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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 chemistry, biological activity, and pharmacokinetics of gamma-interferon and recombinant interferon gamma are reviewed, and the agent's clinical efficacy, adverse effects, and dosage and administration for the treatment of chronic granulomatous disease (CGD) and other disorders are described. Endogenous gamma-interferon is a 166-amino-acid protein encoded by a single gene on chromosome 12. Recombinant human interferon gamma is purified from Escherichia coli as a monomer containing 139 amino acids. Gamma-interferon has antiviral, immunomodulatory, and antiproliferative activity. Serum concentrations of recombinant interferon gamma increase in proportion to the dose. Clearance after i.m. or s.c. administration
fits
a two-compartment model. The half-life is 3.5-7.5 hours, and bioavailability is 89%. Evidence that recombinant interferon gamma can enhance phagocytic oxidative metabolism led to its evaluation for use in the treatment of CGD. Clinical studies showed that the agent decreases the frequency of serious infections in patients with CGD. Recombinant interferon gamma has shown only limited success in the treatment of metastatic renal cell carcinoma (RCC), both as a single agent and in combination with recombinant interferon alfa. Similarly, although interferons appear to be able to change cytogenetic abnormalities in some patients with Philadelphia chromosome-positive
chronic myelogenous leukemia
, therapy with recombinant interferon gamma has led to minimal success. However, the agent has produced some encouraging results in atopic dermatitis. The adverse effects of recombinant interferon gamma in patients with CGD usually consist only of fever, chills, headache, and erythema. The recommended dosage in CGD-afflicted children whose body surface area is greater than 0.5 sq m is 50 micrograms/sq m given by s.c. injection three times a week for life. Recombinant interferon gamma has given new hope to patients with CGD. Although the drug is very expensive, the cost may be offset by fewer hospitalizations to treat infection.
...
PMID:Recombinant interferon gamma for treatment of chronic granulomatous disease and other disorders. 134 90
We present a mathematical model of granulocytopoiesis that depends on certain physiologically meaningful parameters. By choosing different values of these parameters, the model describes both the normal process and that in
chronic myelogenous leukemia
(
CML
). The model
fits
all the available experimental data tested. Furthermore, it shows how the
CML
cells can ultimately outnumber the normal cells and how this process can be very slow. The model provides a quantitative approach to the relationship between proliferation and maturation and resolves the apparent contradiction between decreased proliferation and increased production, by assuming that a greater fraction of
CML
cells is produced by division rather than by maturation. The model should be helpful in designing experiments to better define the abnormalities of proliferation and maturation in
CML
and in seeking to define the specific alterations in the cell regulatory networks resulting from the production of the chimeric p210bcr-abl protein characteristic of
CML
.
...
PMID:Mathematical model of granulocytopoiesis and chronic myelogenous leukemia. 200 27
A Phase II study of vindesine was carried out by the Vindesine Study Group in 130 patients with hematological malignancies: mainly 3 mg/body (about 2 mg/m2) of vindesine was administered once weekly by bolus injection. In 122 evaluable patients who had been heavily pretreated with vincristine and/or others, remissions were observed in patients with acute lymphocytic leukemia, blastic crisis of
chronic myeloid leukemia
, malignant lymphoma and other leukemias. The overall response rate was 39.3% including 20 complete and 28 partial remissions. No remissions were obtained in acute nonlymphocytic leukemia and multiple myeloma. All patients were evaluable for toxicity: Leukopenia occurred in 64.9%; peripheral neuropathy in 24.6%; GPT and GOT elevation in 20.7% and in 10.8%; alopecia in 11.5%; gastrointestinal disturbance in 10.8%; and fever in 5.4%. The treatment with vindesine was generally well tolerated, although in five out of 130 patients (3.8%) the treatment was discontinued due to
convulsion
, feeling of abdominal distention plus constipation, paralytic ileus, dysuria plus constipation, or interstitial pneumonia. Leukopenia and peripheral neuropathy appeared to be dose-limiting factors.
...
