Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0026764 (multiple myeloma)
36,148 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A woman with multiple myeloma relapsed after 6 years of satisfactory tumor control with melphalan therapy. When progression then occurred, she was given exogenous human leukocyte interferon, 3 x 10(6) reference units twice daily i.m., as the sole therapy. Side-effects of the interferon therapy consisted of fever reactions and thrombocytopenia. One month after the initiation of interferon therapy there was 1) improvement of general health with less pain and tiredness, 2) reduction of the M-component, IgG-lambda, in the serum, and 3) a reduced plasma cell concentration in the bone marrow. After 5 months of interferon therapy tumor progression occurred despite continuous interferon treatment. At the same time, the tumor cells were less sensitive to interferon in in vitro tests than prior to interferon therapy. It is suggested that interferon therapy should be given as initial treatment to a few patients with multiple myeloma in a phase I trial.
...
PMID:Interferon therapy in multiple myeloma. 10 25

This prospective study was designed to determine the efficacy of iodized talc pleurodesis in patients with pleural effusions. Thirty-four patients underwent this treatment (three bilaterally) between October 1, 1989, and March 31, 1991. All patients had to have complete or nearly complete lung reexpansion after tube thoracostomy with fluid drainage less than 100 ml in 24 hours. A slurry containing 5 gm of talc and 3 gm of thymol iodide was instilled into the pleural space through the chest tube. Chest tubes were removed after complete reexpansion and clearing of the effusions, usually in 3 to 5 days. The patients' ages ranged from 26 to 88 years (average 50 years). Eighteen patients had lung carcinoma, two had mesothelioma, and one each had carcinoma of the ovary, breast, or anorectum, multiple myeloma, schwannoma, or Hodgkin's lymphoma. Two patients had an unknown adenocarcinoma primary and five other patients had acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. One patient had congestive heart failure. Nineteen patients had left, 12 had right, and three had bilateral pleural effusions. The effusion was serosanguineous in 26 and serofibrinous in eight patients. Serial chest radiography showed complete response in all patients. The period of follow-up ranged from 1 to 21 (average 4.9) months, with no recurrences. Twenty-three patients have died during the follow-up period, and there was no sign that reaccumulated pleural effusion existed in any, despite clinical evidence of systemic tumor progression. These observations indicate that intrapleural instillation of a slurry of iodized talc is a safe, adequate, and effective treatment for control of neoplastic or benign pleural effusions.
...
PMID:Iodized talc pleurodesis for the treatment of pleural effusions. 156 70

A human multiple myeloma (MM) cell line, U-266, has developed the ability to grow independently of exogenous interleukin 6 (IL-6) during long-term cultivation in vitro. The early passage, feeder-cell dependent U-266 cell line (U-266-1970) was compared with the late passage U-266-1984 cell line with respect to response to IL-6, IL-1 beta and tumour necrosis factor alpha and expression of IL-6 and IL-6 receptor (IL-6R) mRNA and protein. The results showed that; (a) only the U-266-1970 cell line was stimulated to growth by IL-6, (b) IL-6 and IL-6R mRNA were expressed in both cell lines, (c) the level of IL-6 mRNA was increased in the U-266-1984 cell line and only this line produced IL-6 and, (d) the level of IL-6R mRNA was highest in the U-266-1984 cell line and the number of IL-6R about ten times higher than in U-266-1970. The growth of the IL-6-producing U-266-1984 cell line was inhibited by 30% by anti-IL-6R antibodies suggesting the possibility that an autocrine IL-6 loop might have developed during the long-term cultivation. In addition to many other phenotypic alterations of the U-266 cell line, having developed as a consequence of tumor progression in vitro, its growth factor requirement seems to have evolved from a dependence on IL-6 as a paracrine growth factor to a capacity for autonomous growth, dependent on autocrine IL-6 stimulation. Whether such a development also may take place in MM clones in vivo remains to be established.
...
PMID:Increase in interleukin 6 (IL-6) and IL-6 receptor expression in a human multiple myeloma cell line, U-266, during long-term in vitro culture and the development of a possible autocrine IL-6 loop. 158 93

