with or without medullar aplasia. Some of these patients later relapsed into a blast crisis. We report a case of CML with clinical and hematologic remission for 19 years after two cycles of busulphan not causing medullar aplasia, negative for the BCR/ABL gene by Southern blot but with the gene's mRNA detectable by hot start nested RT-PCR.
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PMID:Detection of bcr/abl mRNA in a case of chronic myelogenous leukemia in long-term remission: CML or sensitivity of detection? 979 59

Chronic myelogenous leukemia is a myeloproliferative disorder (MPD) that, over time, progresses to acute leukemia. Both processes are closely associated with the t(9;22) chromosomal translocation that creates the BCR/ABL fusion gene in hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) and their progeny. Chronic myelogenous leukemia is therefore classified as an HSC disorder in which a clone of multipotent HSCs is likely to be malignantly transformed, although direct evidence for malignant t(9;22)+ HSCs is lacking. To test whether HSC malignancy is required, we generated hMRP8p210BCR/ABL transgenic mice in which expression of BCR/ABL is absent in HSCs and targeted exclusively to myeloid progenitors and their myelomonocytic progeny. Four of 13 BCR/ABL transgenic founders developed a chronic MPD, but only one progressed to blast crisis. To address whether additional oncogenic events are required for progression to acute disease, we crossed hMRP8p210BCR/ABL mice to apoptosis-resistant hMRP8BCL-2 mice. Of 18 double-transgenic animals, 9 developed acute myeloid leukemias that were transplantable to wild-type recipients. Taken together, these data indicate that a MPD can arise in mice without expression of BCR/ABL in HSCs and that additional mutations inhibiting programmed cell death may be critical in the transition of this disease to blast-crisis leukemia.
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PMID:Expression of BCR/ABL and BCL-2 in myeloid progenitors leads to myeloid leukemias. 1289 Aug 67