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Query: UMLS:C0026764 (
multiple myeloma
)
36,148
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Over a follow-up period of ten years, nine of our 100 patients with
multiple myeloma
(MM), developed myelodysplastic syndrome (
MDS
, preleukaemia).
MDS
occurred 19-156 (median 35) months from the diagnosis of MM. Six patients presented with pancytopenia and no patients had active MM at the time of
MDS
diagnosis. Three patients were defined as having refractory anaemia (RA) and six as refractory anaemia with excess blasts (RAEB) or RAEB in transformation (RAEBT), according to the FAB classification. The clinical course is characterized by increasing red blood cell and platelet transfusion requirements, recurrent infections and bleeding episodes. All patients, except for one, died within 3 to 8 (median 5) months from
MDS
diagnosis. The causes of death were sepsis or bleeding; three patients underwent leukaemic transformation. Thus, the clinical course of this small group of
myeloma
patients who developed secondary
MDS
(sMDS), was similar to other series of patients with sMDS. Serial bone marrow examinations suggest an initial hypercellular phase, followed by a rapidly evolving preterminal hypocellular marrow. In an attempt to detect MM patients at risk of developing sMDS, the epidemiological (including ethnic), clinical and laboratory data of the 9
MDS
patients at the time of the MM presentation were reviewed and compared to the other MM patients. No significant differences were observed between the two groups in most parameters, except for two. All
MDS
patients were Ashkenazi Jews and no patients of Sepharadic origin developed
MDS
. Also, no IgA-
myeloma
patient developed
MDS
. If these findings are confirmed in a larger series, it may point to subgroups at risk which may require a different approach.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Secondary myelodysplastic syndrome in multiple myeloma--a study of nine patients with an attempt to detect myeloma patients at risk. 789 Feb 64
A
multiple myeloma
patient presented for cytogenetic analysis at diagnosis of secondary
MDS
, which followed cytotoxic treatment including melphalan. Two abnormal unrelated clones were detected, one of them had 5q-, 7q- with clonal evolution of an additional aberration, t(12;13); in the second clone there was a translocation between the two homologues of chromosome 1 as the only aberration. We suggest that the clone with 5q- and 7q- represented the secondary
MDS
cells, whereas the abnormal clone with t(1;1) represented the plasmablasts of the
multiple myeloma
.
...
PMID:Therapy-related myelodysplastic syndrome. Two cytogenetically unrelated abnormal clones in a patient with multiple myeloma. 824 90
As a first step to evaluate the possibility of gene therapy using adenoviral vectors in hematological malignancies in vivo, we tested the efficacy of gene transfer by a recombinant adenovirus in cell lines and fresh cells from various hematological neoplasms. Thirteen cell lines and samples from 27 patients were studied. Cells were infected by a recombinant adenovirus expressing beta galactosidase gene (Ad RSV betagal) and efficacy of transduction assessed by evaluating betagal expression in cells with a histochemical method. After infection of the cells at a multiplicity of infection (MOI) of 200 p.f.u./cell, the percentage of beta gal-positive cells after 48h was high in two cell lines. K562 (64%) and RPMI 8226 (a
myeloma
cell line, 65%), relatively large in the two
myeloma
cell lines tested (41% and 20%, respectively) and in MT4 (an adult T cell leukemia cell line, 38%) and low or absent in other cell lines. In fresh samples from AML, ALL, CLL, NHL,
myeloma
and
MDS
, no betagal positive cells were seen 48h and 72h after infection, except in one case of
myeloma
and one case of CLL (where 10% and 2% of betagal positive cells were seen after infection, respectively). Exposure of fresh malignant cells to GM-CSF before and during adenoviral infection, in three cases, did not increase the number of transfected cells. This suggests that adenoviral vectors, at least in their present form, cannot efficiently be used for direct gene transfer in hematological malignant cells.
...
PMID:Differential efficacy of adenoviral mediated gene transfer into cells from hematological cell lines and fresh hematological malignancies. 855 24
We report the case of a 49-year-old woman who presented with a monoclonally IgG kappa expressing
myeloma
since October 1989. Four years later, after 24 cycles of Melphalan-containing chemotherapy, bone marrow (BM) cells of the patient cytologically revealed myelodysplastic changes for the first time. Cytogenetic examination of the BM obtained in January 1994 showed two clonally aberrant main lines. Each of them represented one of the hematological neoplastic diseases. The quantitatively major clone (
MDS
-clone) showed a deletion of the long arm of chromosome 7, typical for secondary myeloid disorders. The other clone (
myeloma
(MM) clone) was characterized by a reciprocal translocation between the short arm of chromosome 8, band q24, a region known to contain the c-myc gene, and the long arm of chromosome 2, band p12, where the Ig kappa gene is located. An unusual finding, however, was that an abnormality of the long arm of chromosome 16 could be detected in both obviously unrelated clones. In the further course of the disease, the
MDS
and MM clones could be detected, both of them showing cytogenetically a clonal evolution characterized by additional clonal abnormalities. Our data stress the significance of cytogenetics in detecting typical clonal abnormalities in different malignant hematological disorders and in detecting "clonal evolution" as an indicator of the progress of the disease. Moreover, our data suggest that MM and
MDS
may arise from a common stem cell, which may be characterized by a clonal cytogenetic abnormality.
