Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0024530 (malaria)
44,886 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The hypothesis that the true incidence of c-ALL is relatively uniform throughout the world is not supported by experience in tropical Africa, where ALL is uncommon under five years of age. A high rate of spontaneous somatic mutation in pre-B cells may initiate the development of c-ALL, but its progress could be determined by (i) a leukaemogenic agent causing a second genetic event, (ii) the effects of intense antigenic barrage, either stimulating or suppressing pre-B-cell mitosis, or (iii) genetic determinants. Epidemiological patterns in populations of low, intermediate and high socio-economic status may be classified I-III with increasing incidence of diagnosed T-ALL in children over five years and c-ALL in younger children, and subclassified A and B with decreasing incidence of BL. There may be two forms of AML, one similar to that seen in industrialized countries, the other occurring at high prevalence in African children of low socio-economic status, often presenting with chloroma, and perhaps associated with immune suppression secondary to malnutrition, malaria and other intercurrent infections. Uncontrolled exposure to petroleum and other chemicals, and the use of alkylating agents in treatment of neoplasms in young patients could emerge as important causes of ANLL in Africa. There are two varieties of CLL also, one similar to that seen in the western world, the other prevalent in adults below 45 years of age, especially women: transmission of a leukaemogenic agent is postulated, to which women are more susceptible due to immunosuppression during normal pregnancy. The human population and some subhuman primates of subSaharan Africa are the largest reservoir of HTLV-1, which shows association with B-CLL over 50 years of age and ATL.
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PMID:Possible aetiological factors in leukaemias in Africa. 289 24

From the survey that first identified cancer effects of foetal irradiation and related sources has come support for the following hypotheses: (1) competing causes of death for childhood cancers include abortions (solid tumours) and infections (RES neoplasms); (2) the forms taken by RES neoplasms vary with the nature and intensity of indigenous infections; (3) ideal conditions for developing diffuse RES neoplasms (leukaemia) include the gross immunological incompetence caused by trisomy 21; (4) the unusually localised RES neoplasms found in children who have survived repeated attacks of malaria (Burkitt lymphoma and chloroma) are probably the result of these children having exceptionally high levels of passive as well as active immunity; and (5) when teratogenic effects of in utero mutations include faulty erythropoiesis as well as faulty leucopoiesis, infections are not the only rival causes of death.
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PMID:Childhood cancers and competing causes of death. 786 38

Until recently, cALL has been uncommon in sub-Saharan Africa, but there is now emerging a peak of incidence at the age 3 to 5 years in west and southern Africa. Prognosis for African patients with cALL is poor because of a multitude of clinical, biological and social factors. AML is seen at high frequency (probably indicating truly high incidence) in male children 5-14 years, of whom up to a quarter present with chloroma. It is predicted that the incidence of AML in adults may rise in the near future, related to cigarette smoking, occupational and environmental exposures to benzene and other pollutants, and the prescription of alkylating agents to young people with malignant disease. CML shows no particular epidemiological features, except for a high frequency in young adults and children, reflecting the age structure of the whole population. There are two forms of B-CLL: one is seen most commonly in women of low socioeconomic status towards the end of the their reproductive life, and is probably related to an initially polyclonal expansion of B-cells in response of recurrent malaria and other infections; the other is seen over the age of 45 years, with men being affected twice as commonly as women, as in the western world.
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PMID:Leukaemias in Africa. 836 Dec 19