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)

Of particular interest in the study of cell membrane markers of leukemic cells were cytotoxic and immunofluorescent results obtained in comparing Ia alloantigen and complement receptor (CR) expression on normal leukocytic and leukemic cell types. Using discontinuous Ficoll gradients, Ia alloantigens were found on varying numbers of leukemic myelo- and lymphoblasts, and on the early stages of normal melocytes. Ia alloantigens, however, were not detectable on mature polymorphonuclear cells. This establishes human Ia alloantigens as cell surface differentiation markers. The appearance of complement receptors was observed later than that of Ia alloantigens. CR1 (EAC1-4b) showed up later in the differentiation than CR2 (EAC1-3d). Thus, an immunological discrimination between AML blasts and CML blast crisis blasts appears to be possible: AML blasts are mostly Ia-positive but CR-negative, whilst CML blast crisis cells are only 20-30% Ia-positive and carry complement receptors in at least equal amounts. The AML blast cell would appear as the less-differentiated cell type when compared to the CML blast crisis cells. The picture, however, remains complex since in CML blast crisis at least three different types of blast cells can be identified: an Ia-positive and an Ia-negative myeloid blast as well as an Ia-positive lymphoid blast. The quantitative composition of these three elements within the myeloid differentiation profile can vary somewhat from patient to patient. Furthermore, these studies revealed a disturbed differentiation of leukemic cell types.
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PMID:Classification of leukemic cells by Ia alloantigens and complement receptors. Surface probes for cell differentiation. 37 3

Bone marrow transplantation from an HLA-identical sibling is increasingly used as a curative therapy for patients with hemopoietic stem cell disorders including acute leukemia, chronic myelogenous leukemia and severe aplastic anemia. Between March 1983 and March 1991, we performed 86 cases of allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT) for the patients with hemopoietic stem cell disorders: 25 acute myelogenous leukemia (AML); 15 acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL); 20 chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML); and 26 severe aplastic anemia (SAA). Ten out of 25 AML are in disease free survival (DFS). The causes of death were recurrence of leukemia (12), acute GVHD (3), sepsis (1) and veno-occlusive disease (1). Nine of 15 ALL are in unmaintained remission. Thirteen out of 20 CML are in DFS. Among 26 SAA, 21 are enjoying DFS, but 1 died of engraftment failure, 3 of graft rejection followed by cytomegalovirus (1) and aspergillus pneumonia (1). Comparing the survival between standard [less than or equal to CR1: 9/14 (64%)] and high risk [greater than or equal to CR1: 1/11 (9%)] AML, our data suggest that preparative regimen for high risk AML was not potent enough to eradicate the minimal residual disease in advanced AML. Although our cases are limited and the follow-up period is short, our result of ALL [overall: CCR (60%), standard risk (adult less than or equal to CR1, children less than or equal to CR2; 8/11 (73%) and high risk; 1/4 (25%)] and CML [overall: 65%, CP; 9/10 (90%), AP; 4/6 (67%), BP; 0/4 (0%)] are optimistic. It is of our interest that the incidence of death related with IP (1/33: 3%) and with AGVHD 94/33: 12%) were much less than that of other's observation but the explanation for this still remains to be clear.
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PMID:Allogeneic bone marrow transplantation for the patients with hemopoietic stem cell disorders: CUMC experience. 151 32