The presence of RAS gene mutations in precancerous lesions suggests that they participate in the early stages of neoplastic development. Furthermore, neoplastic progression from monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (MGUS) to overt multiple myeloma (MM) have been frequently observed. These observations prompted us to study the pathogenetic role of RAS genes in MM and related monoclonal gammopathies. DNA from 18 patients with monoclonal gamma-globulinemia including 12 MM were investigated for the presence of N- and K-RAS gene mutations by polymerase chain reaction (PCR)/oligonucleotide hybridization. Mutations involving codons 12, 13 or 61 of N-RAS gene were identified in 3 of the 12 MM patients, 1 of the solitary plasmacytoma patients and none of the 3 of the MGUS patients. In the case of plasmacytoma, RAS mutations were detected in his bone marrow specimens.
...
PMID:RAS gene mutations in multiple myeloma and related monoclonal gammopathies. 192 Dec 61

Twenty-one patients with 22 pathologic humeral fractures were seen between January 1977 and November 1988. All fractures were secondary to myeloma or metastatic disease. Primary bone tumors were not included. Nineteen of 22 fractures were treated with intramedullary fixation: 12 of these fractures were also treated with methylmethacrylate. Two patients had compression plating, and the remaining patient had no surgery. Twenty-eight percent had a previously undiagnosed malignancy. Postoperatively, 78% of the patients had only mild or moderate pain. Five patients had progression of local disease postoperatively, two resulting in failure of fixation. Both plates failed. Three patients required additional humeral procedures, one of which was a shoulder disarticulation for pain. Intramedullary fixation of pathologic fractures improves the quality of life by controlling pain for most patients. Complications, treatment failures, and pain are related to a 29% rate of tumor progression and a 23% rate of fixation failure.
...
PMID:Treatment of pathologic fracture of the humerus. 206 Feb 8

Recently, the failure of interleukin 4 (IL4) autocrine growing CT4S cells to grow in vivo has been demonstrated. Because it could not be excluded that the cells produce insufficient amounts of IL4 to support their growth in vivo, subclones were established which are unresponsive to exogenous IL4 and therefore have acquired full growth autonomy. From the fact that the subclones likewise did not give rise to tumors when injected into nude mice, one may conclude that the IL4 production of autocrine growing CT4S prevents their growth in vivo. To test this hypothesis, a retroviral vector containing the IL4 gene under the control of the immunoglobulin heavy chain (Igh) enhancer/promoter was constructed and used to infect the myeloma cell line J558L. An IL4 producing clone was established (J558L-XEPIL4) and the tumor progression in comparison to the parental clone J558L was monitored in nude mice. The IL4 production significantly delayed the growth of J558L-XEPIL4 in vivo. Tumor suppression was much more evident when J558L-XEPIL4 cells were injected into syngeneic BALB/c mice. These results may explain why autocrine growing CT4S do not grow in vivo and suggest the involvement of functional T lymphocytes in the effectiveness of the host dependent anti-tumor action of IL4.
...
PMID:Lack of tumorigenicity of interleukin 4 autocrine growing cells seems related to the anti-tumor function of interleukin 4. 227 62

Verapamil (240 mg daily orally) was tested in a phase II trial to restore vincristine sensitivity in 9 patients with myeloma, chronic lymphatic leukemia and immunocytoma. These tumors were selected because treatment response and tumor progression can easily be ascertained with the help of electrophoresis and marrow studies, blood counts and lymph node examination. All patients were clinically refractory to vincristine-cytoxan-prednisolone combinations, to which adriamycin had been added in 2 patients. One patient was refractory to adriamycin, VM 26, and prednisone. In 2/9 patients a side effect-free second response lasting 5-10 months was observed, with a doubtful response in two additional patients. It is suggested that occasional clinical responses can be seen, despite the fact that in vitro the mean verapamil concentration required to affect vincristine efflux from malignant lymphocytes in 5 mumols/1 and the mean in vivo serum concentration only 1 mumole. Hypothetically, the clinical response can be explained by an overlapping in some patients of an unusually high serum concentration with an unusually low verapamil requirement.
...
PMID:Can verapamil induce second response in patients refractory to vincristine? 238 94

