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

The Philadelphia (Ph) translocation is responsible for the generation of the chimeric BCR/ABL oncogene. The Ph chromosome constitutes the earliest detectable chromosome abnormality in chronic myelogenous leukemia and is also found in acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Mice transgenic for a P190 BCR/ABL-producing DNA construct develop lymphoblastic leukemia/lymphoma and provide an opportunity to study early stages of the disease as well as progression. In this study, we have karyotyped the bone marrow of 10 19-day-old BCR/ABL P190 transgenic mice from a line that reproducibly develops leukemia/lymphoma. Leukemic cells from 17 terminally ill transgenic founders and progeny were also karyotyped as well as bone marrow transplant recipients of leukemic donor marrow. Karyotypically visible aberrations were absent from the early stages of BCR/ABL P190-generated leukemia and normal metaphases could be found even in the terminal stages of the disease. A high frequency of aneuploidy was found in advanced leukemia, with a marked preference for the gain of mouse chromosomes 12, 14, or 17. These results point to a primary role for BCR/ABL in leukemogenesis and suggest a destabilizing effect of the BCR/ABL gene on the regulation of cell division.
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PMID:Clonal development and karyotype evolution during leukemogenesis of BCR/ABL transgenic mice. 173 87

The aim of this work is to evaluate the relationship between P-glycoprotein expression in circulating blasts and clinical response in patients suffering from acute lymphoblastic leukemia, acute non-lymphoblastic leukemia, and chronic myeloid leukemia in either lymphoid or myeloid blastic crisis. The results obtained show that: a) patients whose blasts express P-glycoprotein are resistant towards protocols including Doxorubicin, Daunorubicin, Etoposide, Mithramycin, Vincristine; b) P-glycoprotein can be expressed constitutively in some cases; c) P-glycoprotein does not appear to be the only mechanism responsible for resistance towards anthracyclines and Etoposide.
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PMID:P-glycoprotein and drug resistance in acute leukemias and in the blastic crisis of chronic myeloid leukemia. 198 99

Expression of the 93-kd tyrosine kinase encoded by the human c-fes proto-oncogene (also known as FES) is restricted to mature hematopoietic cells of the granulocytic and monocytic lineages, suggestive of a function essential to normal myeloid differentiation. However, recent studies have shown that c-fes can transform fibroblasts if sufficient levels of gene expression are achieved. These findings indicate that strict regulation of the c-fes gene is critical to normal myeloid development, whereas elevated c-fes expression may contribute to malignant transformation. In the present study, we compared the c-fes messenger RNA (mRNA) levels in leukemia blasts from patients with myeloid or lymphoid leukemia with those of peripheral monocytes from a normal donor with the use of a quantitative ribonuclease protection assay. The presence of c-fes mRNA was readily detected in both acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) cells, but c-fes mRNA was present in low levels or was absent in lymphoid leukemia cells. The leukemia cells of two of five AML patients and four of four CML patients expressed more c-fes mRNA than monocytes from a normal donor, with more than a threefold elevation in the cells of one CML patient. No evidence of amplification or rearrangement of the c-fes gene was detectable by Southern blot analysis of myeloid leukemia DNA, suggesting that the variation in c-fes mRNA levels are related to differences in transcriptional activity and/or message stability. These results indicate that elevated c-fes expression is a common feature of myeloid leukemia cells that could potentially contribute to the leukemia phenotype.
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PMID:Elevated expression of the c-fes proto-oncogene in adult human myeloid leukemia cells in the absence of gene amplification. 198 16

Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) patients with a Philadelphia chromosome (Ph+ ALL) were treated with a combination of antineoplastic drugs recommended for both myeloid and lymphoid leukemia (BHAC-DMPV: behenoylcytosine arabinoside, daunorubicin, 6-mercaptopurine, prednisolone, and vincristine). Ph+ ALL patients with chromosome breaks which occur within the major breakpoint cluster region (M-BCR rearranged Ph+ ALL) were treated with natural interferon-alpha (IFN-alpha) after entering complete remission. In this study, four of seven patients with Ph+ ALL had M-BCR rearrangement, and all achieved complete remission with karyotypic normalization. Subsequent cytogenetic analysis during complete remission in two ALL patients with M-BCR rearrangement revealed that the percentage of bone marrow cells with the Ph chromosome increased, while the bone marrow maintained remission status. This cytogenetic-hematological discrepancy led us to consider that M-BCR rearranged Ph+ ALL might be a variant of chronic myelogenous leukemia, therefore, three Ph+ ALL patients with M-BCR rearrangement were treated with IFN-alpha after achieving complete remission. In contrast, only one of three patients with M-BCR non-rearranged Ph+ ALL obtained complete remission.
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PMID:Treatment of Philadelphia chromosome-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia: a pilot study which raises important questions. 207 47