Autologous bone marrow transplantation (ABMT) has developed considerably in the past 15 years and is now a routine procedure for the consolidation of acute leukemias, non-Hodgkin's lymphomas and Hodgkin's disease. In addition, ABMT has been tested in multiple myeloma (MM) and even considered in highly selected cases of chronic myelocytic leukemia (CML). Interest has resulted from the discovery of new purging procedures such as long-term cultures with or without serum-free media containing various lymphokines, the evaluation of cryoinjury on malignant cells, the increased detection of minimal residual disease using PCR, and the acceleration of hemopoietic recovery post-ABMT through the use of peripheral blood stem cells and/or lymphokines. Results presented include data from the international (ABMTR) and European (EBMT) registries, and our own unit in Paris. With respect to acute leukemias, (a) the EBMT listed 1,688 patients. The overall results were as follows: for patients autografted in complete remission (CR) 1, the leukemia-free survival and relapse rate at 7 years were 48 +/- 2% and 41 +/- 3% for AML and 44 +/- 5% and 45 +/- 5% in acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), respectively. In CR2, the figures were 34 +/- 4% and 54 +/- 5% for AML and 32 +/- 3% and 62 +/- 4% for ALL, respectively. Patients not relapsing at 1 year post-ABMT had a probability of being cured at 7 years of 86 and 71% if autografted in CR1 and CR2 for AML and 81 and 59% for ALL, respectively. Multivariate analysis of relapse rates in several subpopulations confirmed the efficacy of marrow purging in AML CR1: in patients transplanted prior to January 1988 (minimum follow-up of 2 years), the relapse rate with purged marrow was 35 +/- 5% vs. 47 +/- 3% (p less than 0.005). (b) In Paris, St-Antoine, using TBI and marrow purged with mafosfamide at levels individually adjusted (Blood 1986;67:1367), the probability of remission and DFS were 84 and 62% in AML CR1 63 and 59% in ALL CR1, respectively. There was a statistically significant relationship between the relapse rate and the residual amount of CFUGM progenitors in the marrow after purging. The cutoff point was 0.3%, with a relapse rate of 54% in those receiving marrow containing the higher residual CFUGM fractions and only 29% in those receiving less. With respect to non-Hodgkin's lymphomas, the EBMT listed 698 patients. In intermediate or high grade lymphomas, the DFS at 6 years was 30% and 18% in sensitive and resistant relapses, respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Autologous bone marrow transplantation in hematological malignancies. 204 65

Certain marrow transplant protocols can now result in a 50-70% long disease-free survival and low relapse rates in acute leukemia (AL) in CR1, CR2, or CML following cytoreduction and HLA-identical marrow infusion. Two-thirds of deaths are due to acute and chronic graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) or viral infection. The other deaths are due to toxicities of the cytoreductive treatment. Prevention of GVHD has been tried by treatment after the transplant or treating the marrow (lymphocyte depletion). Cyclosporine (CsA) or CsA plus methotrexate has reduced acute GVHD but not chronic GVHD. Marrow has been treated with monoclonal antibodies and lectins or elutriated to decrease numbers of T lymphocytes. Some studies have been effective, but the majority have shown an increased number of rejections or leukemic relapses. Apart from teratogenic effects, thalidomide has minimal toxicity. It effectively prevents and treats acute and chronic GVHD in rodent models. Clinical trials will soon begin. Mismatched related or matched unrelated donors have been employed in the clinic with limited success. Alternatively, autologous transplantation in acute leukemia has shown promising results. Possible solutions to remaining problems and strategies will be discussed.
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PMID:Problems and strategies for bone marrow transplantation in acute leukemia and chronic myelogenous leukemia. 305 40

Acute myelogenous leukaemia cells (AML) and cells of chronic myelogenous leukaemia blast crisis (CGL-CB) were examined for the presence of receptors for Fc IgG fragment (FcR), receptors for the complement components (CR1 and CR2), and the surface immunoglobulins including the light kappa and lambda type chains. The leukaemia blasts were found to be the cells poor in receptors and poorly differentiated. As a rule, they contained very small amount of detectable FcR, CR2, and CR1. Analysis of AML cell populations separated on the discontinuous density gradient revealed that the appearance of FcR was followed by CR2 and CR1. The CGL-CB cells were more differentiated immunologically since, in comparison with the AML cells, in greater percentage they expressed the FcR, and the receptors for complement. Assays for surface immunoglobulins indicated that they were not an active product of the leukaemic blasts, but rather exogenous in origin.
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PMID:Fc and C3 receptors as membrane differentiation markers of acute myelogenous leukaemia cells. 678 Oct 63