Monoclonal antibodies to human bladder carcinoma membrane antigens were produced by fusion of MOPC-21 NS/1 mouse myeloma cells with spleen cells from BALB/c mice immunized against a crude membrane extract from a metastatic bladder carcinoma. Hybrids were screened for antibody production in a solid-phase radioimmunoassay and selected for their reactivity with subpopulations of urothelial cells on normal bladder tissue sections. Three antibody groups were defined: Group I (4-72-2) was urothelium specific and stained the basal and intermediate cells in normal urothelium; group II (3-48-2, 48-1, and 3-50-3) showed reactivity with intermediate and superficial cells; group III (8-30-3, 77-1, 2-94-2, 3-71-1, and 94-3) was restricted to antigens on the luminal membrane of superficial cells. All antibodies recognized antigenic determinants in fixed paraffin-embedded material and within groups showed a range of staining patterns in other tissues. Studies on sections representing different stages of neoplastic progression showed disruption in the antibody-staining pattern in urothelium and, in all cases, a strong distinct staining of invasive tumor areas and metastatic secondary tumors. Biochemical analysis of the antigens defined at least three antigenic systems, two of which consisted of molecules having Mr of 250,000 and 300,000 as judged by Western blot analysis. Antigenic determinants recognized by some antibodies (3-48-2, 48-1, 3-50-3, 8-30-3, 77-1, and 3-71-1) were shown to be carbohydrate by reactivity with glycolipid fraction and suggest that antibodies within groups recognize different epitopes on the same molecule.
...
PMID:Monoclonal antibodies raised against cell membrane components of human bladder tumor tissue recognizing subpopulations in normal urothelium. 241 43

The phenotypic pattern of peripheral blood T (PBT) lymphocytes was correlated with diagnosis and clinical status in 63 patients with monoclonal gammopathies (MGs). The numbers of lymphocytes expressing activation and CD11 determinants were significantly increased in suppressor/cytotoxic and helper/inducer subpopulations of patients with multiple myeloma (MM) and MG of undetermined significance (MGUS). The number of activated suppressor/cytotoxic cells was closely correlated with diagnosis and disease status. These cells were significantly higher in MM at diagnosis (160 +/- 88) than MGUS patients (61 +/- 79; P less than .01). Their number decreased to MGUS levels in MM in stable remission (58 +/- 53), but not in MM with tumor progression (172 +/- 102; P less than .001). In individual patients, part of these cells specifically adhered to dishes precoated with the related M-protein. No monoclonal T-beta gene rearrangement was detected in PBT and cytotoxic/suppressor subpopulations from two patients with a large proportion of activated cells.
...
PMID:Activated idiotype-reactive cells in suppressor/cytotoxic subpopulations of monoclonal gammopathies: correlation with diagnosis and disease status. 297 Aug 72

Serum beta 2 microglobulin (B2M) has recently been shown to be a powerful, although nonspecific, marker of multiple myeloma (MM) disease activity. Since the nature of cells producing high levels of B2M remains obscure in MM, we measured (in vitro) the spontaneous secretion of free B2M in 58 culture samples from 52 patients with MM. In comparison with samples from normal individuals and from individuals with monoclonal gammopathy of unknown significance, an abnormal secretion of B2M was found in 83% of samples containing myeloma cells. Levels of secretion significantly correlated with the percentage of tumor cells, tumor progression, and moreover, with the immunoglobulin type of the tumor. The highest levels of secretion were noted in IgG and IgA MM. Our present results would favor the hypothesis of a direct secretion of B2M by myeloma cells and emphasize the interest of B2M as a marker in a majority of (but not all) patients with MM.
...
PMID:In vitro production of beta 2 microglobulin by human myeloma cells. 304 75


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>