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Query: UMLS:C0023473 (
chronic myeloid leukemia
)
18,916
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Twenty-one patients (median age = 34, range = 10-49; F:M = 7:14) received a preparative regimen consisting of busulfan 4 mg/kg/day x 4, cytosine arabinoside 2 g/m2/12 h x 4 and cyclophosphamide 60 mg/kg/day x 2 ('BAC' regimen) for allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. Out of 12 patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML), two were in first remission, six were in second remission and four had resistant, relapsed disease or prolonged marrow aplasia after induction chemotherapy. Five of the 12 patients with AML had
secondary AML
. Four patients had transfusion-dependent myelodysplastic syndrome. Three patients with
chronic myeloid leukemia
were in the accelerated phase and two were in the blastic phase. Organ toxicities related to the preparative regimen were graded. Liver toxicity occurred in 11 patients, two of these were fatal veno-occlusive disease (VOD) (10%). Nineteen of the 21 patients had grade 2 or less diarrhea, and 13 also had mucositis. One patient developed grade 3 cardiac toxicity, and one other patient had grade 1 skin toxicity. Four patients had gross hematuria related to treatment (19%). No renal, pulmonary or CNS toxicities were encountered. Ten patients have died, two from regimen-related hepatic VOD. Of the remaining eight deaths, four were from respiratory failure in four patients (one case each of Pneumocystis pneumonia, CMV pneumonia, bronchiolitis obliterans associated with chronic graft-versus-host disease, and interstitial pneumonitis complicated pulmonary emboli), and one patient each from GI bleeding, cardiac arrhythmia, sepsis and CNS bleeding. Thus far, only one patient transplanted for
secondary AML
in second remission relapsed at day 230.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Allogeneic bone marrow transplantation in high-risk myeloid disorders using busulfan, cytosine arabinoside and cyclophosphamide (BAC). 154 49
The authors report two cases of secondary myelodysplasia and acute myeloid leukemia with t(3;21)(q26.3;q22) as the only cytogenetic abnormality in neoplastic bone marrow. This translocation was identified as a rare, recurring, non-random aberration in
chronic myeloid leukemia
less than five years ago and in
secondary acute myeloid leukemia
and myelodysplasia in 1990. The known and suspected cases in the literature are reviewed.
...
PMID:Translocation (3;21)(q26;q22) in secondary leukemia. Report of two cases and literature review. 180 36
Carboplatin (CBDCA) is a second-generation platinum drug that has been shown to be useful when used as a continuous infusion in treatment of refractory adult leukemia. We report on the effectiveness of continuous infusion CBDCA, 300 mg/m2/d x 5 days, as evaluated in nine patients with
secondary acute nonlymphocytic leukemia
(ANLL) (seven previous myelodysplastic syndrome and two treatment-associated ANLL), three ANLL patients in first relapse, six refractory ANLL, and nine patients with blastic phase of
chronic myelogenous leukemia
(BP-CML). All patients were considered assessable. The response rate was 44% (eight complete remissions [CRs], four partial remissions [PRs]). Median duration of postchemotherapy neutropenia was 36 days (range, 18 to 45). Therapy was well tolerated, and toxicity was mainly hematologic and nondose-limiting. Despite prolonged neutropenia, severe infections were rarely seen, and most patients were managed as outpatients. Twelve patients had nausea and vomiting, two had symptomatic hypomagnesemia, and one patient showed reversible ototoxicity. Because of substantial antileukemic activity and unusual extrahematologic toxicity, CBDCA appears to be an effective second-line agent in the treatment of ANLL and should be considered for upgrading to first-line treatment regimens.
...