A retrospective cytogenetic study was performed to determine whether non-random chromosome aberrations were related to the outcome of marrow transplantation for advanced stage acute leukemia (AL) and chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML). The patients were registered on SWOG-8612, a randomized comparison of busulphan and cyclophosphamide (BU/CY) to fractionated total body irradiation and etoposide (FTBI/VP16) as preparatory regimens for allogeneic bone marrow transplant (BMT). Blume K. G., Kopecky K. J., Henslee-Downey J. P., Forman S. J., Stiff P. J., Le Maistre C. F. & Appelbaum F. R. (1987) Blood 81, 2187. Pretreatment cytogenetic studies were available for 90 (78%) of the 115 patients who proceeded to BMT. Patients were categorized by diagnosis (ALL/AML/CML), disease status ['good' risk = second complete remission (CR2) or CML-accelerated phase (AP); 'poor' risk = third complete remission (CR3), induction failure, florid relapse or CML-blast phase (BP)] and cytogenetic status (favorable = normal cytogenetics in AL or Philadelphia chromosome positive (Ph+) standard or variant translocation as the sole findings in CML; unfavorable = all other cytogenetic aberrations). Chromosomal aberrations observed in the unfavorable category included -7, t(9;22) in AL, t(8;21) in association with complex karyotypes, t(6;9), del(9q), t/del(11q), t(1;19), hypotetraploidy, and complex karyotypes (> 3 cytogenetic anomalies). Unfavorable cytogenetic status was significantly more frequent among patients with 'poor' risk clinical disease status (P < 0.0001). In multivariate analysis, disease-free survival (DFS) was significantly poorer for patients with unfavorable cytogenetic status (P = 0.002) but not significantly related to disease status (P = 0.43). These data indicate that certain secondary chromosome aberrations [+8,i(17q), duplication of Ph] should be reclassified as relatively favorable predictors of successful BMT in CML and, therefore, be separated from the unfavorable cytogenetic aberrations characteristic of drug resistant disease [-7, inv(3), complex karyotypes]. The limited number of patients precluded definitive assessment of the prognostic significance of specific cytogenetic aberrations for any single diagnosis. Nevertheless, these findings suggest that cytogenetic status may be an important and independent factor in predicting outcome following allogeneic bone marrow transplantation.
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PMID:Cytogenetic correlation with disease status and treatment outcome in advanced stage leukemia post bone marrow transplantation: a Southwest Oncology Group study (SWOG-8612). 759 50

Between March 1983 and December 1992, we performed 178 allogeneic BMTs for patients with hematopoietic stem cell disorders: 48 acute myelogenous leukemia (AML), 27 acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), 40 chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML), 55 severe aplastic anemia (SAA), 6 myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS), 1 non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and 1 hybrid leukemia. Twenty-five of 48 AML are in disease-free survival (DFS). Fifteen of 27 ALL are in unmaintained remission. Twenty-four of 40 CML are in DFS. Forty-four out of 55 SAA patients are alive and well. Comparing the survival between standard (< or = CR1: 21 of 31 (68%)) and high risk (> or = CR2: 4 of 17 (24%)) AML, our data suggest that the preparative regimen for high risk AML was not potent enough to eradicate the residual disease in advanced AML. Although our cases are limited and the follow-up period is short, the result of ALL (overall: 56%, standard risk (adult < or = CR1, children < or = CR2: 10 of 14 (71%) and high risk (adult > or = CR2, children > CR2): 5 of 13 (38%)) and CML (overall: 60%; CP: 19 of 27 (70%), AP or BC: 5 of 13 (38%)) are promising. The probability of 5 year survival of SAA was 80 +/- 4 years.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Allogeneic bone marrow transplantation in Korea: 1983-92. 792 Mar 1

Myeloablation and immunosuppression were considered to be the two major roles of the conditioning regimens for allogeneic stem cell transplantation to facilitate engraftment. It has turned out, however, that immunosuppression is more important and myeloablation is not necessary for engraftment. At the same time, it is considered that the major anti-tumor effect of allogeneic stem cell transplantation depends on the graft-versus-leukemia effect, not on the conditioning regimen itself. In patients with CML who relapsed after allogeneic transplantation, for example, infusion of donor lymphocytes can induce a second complete remission. Non-myeloablative stem cell transplantation (NST) was developed in the late 90s based on these theories. Low-dose, less toxic, so-called "non-myeloablative" preparative regimens have been designed not to eradicate the malignancies, but to provide sufficient immunosuppression to allow donor cells to engraft, while the graft-versus-malignancy effects eradicate the tumor. This strategy permits allogeneic transplantation to be used in patients who are not eligible for conventional, often myeloablative, transplantation because of advanced age or organ dysfunction. Non-myeloablative preparative regimens contain purine analogs, such as fludarabine or cladribine. The NST regimen being used at the National Cancer Center Hospital, Tokyo, Japan, consists of cladribine (0.11 mg/kg x 6 days), busulfan (4 mg/kg x 2 days) and rabbit anti-thymocyte globulin (2.5 mg/kg x 4 days). We enrolled 6 patients in this NST protocol so far: 1 with severe aplastic anemia (sibling-PBSCT), 2 with MDS-RA (1 for sibling-PBSCT and 1 for matched uBMT), 1 with AML-CR2 (matched uBMT), 1 with AML-CR3 (sibling-PBSCT), and 1 with relapsed AML (mismatched related PBSCT). All patients achieved engraftment within 14 days with complete donor chimerism. In addition to leukemias, a graft-versus-malignancy effect was also reported in allogeneic NST of solid tumors, such as renal cell carcinoma and malignant melanoma. The long-term efficacy of NST remains to be determined, and further clinical trials are warranted.
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PMID:[Non-myeloablative stem cell transplant]. 1089 4

