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)

Anti-SSEA-1 which binds to glycoconjugates with a Gal beta 1-4(fuc alpha 1-3)GlcNAc epitope and VIM-2 which binds to gangliosides with a NeuAc alpha 2-3GlcNAc beta-4(FUC alpha 1-3) GlcNAc beta 1-3Gal-epitope were used to determine the expression of their corresponding carbohydrate antigens in human leukocytes and leukemia cells. Expression of these antigens was evaluated by immunohistochemical staining of plastic embedded sections of bone marrow or isolated cells, and by immunostaining of isolated glycosphingolipids separated by thin layer chromatography. The expression of both antigens was restricted to normal and leukemic myeloid cells. A range of positive immunohistochemical staining was found among normal marrow myeloid precursors, with myeloblasts giving weaker staining than more mature cells (promyelocytes, myelocytes, metamyelocytes). A similar trend was observed with leukemia cell lines, in that the myeloblastic cell line KG1 was weakly stained compared to the partially differentiated cell line HL-60. Immunohistochemical staining of marrows from acute leukemia patients showed that the VIM-2 antigen is more strongly expressed than the SSEA-1 antigen. Interestingly, both antibodies stained AMMoL cells more intensely than AML cells. Granulocytes from marrows of chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) patients were intensely stained by both antibodies, whereas lymphocytic leukemias (acute lymphocytic, chronic lymphocytic and hairy cell marrows) were negative. Thus, although both antigens are restricted to myeloid cells there are differences in the level of expression depending on the level of cell maturity. Immunostaining of glycosphingolipids isolated from myeloid cells demonstrated that the SSEA-1 epitope is carried by several neutral glycosphingolipids and that the VIM-2 epitope is carried by three or more gangliosides. Major SSEA-1 glycosphingolipids, with seven to more than ten monosaccharides, are expressed by all myeloid cells regardless of the level of maturity, although quantitative differences are apparent in different patient samples. Two strongly immunoreactive VIM-2 gangliosides with ten and twelve monosaccharides, respectively were found in myeloid cells. The ratio of these two gangliosides varied dramatically, with greater amounts of the more complex ganglioside being present in most cell samples. Normal neutrophils and CML cells had much greater quantities of the VIM-2 gangliosides than acute leukemia cells. This observation correlates with our earlier findings that: (1) acute leukemia cells have less total ganglioside than granulocytes and (2) acute leukemia cells have a predominance of short chain gangliosides (i.e. less than five monosaccharide units). Finally, both CML cells and normal neutrophils express a shorter chain VIM-2 ganglioside, which was not detected in acute myelogenous leukemia cells.
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PMID:Distribution of VIM-2 and SSEA-1 glycoconjugate epitopes among human leukocytes and leukemia cells. 169 Mar 17

Leukemias are characterized by an idiopathic proliferation of a progenitor cell that is committed to a single cell lineage. However, leukemias with dual-lineage differentiation are being described, especially within the pediatric age group. The authors reviewed 118 cases of adult acute leukemia phenotyped by immunofluorescent flow cytometry; 7 cases demonstrated mixed cell lineage. Immunophenotypically these cases were defined by early B-lymphocyte differentiation (TdT, HLA-DR, and CD19) coexpressed with a myeloid receptor (CD13, CD15, or CD33) on the same leukemic cell. Routine cytochemical evaluation demonstrated punctate positivity of the blasts with naphthol AS-D chloroacetate esterase stain in five of seven cases. Cytogenetic analysis revealed structural abnormalities of chromosome 11 in four of the seven cases. Three of these studies showed a break at 11q23-24, the location of the human proto-oncogene ets-1. Clinically, two of these leukemias represented chronic myelogenous leukemia in blast crisis, and all cases behaved aggressively. The authors' data suggest that mixed lineage leukemias are an identifiable subset of adult acute leukemias and are associated with a poor prognosis.
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PMID:Biphenotypic acute leukemia in adults. 169 92

Silver staining of nucleolar organizer regions (NOR) was applied to air-dried peripheral and bone marrow smears of normal subjects and leukemic patients. Specimens were fixed in buffered acetone formalin. Even in smears kept for 2 years at room temperature, the stainability of Ag-NOR was well preserved. By dipping Giemsa-stained smears in 5% trichloracetic acid and then placing them in methanol for 5 minutes, the stain was leached out. After the dye had been removed, the smears were clearly stained by a Ag-NOR staining technique. The mean number of Ag-NOR per nucleus of mature granulocytes and mononuclear cells in normal peripheral bloods was 0.59 and 1.43 respectively. The mean number of Ag-NOR per nucleus of peripheral and bone marrow leukemic cells from patients with acute leukemia and chronic myelocytic leukemia in blastic crisis was 2.32 and 2.66 respectively. On the other hand, the mean number of Ag-NOR per nucleus of peripheral leukemic cells from patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia was 1.48. These results suggest that acute leukemia cells possess a more active proliferating potential. The Ag-NOR staining technique is very simple and might be useful for investigation of hematologic cells.
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PMID:[Application of nucleolar organizer region staining technique to air-dried blood smears]. 169 69