PMID:A phase II clinical trial of carboplatin infusion in high-risk acute nonlymphoblastic leukemia. 198 71
We previously administered ara-C at a dose rate of 250 mg/m2/hr for 36-72 hr to patients with leukemia. Gastrointestinal toxicity was dose-limiting. This regimen was modified to an every other day schedule, administering 24-hr periods of high dose continuous infusion ara-C, each followed by a 24-hr rest period. Sixteen patients with relapsed/refractory acute myeloid leukemia (AML) (N = 4),
secondary AML
(N = 2), relapsed/refractory acute lymphoblastic leukemia (N = 7), or
CML
in blast crisis (N = 3) received this regimen of three 24-hr infusions with two intercurrent 24-hr rest periods. Grade 3 gastrointestinal toxicity was encountered in 57% of the courses, and hypoplasia was achieved in all patients. Three of the patients died while hypoplastic, two with septicemia and another with intracranial hemorrhage. There were five responding patients (2 CRs, 3 PRs). Median steady-state plasma ara-C levels were 24 microM, 22 microM, and 20 microM during the first, second, and third 24-hr infusions, respectively. Ara-C levels ranged from 4-118 microM during the infusions and were always below 4.5 microM during the rest periods. A significant level of ara-C incorporation into DNA was detected in each of the five patients studied, thus demonstrating that (ara-C)DNA formation is detectable in blasts from patients receiving high dose continuous infusion ara-C therapy. These findings suggest that alternate day continuous infusion ara-C may be useful in the treatment of acute leukemia and
CML
in blast crisis.
...
PMID:A phase I study of intermittent continuous infusion high dose cytosine arabinoside for acute leukemia. 224 7
Blast cells from five cases of secondary unclassifiable leukemia following therapy for Hodgkin's disease were studied by cytochemical, immunological and cytogenetic analyses. Cytochemical and immunological reactivity were in accordance with poorly differentiated, myeloid blasts. The four cases in which karyotype analysis was performed showed specific chromosomal abnormalities. No evidence of multiple lineage involvement was found. Problems in classifying these cases of
secondary ANLL
were due to the high grade of undifferentiation of the blast cells. Their low cytochemical reactivity with markers of myeloid differentiation was similar to what may be observed in patients with acute undifferentiated leukemia or with
chronic myeloid leukemia
in blast crisis.
...
PMID:Morphologic, immunologic, and cytogenetic characteristics of secondary acute unclassifiable leukemia in Hodgkin's disease. 318 41
Diaziquone given as a bolus has not been effective in patients with relapsed or refractory leukemia. Because of in vitro data suggesting enhancement of diaziquone-induced cytotoxicity for human and murine leukemia cells with increased duration of drug exposure and the relatively short terminal plasma half-life of diaziquone, 49 patients (34 acute nonlymphocytic leukemia [ANLL], six
chronic myelogenous leukemia
in blast crisis [
CML
-B], five acute lymphocytic leukemia [ALL], four 2 degrees ANLL) with leukemia were given diaziquone as a continuous infusion for seven days. The maximum tolerated dose was 28 mg/m2/d for seven days. The dose-limiting toxicity was the duration of bone marrow aplasia (median, 49 days to greater than 500 PMNs in responders; range, 28 to 101 days). Nonhematologic toxicity was minimal. Responses occurred only in patients with relapsed ANLL, of whom 26 were treated at effective doses. There were six complete responses (CR) (23%) and two partial responses (PR) (8%), although five of eight responders never achieved platelet counts greater than 100,000/microL. Thrombocytopenia in these patients was felt to be a manifestation of diaziquone effect, not persistence of leukemia. The median duration of CR was 195 days (range, 88 to 860+). One patient had active CNS leukemia at the start of treatment and has had a durable (28+ month) CR in both sites of disease. Diaziquone produced prolonged aplasia in patients with
secondary ANLL
and
CML
-B (five of ten patients died aplastic), whereas patients with ALL all had regrowth of leukemia and two failed to become aplastic. The lack of significant nonhematologic toxicity and the activity in patients with relapsed ANLL render diaziquone of interest as second-line therapy or consolidation therapy in first remission for patients with ANLL.
...
PMID:Diaziquone given as a continuous infusion is an active agent for relapsed adult acute nonlymphocytic leukemia. 394 May 46
A case is reported of an 11-year-old girl with Ph1-positive
chronic granulocytic leukemia
. Very early in her illness the original 46,XX,t(9:22) cell population in the marrow became replaced by a second abnormal cell line, 45,XX,-7. This hypodiploid clone then remained dominant in the marrow until her death from myeloid blast crisis over 3 years later. It is suggested that the 45,XX,-7 cell line may have been induced by chemotherapy, and this possibility is discussed with particular reference to similar changes seen in
secondary ANLL
following treatment for lymphomas and other hematological malignancies.
...