Despite improvements in HLA typing, graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) continues to impair the results after volunteer unrelated donor bone marrow transplantation (VUD-BMT) in adult patients compared with matched sibling BMT. Here, the outcome after VUD-BMT using a specific regimen with high-dose anti-T-lymphocyte globulin (ATG) was analysed. Fifty-five adult patients, median age 34 years (range 17-55 years), with acute or chronic leukaemia or myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) were transplanted in first complete remission (CR1)/first chronic phase (CP1) (early disease) (n = 21) or in advanced (CR2/CP2, no remission) disease (n = 34) from an unrelated marrow donor. GVHD prophylaxis consisted of ATG-S (Fresenius) 60-90 mg/kg b.w. prior to transplantation, in addition to cyclosporin A and short-course methotrexate. Graft failure did not occur and white blood cell count (WBC) > 1.0 x 10(9)/l was reached at median day +16. The cumulative incidence of acute (a)GVHD grade II-IV was 15% [95% CI (8%, 28%)] and of chronic GVHD was 51% [95% CI (38%, 68%)]. The cumulative incidence of relapse within 1 year was 0% [95% CI (0%, 19%)] and 21% [95% CI (11%, 40%)] for patients with early and advanced disease respectively. With a median follow-up of 28 months (range 16-45 months), 2-year disease-free and overall survival for patients transplanted in CR1/CP1 was 81% and 81% [95% CI (64%, 98%)], respectively, and for patients with advanced disease was 33% [95% CI (17%, 50%)] and 40% [95% CI (23%, 57%)] respectively. Complete and persistent donor chimaerism was seen in 77.5% of 40 patients evaluated. All 14 chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML)-CP1 patients became bcr-abl negative within 250 d. High-dose ATG pretransplant results in a low incidence of severe aGVHD without compromising donor chimaerism or elimination of minimal residual disease. Our results are similar to data obtained after matched sibling donor transplantation.
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PMID:Allogeneic bone marrow transplantation from unrelated donors using in vivo anti-T-cell globulin. 1109 Dec 17

Leukaemic patients with advanced disease and severe fungal infections as well as older patients with substantial co-morbidity are usually excluded from conventional allotransplantation because of increased morbidity and mortality. We approached allogeneic transplantation in four patients with a median age of 62 years (one chronic myeloid leukaemia in blast crisis, one high-risk acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) in first complete remission (CR1), one AML in 2nd relapse, one AML in CR2 with pre-existing fungal lung infections (two aspergillus, two mucor) and additional co-morbidity (diabetes n = 2, aortic aneurysm n = 1, arterial sclerosis n = 2) by combining non-myeloablative conditioning with an intensified supportive care regimen, including amphotericin B and 4-12 (median 9) prophylactic granulocyte transfusions from granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF)-stimulated volunteer donors. G-CSF was also given to patients until neutrophil recovery. All four patients recovered to a neutrophil count of 0.5 x 109/l after a median of 11.5 d (range 11-13 d). Prophylactic granulocyte transfusions also reduced the need for platelet transfusions and minimized mucositis. All patients were discharged at a median of 25 d (range 18-59 d) and are alive and well after a median follow-up of > 390 d (range 336-417 d) without evidence of leukaemia. Regression of the fungal lesions was documented in three patients, with a slight progression detected by computerized tomography scan of the chest in one patient. We conclude that pulmonary fungal infections are not a contraindication for allogeneic stem cell transplantation, if non-myeloablative conditioning regimens are used in combination with granulocyte transfusions, intravenous amphotericin B and G-CSF.
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PMID:Older patients with high-risk fungal infections can be successfully allografted using non-myeloablative conditioning in combination with intensified supportive care regimens. 1138 Apr 15


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