PMID:[Phase II study of vindesine in hematological malignancies]. 658 Aug 41
This case report shows reversible brain MRI changes probably associated with acyclovir toxicity. So far, neuroimaging in acyclovir toxicity had been negative or uninformative. A 12-year-old girl developed focal secondary generalizing epileptic
fits
following 4 weeks of prophylactic administration of acyclovir (3 x 10 mg/kg body weight/day i.v.) on day +22 after allogeneic peripheral blood stem cell transplantation for
CML
. Infective causes were excluded. Brain MRI demonstrated multiple gadolinium-enhancing areas with impairment of the blood-brain barrier in cortical and subcortical regions. Clinical symptoms and neuroimaging pathology resolved completely within 9 days of acyclovir withdrawal.
...
PMID:Reversible brain MRI changes in acyclovir neurotoxicity. 916 53
Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and placental derived growth factor (PlGF) stimulate cell proliferation and differentiation by binding to their specific receptors, Flk-1/KDR and Flt-1 respectively. Flk-1/KDR-deficient murine embryos manifest failure of blood-island formation and vasculogenesis. The aim of this study was to directly evaluate the importance of VEGF, PlGF/Flt-1 and Flk-1/KDR receptor ligand interactions in regulating normal and malignant human haemopoiesis. Addition of VEGF and PlGF failed to enhance survival or cloning efficiency of human haemopoietic progenitors isolated from adult bone marrows, fetal livers or cord blood samples. This finding may be explained by the apparent absence of mRNA encoding Flt-1 and Flk-1/KDR receptors on stem cell rich CD34+ c-kit-R+ Rh123(low) cells. Further studies revealed that
Fit
-1 R mRNA, but not Flk-1/KDR mRNA was first detectable in the more mature cells isolated from haemopoietic colonies. Accordingly, VEGF receptors are either absent, or expressed at very low level, on human haemopoietic stem/progenitor cells. Of interest, normal and malignant human haemopoietic cells appeared to secrete VEGF protein. However, in contrast to normal haemopoietic progenitors, VEGF co-stimulated HEL cell proliferation as well as CFU-GM colony formation from approximately 15% of the
chronic myeloid leukaemia
(
CML
) and acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) patients studied. Therefore, although VEGF appeared to have minimal effects on normal haemopoietic cell growth it would appear to drive malignant haemopoietic cell proliferation to some degree. Of more importance, however, we speculate that VEGF may play an very important role in leukaemogenesis by stimulating growth of vascular endothelium, thereby providing a sufficient blood supply to feed the growing haematological tumour.
...
PMID:Role of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and placenta-derived growth factor (PlGF) in regulating human haemopoietic cell growth. 988 8
The availability of an i.v. form of busulfan (Bu) has prompted investigation of administration schedules other than the 4-times-daily dosage commonly used with oral Bu. We have studied an allogeneic stem cell transplantation (SCT) preparative regimen comprising fludarabine (FLU) 50 mg/m2 on days -6 to -2 plus i.v. Bu 3.2 mg/kg daily in a 3-hour infusion on days -5 to -2. The regimen was given to 70 patients aged 15 to 64 years (median, 41 years) with hematologic malignancy. Thirty-six patients (51%) had high-risk malignancy, 28 (40%) had unrelated or genotypically mismatched related donors (alternate donors [AD]) and 29 (41%) received bone marrow rather than blood as stem cell source. Acute GVHD prevention comprised antithymocyte globulin 4.5 mg/kg over 3 days pretransplantation, cyclosporin A, and short-course methotrexate with folinic acid. Hepatic toxicity was transient and there was no clinically diagnosed veno-occlusive disease. Grade II stomatitis occurred in 49 patients (70%) and hemorrhagic cystitis in 9 patients (13%). One patient with subtherapeutic phenytoin levels had a
convulsion