Background. Although colony-stimulating factors have been shown to accelerate recovery from severe neutropenia after intensive chemotherapy or bone marrow transplantation, their use in acute leukemia has been controversial because in vitro they stimulate leukemic colonies as well as normal granulocyte colonies. Methods. We conducted a prospective, randomized, controlled study to determine the safety and efficacy of recombinant human granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (CSF) after a standard course of intensive therapy in 108 patients with relapsed or refractory acute leukemia (67 with acute myelogenous leukemia, 30 with acute lymphocytic leukemia, 9 in blast crisis from chronic myelogenous leukemia, and 2 with acute leukemia arising from myelodysplastic syndromes). Treatment with granulocyte CSF (200 micrograms per square meter of body-surface area per day in a 30-minute infusion) was begun two days after the end of the chemotherapy and continued until the neutrophil count rose above 1500 per cubic millimeter. Results. Treatment with granulocyte CSF accelerated the recovery of neutrophils significantly (P less than 0.01), shortening it by about a week, but it had no effect on platelet recovery. Although the incidence of febrile episodes was almost the same, documented infections were significantly less frequent in the group treated with granulocyte CSF (P = 0.028). There was no evidence that granulocyte CSF accelerated the regrowth of leukemic cells. Fifty percent of 48 patients in the CSF group who could be evaluated and 36 percent of 50 controls had complete remission. The rate of relapse was almost the same in the two groups. Conclusions. It appears that recombinant human granulocyte CSF is safe in acute leukemia, accelerating neutrophil recovery and thereby reducing the incidence of documented infection without affecting the regrowth of leukemic cells. It should be used with caution, however, pending further confirmation of these early results.
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PMID:Effect of granulocyte colony-stimulating factor after intensive induction therapy in relapsed or refractory acute leukemia. 169 46

We have evaluated 230 patients with myeloproliferative disorders treated in the last 15 years with 32P. None of the patients affected by essential thrombocythaemia developed haematological complications. In the larger group of polycythaemia patients (214 subjects) only 38 patients (17 males and 21 females) developed complications. 60.5% of these subjects had a minor complications: 1.8% showed a thrombocytopenia lower than 100.10e9/lt, 2.3% anaemia with Hb lower than 10 g%, 2.6% leukopenia lower than 40.10e9/lt and 2.3% a pancytopenia. All these complications were transient and eventually treated with limited blood transfusions. We could not identify a correlation between the dose used and the development of such complications. We noted only that the occurrence of anaemia, given a similar dose, was more frequent in females. Only 7% of all patients presented a major complication after 32P administration. In this case too, there was no correlation with the dose administered. Myelofibrosis and chronic myeloid leukaemia resulted to be the more frequent complication (9 out of 15) but we could not clarify if they represented a natural evolution of polycythaemia vera or were due to the treatment with 32P. Acute leukaemia developed only in 5 patients and again we could not recognized a correlation with the dose administered. Moreover, the time from the diagnosis of polycythaemia vera the onset of acute leukaemia ranged widely. 32P has a definite effect on the prevention of thrombotic and haemorrhagic complications in polycythaemia patients since it prolongs their life but it also increases the incidence of acute leukaemia.
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PMID:Haematological complications in polycythaemia vera and thrombocythaemia patients treated with radiophosphorus (32P). 170 18

To evaluate the potential teratogenicity of modern cancer treatment, 43 children born to mothers with hematological malignancies (18 with non-Hodgkin lymphoma, 14 Hodgkin disease, seven acute leukemia, and four with chronic granulocytic leukemia) who received chemotherapy during some portion of their pregnancy, including 19 of these 43 who received chemotherapy during the first trimester, were examined for physical health, growth, and development. Immunological, hematological, and cytogenetic status also were evaluated. The children's ages ranged from 3 to 19 years. The children had a careful history and physical examination to detect any abnormal symptoms or signs and the mother's previous chemotherapy was carefully documented. In all of the children studied, physical, neurological, psychological, hematological, immune function, and cytogenetics were normal. These results suggest that chemotherapy can be administered during pregnancy, even during the first trimester, because it is not hazardous to the fetus; nevertheless, this study is inadequate in size to exclude the possibility of teratogenesis, and more reports are necessary to define the best treatment from cancer during pregnancy.
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PMID:Growth and development of children of mothers treated with chemotherapy during pregnancy: current status of 43 children. 170 27