We have compared the effect of alpha 2-C and gamma recombinant interferons (rIFNs) on normal myeloid progenitors (N-CFU-GM), chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) progenitors (CML-CFU-GM) and leukemic progenitors (L-CFU) of acute non-lymphoblastic leukemia (ANLL) patients. Within 14 days of continuous exposure in culture, a dose-dependent inhibition of CFU-GM was seen for most normal subjects. Resistance to rIFNs was frequent in leukemic patients and even more in acute leukemia than in CML. Stimulation of clonogenic cell growth was seen for a minority of leukemic patients. When only the sensitive cases were considered, no difference in sensitivity was noticed between normal, CML and ANLL patients. A good correlation was observed between the activity or the lack of activity of alpha and gamma rIFNs.
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PMID:Influence of recombinant alpha and gamma interferons on the in vitro proliferation of myeloid and leukemic progenitors. 211 9

The effects of TPA (12-0-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate) and RA (retinoic acid) were investigated on the cell lines HL60 (acute promyelocytic leukemia) and K562 (erythroleukemia) and on cells from patients with several kinds of leukemia. There were 14 cases of acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL), 2 cases of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), 23 cases of acute myeloid leukemia (M1-M7), 5 cases of chronic myelocytic leukemia in blast crisis (CML-BC) and 2 mixed leukemias. In almost all of the cases examined, after TPA exposure cells from patients with proven myeloid leukemia became adherent to the substrate, while lymphoid leukemia cells remained in suspension, allowing the differentiation of lymphoid from myeloid blasts. The only exception was in one case of CLL, which had cells that became adherent with long filamental projections. In addition, increased phagocytosis following TPA exposure permitted characterization of M7 as this was the only myeloid leukemia negative for phagocytosis. Further discrimination between the subtypes of myeloid leukemia could be based on the increased lysozyme production seen after TPA in M4 and M5. Esterase positivity allowed the discrimination of M1 cells, which were negative before and after TPA treatment. In agreement with the results of other authors, TPA and RA led to independent ways of differentiation, granulocytic-like lineage and monocytic-like cells being favored by RA and TPA, respectively. The capacity of the same cell to differentiate into more than one lineage, depending on whether RA or TPA was used, was only seen in the present study with M3 cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Myeloid leukemia differentiation by phorbol ester and retinoic acid: a practical approach. 223 Nov 80

The indications and results of allogeneic bone marrow transplantation are well known by the analyses of European and International registries. In acute non-lymphoblastic leukemia in first complete remission (CR), the disease-free survival (DFS) is 45%, with a risk of relapse (RR) of 15%; in ALL in first CR the DFS is 60% with a RR of 15%; in ALL in second CR the DFS in 40%, with a RR of 30%; in CML in chronic phase the DFS is 60%, with a RR of 20%. These results have to be adjusted with other risk factors such as age, sex mismatch, disease status, CMV serology, and GVH. The use of donors different from a genotypically matched related donor is currently under investigation. Mismatched related transplants give disappointing results except in the case of one HLA mismatch. Unrelated HLA matched donor panels have been recently established in various countries with 200 transplants performed with a DFS of approximately 40%. Current research tries to reduce the risk of relapse by intensifying the conditioning or using the GVL effect of allogeneic T cells, to reduce GVH by the use of monoclonal antibodies and to improve the engraftment by the use of growth factors.
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PMID:Recent trends in allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. 225 66