8 hours after the third i.v. Bu dose, but no other neurotoxicity was apparent. Incidence of acute GVHD grades II to IV was 8% and incidence of grade III-IV was 3%, with no deaths from this cause. Actuarial incidence of chronic GVHD at 2 years is 38%. There were 2 cases of graft failure in unrelated donor BMT recipients, 1 of which was reversed by asecond transplantation. With a median follow-up of 16 months (range, 6-27 months), transplantation-related mortality at 100 days and 2 years was 2% and 5% for matched related donor (MRD) SCT and 8% and 19% for AD SCT, respectively (P = not significant). Relapse rates were 21% for 34 patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) in complete remission or
chronic myeloid leukemia
in chronic phase (low-risk), 66% for 19 patients with high-risk AML, and 18% for 17 patients with other active malignancy. Projected disease-free and overall survival rates at 2 years were 74% and 88% for low-risk disease, 26% and 37% for advanced AML, and 65% and 71% for other high-risk disease, respectively. Pharmacokinetic studies were done using 11 samples with the first and fourth doses of Bu. Kinetics were linear, and for the first and fourth doses, the half-lives were 2.60 +/- 0.44 and 2.57 +/- 0.36 hours, respectively. Clearances were 106.77 +/- 16.68 and 106.86 +/- 21.57 mL/min per m2, peak concentrations (Cmax) were 3.92 +/- 0.31 and 3.96 +/- 0.28 mcg/mL, and Bu areas under the plasma concentration versus time curve (AUC) were 4866.51 +/- 771.42 and 4980 +/- 882.80 microM x min, respectively. Bu was completely cleared within 24 hours and the day 4 pharmacokinetic values were very similar to those on day 1 for every patient. The cumulative AUC was comparable to the target range established for p.o. Bu. This regimen incorporating once-daily i.v. Bu is convenient to give, is relatively well tolerated, gives predictable blood levels, and deserves further study in circumstances in which cytoreduction as well as immune suppression is needed.
...
PMID:Once-daily intravenous busulfan given with fludarabine as conditioning for allogeneic stem cell transplantation: study of pharmacokinetics and early clinical outcomes. 1237 50
Scant knowledge is available about the dynamics of lineage-specific mixed chimerism (Ch) following bone marrow transplantation (BMT). This review is focused on findings derived from bone marrow (BM) biopsies in patients with
chronic myeloid leukemia
(
CML
) including a sex-mismatched host/donor constellation. Appropriate techniques involved immunophenotyping by monoclonal antibodies to identify the various cell lineages, dual color fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) with x- and y-chromosome-specific DNA-probes and a proper detection system for a simultaneous labeling of the bcr/abl locus. A significant degree of Ch with more than 20% host CD34+ progenitors was found in the early and late (up to 200 days after BMT) posttransplant period. However, only 10% of these cells harbored the bcr/abl translocation gene. This result
fits
well with corresponding molecular biological findings of so-called minimal residual disease. Conversion of Ch evolved during leukemic relapse with 90% host progenitors of which 50% revealed the bcr/abl locus. A Ch of nucleated erythroid percursors (5%) and CD68+ macrophages (8%) was expressed to a significantly lower degree. The slightly increased frequency found in CD61+ megakaryocytes (16%) was probably due to the polyploid state of these cells. Similar to the CD34+ progenitor cells abrupt changes from donor to host type was associated with an insidious transformation into recurrent leukemia. The CD34+ endothelial cells showed a minor degree of Ch, because donor-derived elements ranged from 18% to 25%. Leukemic relapse was characterized by an almost complete conversion of the endothelial cells to a host type. These findings point towards a CD34+ progenitor cell origin of the (leukemic) endothelial cell layer and suggests that their dysfunction may contribute to an expansion of the neoplastic clone.
...
PMID:Dynamics of lineage-restricted mixed chimerism following sex-mismatched allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. 1264 7
We studied S-phase fraction (SPF) and aneuploidy in peripheral blood leucocytes of patients with
chronic myeloid leukemia
(
CML
) in chronic phase (
CML
-CP, n=41), accelerated phase (
CML
-AP, n=6), and control subjects (n=12) with an aim to find out their role in early detection of accelerated phase. The SPF and aneuploidy were studied through flow-cytometry using LT-Mod.