...
PMID:Development of myeloma and secondary myelodysplastic syndrome from a common clone. 940 77
The telomerase activity of various hematologic disorders, including malignant and non-malignant ones is discussed in this paper. In total of 137 cases, each positivity of telomerase activity was
MDS
= 17/51, overt leukemia from
MDS
= 6/15, AML = 17/21, ALL = 4/6, CML-CP (chronic phase) = 0/10, CML-BC (blastic crisis) = 4/4, MPD (myeloproliferative disease)-BC = 3/3, CLL = 1/10, MM (
multiple myeloma
) = 0/6, aplastic anemia = 3/5, essential thrombocytosis = 0/3, and polycythemia vera = 1/3. The MPD-BC showed very high level of telomerase activity as well as CML-BC cases. From the analysis for 18 cases of AML and/or malignant lymphoma patients, significant results showed that the expression of cyclin D/E was not related to telomerase activity in these hematologic disease, as was not the case with breast cancer which was reported formerly.
...
PMID:[Analysis for telomerase activity in various hematologic disorders]. 961 44
From September 1982 to August 1997, 767 bone marrow or peripheral blood stem cell transplants have been performed at the Health Sciences Center in Oklahoma. Five hundred and two (502) autologous transplants (AutoTX) preceded by high-dose myeloablative therapy were performed for breast cancer (BC, 36%), non-Hodgkin's lymphomas (NHL, 24%), Hodgkin's disease (HD, 10%), acute myeloid leukemia (AML, 8%), testicular cancer (TC, 4%),
multiple myeloma
(MM, 2%) and other malignancies (16%). Two hundred and sixty-five (265) allogeneic marrow transplants (AlloTX) (related, unrelated) were carried out in chronic myeloid leukemia (CML, 30%), AML (23%), acute lymphoid leukemia (ALL, 14%), myelodysplastic syndrome (
MDS
, 9%), severe aplastic anemia (SAA, 8%), and other diseases (14%). Compared between 1980s to 1990s, 100-day mortality rates have decreased from 28% to 5% for AutoTX and from 40% to 25% for AlloTX. In the AutoTX setting, major changes included the routine use of growth factors post-transplant and the switch from bone marrow to growth factor-mobilized peripheral blood as a source of stem cells over the last five years. In the AlloTX setting, improvements in recognition and control of cytomegalovirus and Candida organisms, the selective use of growth factors and screened blood products, and better selection of unrelated donors using DNA-based techniques of HLA-matching have contributed to reduce early mortality from infection and primary graft failure. The five-year survival outcomes are comparable to those reported in registry data from the International Bone Marrow Transplant Registry (IBMTR) and the National Marrow Donor Program (NMDP).
...
PMID:Marrow and stem cell transplantation in Oklahoma: fifteen years of experience and results. 976 68
The expansion of
myeloma
cells is regulated by cytokines, among which IL-6 is a major growth factor. It has been recently suggested that serum transforming growth factor beta 1 (TGF beta 1), a cytokine found in large amounts in alpha-granules of platelets, might play a role in
multiple myeloma
(MM). It was the purpose of this study to determine serum TGF beta 1 levels in MM patients and to seek a correlation with disease parameters. Measurements were done by ELISA. We studied 35 MM patients (19 stage II, 16 stage III, 20 IgG, 8 IgA and 6 BJ, 1 IgD) in different phases of the disease, 27 healthy individuals and 17 thrombocytopenic patients with other haematological diseases (three
MDS
, three congenital thrombocytopenia, 11 ITP). Overall samples from MM patients were included: 10 at diagnosis, 18 in remission and 32 in relapse. In normal controls TGF beta 1 serum levels ranged from 1 to 33 ng/ml (median 16.5 ng/ml). In both thrombocytopenic controls with other diseases and thrombocytopenic MM patients (seven samples), TGF beta 1 serum levels were very low (median 3.2 and 4.5 ng/ml respectively). In MM patients with PLT > 100 x 10(9)/L (53 samples), TGF beta 1 serum levels were in the normal range in patients without immunoparesis (1 to 27 ng/ml, median 16.6 ng/ml), whereas they were higher in patients with immunoparesis (polyclonal immunoglobulins (Igs) below lower normal reference values) ranging from 10.2 to 45 ng/ml (median 26.8 ng/ml) (P < 0.01). Serum TGF beta 1 levels fluctuated in the same patient at different times but not according to relapse or remission. Correlation was found only between serum TGF beta 1 levels and immunoparesis and not between serum TGF beta 1 levels and disease stage or Ig subtype nor with prognostic factors for MM (serum CRP, beta 2M or IL-6). This finding suggests that the remaining normal plasma cells are sensitive to the inhibitory action of TGF beta 1 on Ig production. In conclusion TGF beta 1 serum levels are very low in thrombocytopenic patients confirming that platelets are the major source of this cytokine. Furthermore, a strong correlation was found between TGF beta 1 serum levels and immunoparesis in MM patients.