Neoplasia may develop in patients with malignant hematologic disorders, during remission after radio and/or chemotherapy. A multifactorial origin related to therapy may be postulated. From 1978 to 1987, among 142 patients with malignant hematologic disorders (Hodgkin lymphoma 33, non-Hodgkin lymphoma 51, Multiple Myeloma 35 and Chronic Myeloid Leukemia 31) we observed 3 patients developing another neoplasia. An additional patient with acute non-lymphatic leukemia had been submitted to chemotherapy for gastric cancer. Four other patients with double neoplasia, one of them a hematologic one, had not been submitted to chemotherapy. The lack of national registries for neoplastic diseases precludes an estimation of the odd ratios involved in our findings.
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PMID:[Second neoplasms in malignant hematologic disorders. Experience from 1978 to 1987]. 196 10

Eighty consecutive patients were transplanted with human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-identical sibling marrow for acute myelogenous leukemia (AML, N = 29), acute lymphoid leukemia (ALL, N = 23), or chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML, N = 28). Donor marrow was depleted of lymphocytes using counterflow centrifugation. Median age of the recipients was 31 years. Pretransplant conditioning consisted of cyclophosphamide and fractionated total body irradiation (TBI) with a low (4.1 +/- 0.3 cGy/min) or high (13.1 +/- 1.6 cGy/min) midline average dose rate. In 43 patients, cytosine-arabinoside or anthracyclines were added to the conditioning regimen. Immunoprophylaxis posttransplant consisted of methotrexate (MTX) alone, cyclosporine A (CsA) in combination with MTX, or CsA alone; two patients received no immunoprophylaxis at all. Graft failure occurred in 4 of 77 evaluable patients (5%). The probability of acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) greater than or equal to grade 2 at day 100 after transplantation was 15%. The projected 3-year estimate of extensive chronic GVHD was 12%. Only three patients died of cytomegalovirus-interstitial pneumonitis. The projected 3-year probability of relapse was 30% (95% confidence interval [CI], range 8% to 53%) in transplants for AML in first complete remission (CR1), 35% (95% CI, 1% to 69%) after transplantation for ALL in CR1, and 38% (95% CI, 2% to 74%) after transplantation for CML in first chronic phase (CP1). The projected 3-year probability of leukemia-free survival (LFS) was 56% (95% CI, 35% to 77%) after transplantation for AML-CR1, 42% (95% CI, 16% to 69%) in patients transplanted for ALL-CR1, and 49% (95% CI, 18% to 80%) after transplantation for CML-CP1. After transplantation for AML-CR1, ALL-CR1, or CML-CP1, the median follow-up time for leukemia-free survivors was 31+, 30+, and 21+ months, respectively. Probabilities of relapse, survival, and LFS in AML-CR1 and ALL-CR1 transplants were comparable with those reported in recipients of untreated grafts. In patients transplanted for CML-CP1, probability of relapse was higher and probability of LFS was lower than in recipients of untreated grafts. In transplants for leukemia in CR1 and CP1, preparative regimen and immunoprophylaxis posttransplant were not associated significantly with the probability of acute GVHD greater than or equal to grade 2, extensive chronic GVHD, relapse, survival, or LFS. In bone marrow transplantation for leukemia, counterflow centrifugation is a useful technique for the prevention of GVHD.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Allogeneic bone marrow transplantation for leukemia with marrow grafts depleted of lymphocytes by counterflow centrifugation. 231 Aug 32

Marrow transplantation is now preferred treatment, if the patient has a suitable identical twin or HLA-identical sibling donor, for aplastic anemia, acute myelogenous or lymphoblastic leukemia that has relapsed once, and is commonly employed for the treatment of acute myelogenous leukemia in the first remission, for chronic myelogenous leukemia in the chronic phase, and for certain congenital disorders. The results of transplantation from HLA-nonidentical donors appears promising, but the follow-up is short at this time. The low incidence of relapse or nonrelapse mortality beyond the first 3-5 years with follow-up now to almost 20 years from transplantation signifies that surviving patients are cured of their disease and are likely to have survival similar to the normal population thereafter. They will probably lead normal productive lives in society. These data support applying criteria for insurance candidacy of patients who have survived more than 5 years from marrow transplantation which are similar to criteria applied to other normal individuals.
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PMID:Long-term results of bone marrow transplantation for leukemia or aplastic anemia. 235 90


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