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)

Autologous bone marrow reinfusion rapidly repopulates severely damaged bone marrow thus shortening the period of myelosuppression following high-dose chemotherapy programs. This strategy has been successfully employed in several hematologic malignancies such as acute leukemia, Hodgkin's disease, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, and chronic myelogenous leukemia. More recently a number of clinical trials have investigated the role of high-dose chemotherapy with autologous bone marrow transplant in solid tumors. This strategy, when used in patients with advanced refractory metastatic breast cancer, results in a high objective response rate (30-70%) but most of these remissions are of short duration (3-4 months). When using high-dose single agents complete remissions are rare; with combination chemotherapy they are more frequent (20-50%). The utilization of high-dose chemotherapy with autologous marrow transplant as a consolidation after achieving a partial or complete remission with standard chemotherapy has shown more promising results with complete remissions approaching 70% in some series. The impact of any of these strategies on overall survival of patients with metastatic breast cancer remains to be demonstrated. The optimal patient selection criteria and strategies for additional development of this field are discussed.
...
PMID:The role of high-dose chemotherapy with autologous bone marrow transplantation in the treatment of breast cancer. 306 20

Landmark clinical studies of new drugs developed to target specific forms of cancer were reported in 2001. Herceptin, a monoclonal antibody against the Her2/neu receptor tyrosine kinase, prolonged the survival of women with Her-2/neu positive metastatic breast cancer, when combined with chemotherapy. STI-571, a small molecule inhibitor of the Bcr-Abl, c-kit and platelet derived growth factor receptor tyrosine kinases, produced dramatic clinical responses in patients with Bcr-Abl positive chronic myeloid leukemia and c-kit positive gastrointestinal stromal tumors. These examples have galvanized the cancer research community to extend kinase-inhibitor therapy to other cancers.
...
PMID:Rational therapeutic intervention in cancer: kinases as drug targets. 1179 May 64

A kindred with familial leukemia is described in which three members are affected by leukemia in three consecutive generations. One of these members had Philadelphia positive chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) and other two had precursor B acute lymphoblasticleukemia (ALL)--Philadelphia negative. All three of them shared a common haplotype A2, B55, Cw3. In addition, another member sharing same haplotype developed metastatic breast cancer. Phenomenon of anticipation is demonstrated in the affected family members. Possible causes of genetic susceptibility to leukemia especially the association of Cw3 with familial leukemia are discussed.
...
PMID:Association of familial leukemia with HLA Cw3: is it real? 1268 50

Hematological malignancies in Jehovah's Witnesses are often difficult to cure since these patients deny transfusions. By a retrospective analysis, we report the possibility of treating some tumors, mostly hematological, with either autologous or allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT) without blood support. Eight patients were evaluated, including lymphoma (two patients), acute lymphoblastic (one patient) and myeloblastic (one patient) leukemia, chronic lymphocytic leukemia (one patient), refractory anemia with blasts in transformation (one patient), chronic myeloid leukemia (one patient) and metastatic breast cancer (one patient). All patients experienced a severe cytopenia with no major side effects or life-threatening complications. We had four deaths: three from relapse and progression of the disease (at 5, 8 and 15 months after the stem cell infusion), and one from acute intestinal GVHD (at 2 months after the stem cell infusion). Four patients are in complete clinical remission (at 8, 10, 16 and 26 months after the stem cell infusion), and this was related to the disease outcome. We conclude that autologous and allogeneic BMT are feasible without the support of transfusions. We believe that this should be performed as soon as possible in the course of the disease.
...
PMID:Myeloablative therapy and bone marrow transplantation in Jehovah's Witnesses with malignancies: single center experience. 1290 Jul 81

The regulatory agency approvals in the United States and Europe of imatinib mesylate (Gleevec) for patients with bcr/abl-positive chronic myelogenous leukemia, cetuximab (Erbitux) for patients with epidermal growth factor receptor overexpressing metastatic colorectal cancer, the antiangiogenesis agent bevacizumab (Avastin), and the proteasome inhibitor bortezomib (Velcade)--and the considerable public interest in new anticancer drugs that take advantage of specific genetic defects that render the malignant cells more likely to respond to specific treatment--are driving a new era of integrated diagnostics and therapeutics. The recent discovery of a drug response predicting activating mutation in the epidermal growth factor receptor gene for patients with non-small cell lung cancer treated with gefitinib (Iressa) has intensified this interest. In this review, the history of targeted anticancer therapies is highlighted, with focus on the development of molecular diagnostics for hematologic malignancies and the emergence of trastuzumab (Herceptin), an antibody-based targeted therapy for HER-2/neu overexpressing metastatic breast cancer: The potential of pharmacogenomic strategies and the use of high-density genomic microarrays to classify and select therapy for cancer are briefly considered. This review also considers the widely held view that, in the next 5 to 10 years, the clinical application of molecular diagnostics will further revolutionize the drug discovery and development process; customize the selection, dosing, route of administration of existing and new therapeutic agents; and truly personalize medical care for cancer patients.
...
PMID:Targeted therapies for cancer 2004. 1548 59

Recently, clinical studies of new drugs development to target specific forms of cancer were reported. Herceptin, a monoclonal antibody against the Her2/neu receptor tyrosine kinase, prolonged the survival of women with Her2/neu positive metastatic breast cancer. STI571, a small molecule inhibitor of the BCR/ABL, c-Kit and platelet derived growth factor receptor tyrosine kinase, produced pronounced clinical responses in patients with BCR/ABL positive chronic myeloid leukemia and c-Kit positive gastrointestial stromal tumors. In order to consider the use of the inhibitor of tyrosine kinases activity as anticancer drug, their mechanisms of the oncogenic activation and their impact on tumor transformation should be studied. The treatment with tyrosine kinase inhibitors such as STI571 or herceptin was a spectacular clinical success which stimulated research on the structure and function of both kinases and their inhibitors.
...
PMID:[Tyrosine kinases. New target of anticancer therapy]. 1638 Nov 69

Targeted therapies by means of compounds that inhibit a specific target molecule represent a new perspective in the treatment of cancer. In contrast to conventional chemotherapy which acts on all dividing cells generating toxic effects and damage of normal tissues, targeted drugs allow to hit, in a more specific manner, subpopulations of cells directly involved in tumor progression. Molecules controlling cell proliferation and death, such as Tyrosine Kinase Receptors (RTKs) for growth factors, are among the best targets for this type of therapeutic approach. Two classes of compounds targeting RTKs are currently used in clinical practice: monoclonal antibodies and tyrosine kinase inhibitors. The era of targeted therapy began with the approval of Trastuzumab, a monoclonal antibody against HER2, for treatment of metastatic breast cancer, and Imatinib, a small tyrosine kinase inhibitor targeting BCR-Abl, in Chronic Myeloid Leukemia. Despite the initial enthusiasm for the efficacy of these treatments, clinicians had to face soon the problem of relapse, as almost invariably cancer patients developed drug resistance, often due to the activation of alternative RTKs pathways. In this view, the rationale at the basis of targeting drugs is radically shifting. In the past, the main effort was aimed at developing highly specific inhibitors acting on single RTKs. Now, there is a general agreement that molecules interfering simultaneously with multiple RTKs might be more effective than single target agents. With the recent approval by FDA of Sorafenib and Sunitinib--targeting VEGFR, PDGFR, FLT-3 and c-Kit--a different scenario has been emerging, where a new generation of anti-cancer drugs, able to inhibit more than one pathway, would probably play a major role.
...
PMID:From single- to multi-target drugs in cancer therapy: when aspecificity becomes an advantage. 1828 97