Fit
software. Mean SPF value in
CML
-AP (9.28+/-3.46%) and in
CML
-CP (4.76+/-2.30%) were significantly higher than in normal controls (0.28+/-0.21%), (P<0.005, P<0.001).
CML
-CP patients having higher SPF (>7%) converted to accelerated phase within 18 months of follow-up while those with lower SPF (<7%) did not. Aneuploidy was present in 34.14% of
CML
-CP and all patients of
CML
-AP whereas no control subjects showed aneuploidy. Among
CML
-CP patients having SPF >7%, 86% developed aneuploidy during follow-up as compared to 18.50% of
CML
-CP with less than 7% SPF. We conclude that peripheral blood SPF and aneuploidy could be important parameters for prediction of evolution to accelerated phase in
CML
patients.
...
PMID:Flow cytometric analysis of aneuploidy and S-phase fraction in chronic myeloid leukemia patients: role in early detection of accelerated phase. 1286 9
Cyclical neutropenia is a dynamical disease of the hematopoietic system marked by an oscillation in circulating leukocyte (e.g. neutrophil) numbers to near zero levels and then back to normal. This oscillation is also mirrored in the platelets and reticulocytes which oscillate with the same period. Cyclical neutropenia has an animal counterpart in the grey collie. Using the mathematical model of the hematopoietic system of Colijn and Mackey [A mathematical model of hematopoiesis: I. Periodic
chronic myelogenous leukemia
. Companion paper to the present paper.] we have determined what parameters are necessary to mimic laboratory and clinical data on untreated grey collies and humans, and also what changes in these parameters are necessary to fit data during treatment with granulocyte colony stimulating factor (G-CSF). Compared to the normal steady-state values, we found that the major parameter changes that mimic untreated cyclical neutropenia correspond to a decreased amplification (increased apoptosis) within the proliferating neutrophil precursor compartment, and a decrease in the maximal rate of re-entry into the proliferative phase of the stem cell compartment. For the data obtained during G-CSF treatment, good
fits
were obtained only when parameters were altered that would imply that G-CSF led to higher amplification (lower rate of apoptosis) in the proliferating neutrophil precursors, and a elevated rate of differentiation into the neutrophil line.
...
PMID:A mathematical model of hematopoiesis: II. Cyclical neutropenia. 1597 6
The t(9;22)(q34;q11) translocation occurs in
chronic myeloid leukemia
(
CML
) and adult B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), leading to fusion of BCR to ABL1 and constitutive activation of ABL1 tyrosine kinase activity. The main BCR-ABL1 breakpoints result in P190 BCR-ABL1 or P210 BCR-ABL1 fusion proteins. The latter is found in almost all cases of
CML
and in one third of the cases of t(9;22)-positive adult B-ALL. P190 BCR-ABL1 is found in the remaining two thirds of t(9;22)-positive adult B-ALL cases but only exceptionally in
CML
. We describe here the first case of t(9;22)(q34;q11) associated with t(10;11)(p13;q14) in acute monocytic leukemia. The recurrent t(10;11)(p13;q14) translocation, usually found in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and T-ALL, merges PICALM to MLLT10. RT-PCR enabled identification of PICALM-MLLT10 and BCR-ABL1 e1-a2 fusion transcripts; in the context of chronic and acute myeloid leukemia, the latter usually has a monocytic presentation. We also identified overexpression of HOXA9, a gene essential to myeloid differentiation that is expressed in PICALM-MLLT10 and MLL-rearranged acute leukemias. This case
fits
with and extends a recently proposed multistage AML model in which constitutive activation of tyrosine kinases by mutations (BCR-ABL1) are associated with deregulation of transcription factors central to myeloid differentiation (HOXA9 secondary to PICALM-MLLT10).
...
PMID:Acute monocytic leukemia with coexpression of minor BCR-ABL1 and PICALM-MLLT10 fusion genes along with overexpression of HOXA9. 1651 48
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