The Philadelphia chromosome defines chronic myeloid leukemia, and is mostly based on a translocation t(9;22) with a typical BCR-ABL rearrangement which also occurs in so called atypical translocations. The transformation of chronic myeloid leukemia is associated with clonal evolution in 80% of cases. The appearance of an isochromosome 17q unequivocally heralds the onset of a myeloid type of blast crisis. Treatment of Ph-positive CML has still to be considered palliative except for allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. The Philadelphia chromosome is also found in about 20% of patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia and in about 2% of patients with nonlymphoblastic leukemia. It is associated with a poor prognosis. Molecular and cytogenetic findings help differentiating between de novo acute leukemia and blast crisis of chronic myeloid leukemia.
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PMID:[Cytogenetic and clinical features of Philadelphia chromosome positive leukemias]. 170 14

Monoclonal antibody QBEND10 is reactive with the CD34 antigen in aldehyde-fixed, decalcified, paraffin-embedded bone marrow biopsies. In normal bone marrow it stained endothelial cells lining arterioles and capillaries, sinusoidal (littoral) cells and 0.89% of all haemopoietic cells. QBEND10+ mononuclear cells were seen as isolated, randomly distributed mononuclear cells in normal and regenerating bone marrows. Conversely, QBEND10+ cells were increased and present in aggregates of three or more cells in 6/8 cases of acute leukemia; in two cases of CD34-negative leukemia and in two patients after complete remission no aggregates were seen. QBEND10 immunohistochemistry may therefore be useful for diagnosis and follow-up of myeloid leukemias. In addition, increased numbers of CD34+ cells arranged in clusters were seen in 4/9 cases of refractory anemia with excess blasts (RAEB), 1 case of chronic myelomonocytic leukemia, 3/3 cases of RAEB in transformation, and in 3/7 cases of chronic myelogenous leukemia: in all these cases, CD34 staining of the bone biopsy may have prognostic value. QBEND10+ endothelial cells were significantly increased in all the pathological conditions examined (1.43% of all nucleated cells versus 0.80% in normal bone marrow; p = 0.0063), but especially in myeloid leukemias and in two fibrotic syndromes examined.
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PMID:Identification of CD34+ cells in normal and pathological bone marrow biopsies by QBEND10 monoclonal antibody. 172 30

Two cases are described with the rare combination of inv(16)(p13q22), strongly associated with acute myelomonocytic leukemia with eosinophilia, M4Eo, and the Philadelphia translocation, t(9;22)(q34;q11), hallmark of chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) and rarely found, (less than 1%), in acute nonlymphocytic leukemia. The patients were: case 1, a 9-year-old girl presenting with a white blood cell count (WBC) 42 x 10(9)/L with 32% blasts and bone marrow with blasts and eosinophil precursors consistent with M4Eo, and case 2, a 25-year-old man with WBC 34.7 x 10(9)/L with 13% blasts and bone marrow with features of M4Eo and basophilia. Both patients achieved remission but died following bone marrow transplantation in first remission (case 1) or in relapse (case 2). Cytogenetic findings were: case 1, at diagnosis, 46,XX,inv(16)(p13q22)(21)/46,XX,t(9;22) (q34;q11),inv(16)(8)/46,XX(10), and case 2, at diagnosis, 46,XY,t(9;22) (q34;q11),inv(16)(p13q22) (16) and in remission, 46,XY,t(9;22)(q34;q11) (1)/46,XY (24). Investigation of the breakpoint on 22 in case 1 with Southern blotting and the polymerase chain reaction demonstrated the presence of a p190 mRNA and a breakpoint typical of acute leukemia. Thus a diagnosis of M4Eo was supported by clinical and cytogenetic sequelae in each case; the Ph in case 1 was apparently secondary to inv(16), in case 2 the Ph probably preceded inv(16) in the etiology of the leukemia.
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PMID:Inversion of chromosome 16 with the Philadelphia chromosome in acute myelomonocytic leukemia with eosinophilia. Report of two cases. 172 47

The P210bcr/abl protein is produced in cells from patients with Philadelphia chromosome-positive chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML). Retroviral transfer of the gene encoding P210bcr/abl into murine bone marrow induces a granulocytic leukemia that models the chronic phase of human CML. We have transferred the leukemic clone to syngeneic animals, albeit with surprising inefficiency, and have observed CML and clonally related acute leukemias of lymphoid or myeloid phenotype in some transplant recipients. These data show that murine CML can result from retroviral transfer of the bcr/abl gene into pluripotent hematopoietic stem cells, that infected clones repopulate poorly after adoptive transfer, and that these clones can give rise to acute leukemia, reflecting evolution to a phase resembling blast crisis in the human disease.
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PMID:Blast crisis in a murine model of chronic myelogenous leukemia. 176 47


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