PMID:Monosomy 7 in a girl with Ph1 positive chronic granulocytic leukemia. 657 11
Immunocytochemistry was used to assess bcl-2 expression in blasts obtained from the bone marrow of 28 patients with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) (16 children and six adults at presentation and three children and three adults on relapse) and 20 with acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) (19 adults and one child, 13 with de novo AML, 11 at presentation and two on relapse, and seven secondary to myelodysplasia or
chronic myeloid leukaemia
). Slides were examined both for the percentage of positive cells and for the intensity of staining using a five-point scale. There was a statistically significant increase in both the percentage of positive cells seen (P < 0.002) and the intensity of staining (P < 0.01) between samples obtained at relapse and those at presentation in ALL. There was a significantly greater intensity of staining in cells from patients with ALL (P < 0.05) and AML (P < 0.05) who failed to achieve remission after chemotherapy than in those who responded. The intensity of staining in cases of
secondary AML
was lower than that in de novo disease (P < 0.01). These results suggest that expression of bcl-2 may be an important prognostic feature in both de novo AML and in ALL, but not in
secondary AML
.
...
PMID:The relationship between bcl-2 expression and response to chemotherapy in acute leukaemia. 780 31
Forty-seven patients with poor-prognosis myeloid leukemias received induction therapy with high-dose cytosine arabinoside (HDara-C), 1.5-3.0g/m2 for 8-10 doses, and mitoxantrone (DHAD), 12-15 mg/m2 for 3 doses. Complete remissions were achieved in 21 [45%, 95% confidence interval (CI) 30.2-59.9%] of the patients, including 11 of 14 with acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) in first relapse (79%, 95% CI 49.2-95.3%), 4 of 8 with refractory anemia with excess blasts in transformation (RAEBiT) (50%, 95% CI 15.4-84.6%), and 4 of 6 (67%, 95% CI 22.3-95.7%) previously untreated elderly AML patients. Patients with
secondary AML
and advanced
chronic myelogenous leukemia
had a very low response rate. The incidence of reversible toxicity was low and only 3 treatment-related deaths occurred. After reinduction, 8 of 9 AML patients < or = 60 years of age were ultimately able to undergo intensive therapy and either autologous 4-hydroperoxycyclophosphamide-purged bone marrow (7 patients) or peripheral blood stem cell (1 patient) transplantation with satisfactory hematological recovery. We conclude that HDara-C and DHAD is an effective antileukemic regimen in selected AML and RAEBiT patients, and that its use may allow subsequent successful autologous BMT in appropriate patients.
...
PMID:Chemotherapy with high-dose cytosine arabinoside and mitoxantrone for poor-prognosis myeloid leukemias. 840 19
The monoclonal antibody LRP56 recognizes a 110-kD major vault protein (lung-resistance protein [LRP]) overexpressed in several P-glycoprotein-negative (Pgp-), multidrug resistant tumor cell lines. To determine the frequency of LRP overexpression, its prognostic significance, and its relation to Pgp, we analyzed bone marrow specimens from 87 consecutive patients with acute leukemia. Diagnoses included de novo acute myeloid leukemia (AML; 21 patients), leukemia arising from an antecedent hematologic disorder or prior cytotoxic therapy (
secondary AML
; 27 patients), AML in relapse (29 patients), and blast phase of
chronic myeloid leukemia
(
CML
-BP; 10 patients). A granular cytoplasmic staining pattern was detected by immunocytochemistry in 32 (37%) cases, including 7 (33%) de novo AML, 13 (48%)
secondary AML
, 11 (38%) relapsed AML, and 1 of 10
CML
-BP. Among 66 evaluable patients with AML, LRP overexpression was associated with an inferior response to induction chemotherapy (P = .0017). Remissions were achieved in 35% of LRP+ patients as compared with 68% of LRP- patients. Although Pgp adversely affected response in univariate analysis (P = .0414), only LRP had independent prognostic significance when compared in a logistic regression model (P = .0046). Differences in remission duration (P = .075) and overall survival (P = .058) approached significance only for LRP. Sequential specimens from remitting patients receiving treatment with the Pgp modulator cyclosporin-A showed emergence of the LRP phenotype despite a decrease or loss of Pgp at the time of treatment failure (P =.0304). Significant associations were observed between LRP and age greater than 55 years (P = .017), Pgp (P = .040), and prior treatment with mitoxantrone (P = .020) but not with CD34. These findings indicate that overexpression of the novel transporter protein LRP is an important predictor of treatment outcome in AML.
...
PMID:Overexpression of the major vault transporter protein lung-resistance protein predicts treatment outcome in acute myeloid leukemia. 863 Apr 12
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