...
PMID:Serum transforming growth factor-beta 1 is related to the degree of immunoparesis in patients with multiple myeloma. 978 21
During the period from 1995 to 1997, we studied 19 new cases of therapy-related myelodysplasia (t-MDS) and acute myeloid leukemia (t-AML), extending our series to 180 consecutive cases: 123 patients with t-
MDS
and 57 patients with t-AML. Cytogenetically unrelated clones were observed in 13 patients: 11 patients with two unrelated clones, one patient with three unrelated clones, and one patient with four unrelated clones. Twelve cases of unrelated clones presented as t-
MDS
, whereas only one case presented as overt t-AML. Partial or complete deletions of the long arms or monosomy for chromosome 5 or chromosome 7, which are characteristic of t-
MDS
and t-AML, were observed in both unrelated clones in four patients and in one unrelated clone only in six patients, whereas three patients showed aberrations in both clones that were uncharacteristic of t-
MDS
or t-AML. Three different interpretations of the origin and significance of cytogenetically unrelated clones in t-
MDS
and t-AML are presented, although the disease is still considered to be monoclonal. First, patients with different defects of the long arm of chromosome 5 or chromosome 7 in two unrelated clones often seem to have acquired these aberrations as independent events. For this reason, it is possible that they may play an important role in leukemic transformation, for instance, by activating or potentiating the effect of a genetic change that is present in all cells but not disclosed as a visible chromosome abnormality. In cases with involvement of other chromosomes, unrelated clones sometimes develop by cytogenetic change in only a subclone of cells, indicating that they play a role only in tumor progression. Finally, unrelated clones in t-
MDS
and t-AML may represent two different monoclonal diseases: the primary tumor and t-
MDS
. This view is supported by the significant excess of unrelated clones observed in t-
MDS
following
multiple myeloma
(4 in 13 cases) compared with other diseases (9 in 167 cases; P = 0.02), and by results from a case with a balanced translocation that is highly characteristic of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma in one clone and a t-
MDS
-associated deletion of the long arm of chromosome 5 in another.
...
PMID:Cytogenetically unrelated clones in therapy-related myelodysplasia and acute myeloid leukemia: experience from the Copenhagen series updated to 180 consecutive cases. 982 7
We evaluated 443 outpatients and inpatients in Keio University Hospital between 1994 and 1999. Morphologic features from peripheral blood and bone marrow aspiration were evaluated in our hematology laboratory, using Wright-Giemsa, peroxidase staining films and other cytochemistry. Immunophenotype was determined by cell surface antigen analysis by laser flow cytometry, FACscan, using various monoclonal antibodies. Information on cytogenetic and molecular genetic characteristics can be also integrated for diagnosis. One hundred fifty patients were diagnosed with acute leukemia, in which 59 cases were ALL and 91 cases were AML. Seventy-four cases were
MDS
, 76 cases were myeloproliferative disorders, 21 cases were CLL related disorders, 104 patients were malignant lymphoma, and 18 cases were
multiple myeloma
. The ratio of male to female was 1.7. The probability of diagnostic rate by Immunophenotyping was estimated by Discriminant analysis in 189 patients, using multivariate analysis of immunophenotype compared to morphology. The average probability by immunophenotypic analysis for diagnostic rate was 91.7%, in which the probability for NHL was very high of 97.1%. Thus, morphologic and immunophenotypic analysis is most essential and basic approach in laboratory hematology, from the perspective of rapid and precise diagnostic methods. Recent advance appreciates the rapid contribution for diagnosis by immunophenotypic analysis. Furthermore, Tele-hematology would contribute the standardization for morphologic method in the near future.
...
PMID:[Morphology and immunophenotyping in hematological malignancies]. 1106 91
Single-agent topotecan is an active drug in chemotherapy-naive
MDS
and CMML and, to a lesser degree, in refractory/relapsed acute leukemias, low-/intermediate-grade lymphoma, and
myeloma
. Its combination with cytosine arabinoside induces complete remissions in high-risk
MDS
/CMML. A triple-combination regimen of cyclophosphamide, cytosine arabinoside, and topotecan (CAT) was extensively tested in refractory/relapsed as well as in untreated AML. By proving effective in inducing complete remission in newly diagnosed AML at rates comparable to those achieved by anthracycline-cytosine arabinoside regimens, for example, CAT offers a useful treatment alternative. Topotecan combined with paclitaxel is promising in low-/intermediate-grade lymphomas. The activity of topotecan justifies further evaluation of topotecan-containing combination regimens, particularly in
MDS
/CMML and acute leukemias.
...
PMID:Topotecan (hycamptin) and topotecan-containing regimens in the treatment of hematologic malignancies. 1119
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