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

Retroviral-mediated gene transfer was employed to introduce an IL-1 alpha cDNA into an IL-6-dependent murine B-cell line. Bone marrow metastases and bone lesions were frequently observed following intravenous injection of these B cells into syngeneic mice. Because the retroviral vector also contained the neomycin phosphotransferase gene, metastatic cells could be easily recovered from bone marrow by addition of G418 to the culture medium. Interestingly, the metastatic B cells were found to retain their IL-6 dependency through several transplant generations. By comparison, intravenous injection of autonomously-growing B-cell lines generated in vitro by retroviral introduction of an IL-6 cDNA rarely resulted in bone marrow metastases. These results demonstrate that abrogation of growth factor dependency is neither necessary nor sufficient for the in vivo growth and dissemination of tumor cells in this experimental system. It is proposed that the increased metastasis of the IL-1 alpha-producing B-cells to bone marrow is due to alterations in cell adhesion molecules. The B-cell bone marrow metastasis model described here may be useful for studies of bone marrow homing and for evaluation of therapeutic regimens for multiple myeloma.
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PMID:Expression of retrovirally transduced IL-1 alpha in IL-6-dependent B cells: a murine model of aggressive multiple myeloma. 177 41

Forty patients with known primary tumor and progressive back pain, suspected of having spinal metastatic disease, underwent magnetic resonance (MR) examinations of the thoracic and lumbosacral spine. Conventional radiographs and CT scans of the spine were all normal. The radionuclide bone scans were equivocal. In 21 patients focal or diffuse vertebral MR abnormalities were detected. In nine patients the lesions were hypointense on T1 sequence, and the same lesions were demonstrated poorly or not at all on T2 and proton density sequences. In eight other patients the bone marrow metastases presented with strong signal intensity on T2 and were poorly or not at all demonstrated on T1 and proton density sequences. In three patients with multiple myeloma, the signal intensity pattern of the vertebrae was diffusely heterogeneous, with alternating small foci of strong and weak signals (a mosaic-like pattern). Following the MR studies, needle biopsy confirmed the malignancy in the 21 patients who had shown abnormalities. No correlation between the type of primary tumor and the signal intensity of the vertebral metastases was shown. Possibly the mosaic pattern shown in three of the multiple myeloma patients represents a special case.
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PMID:Early MR demonstration of spinal metastases in patients with normal radiographs and CT and radionuclide bone scans. 274 77

Flow cytometry of cellular DNA content revealed ploidy abnormalities in 15% of 170 patients with various leukemias, in 50% of 26 patients with malignant lymphomas, and in 68% of 110 patients with multiple myeloma, for an overall incidence of DNA content abnormality of 37% in 306 patients with hematologic malignancies. Since the incidence of ploidy abnormality in over 100 solid tumors exceeded 90%. DNA flow cytometry is also ideally suited to screen for bone marrow metastases. Cell separation by centrifugal elutriation was shown to permit enrichment of aneuploid cells, including one example where cells with abnormal DNA content were not recognized in the unfractionated sample. Biparametric measurements of acridine orange-stained cells for DNA and RNA content analysis were suitable to enhance the discriminatory power of flow cytometric detection of lymphoma and myeloma tumor cells in heterogeneous cell populations of bone marrow and lymph nodes. DNA/RNA measurements in leukemia, (the disease category with the lowest incidence of abnormal DNA mode) revealed a markedly higher mean RNA content in acute myeloid leukemia compared with normal or acute lymphoblastic leukemia bone marrow. While these different RNA content patterns were found in whole marrow, cell separation by centrifugal elutriation of normal marrow disclosed cell subpopulations of myeloid precursor cells with a RNA content pattern similar to that of unseparated AML marrow. Hence, the described differences in RNA content between normal and AML marrow seem to be related to the greater heterogeneity of differentiated cells in normal marrow and per se do not appear to be a unique feature of the leukemia disease process.
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PMID:Characterization of hematologic malignancies by flow cytometry. 700 71

LL1, a monoclonal antibody (MAb) to HLA Class-II-like antigen (li determinant) on the surface of B-lymphocytes, monocytes and histiocytes, was evaluated as an agent for bone marrow imaging. Six patients with diverse diseases (non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, n = 2; multiple myeloma, n = 1; polycythaemia vera, n = 1; lung cancer, n = 1; breast cancer, n = 1) were given low protein doses (< 1 mg) of 99Tcm (30 mCi) labelled Fab' of LL1. 99Tcm-sulphur colloid (SC) imaging was performed in three patients for comparison. Both planar and single photon emission tomographic images were acquired using Sopha gamma cameras. As early as 2 h post-MAb injection, excellent bone marrow images were achieved in all patients, demonstrating both normal or hyperproliferative marrow, as well as 'cold' bone marrow abnormalities such as radiation defects or cancer metastases. Similar to SC, relatively high uptake of LL1 was found in the liver and spleen. However, the bone marrow-to-liver and -spleen uptake ratios were approximately 19-fold higher (0.75 vs 0.04) and 6-fold higher (1.23 vs 0.22), respectively, with LL1 than with SC. The higher bone marrow uptake allowed clearly superior visualization of the thoracic spine when compared to SC. The mean T1/2 of blood and whole-body clearance were 0.4 and 66 h, respectively. The highest radiation absorbed doses (in cGy mCi-1) were observed in the spleen (0.47 +/- 0.24), kidneys (0.25 +/- 0.09) and liver (0.14 +/- 0.04). The bone marrow dose was only 0.05 +/- 0.02 cGy mCi-1. These results indicate that bone marrow imaging with 99Tcm-LL1 is feasible, and that LL1 may be a suitable alternative to SC because of better visualization of the lower thoracic spine. Potential applications include the improved detection of bone marrow metastases of solid tumours and the assessment of haematological disorders.
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PMID:99Tcm-LL1: a potential new bone marrow imaging agent. 907 70

The aim of our study was to investigate whether the defective function of osteogenic cells induced by neuroblastoma might play a role in the development of skeletal metastases. This mechanism has been extensively demonstrated for multiple myeloma, in which the blockage of osteoblast differentiation has been ascribed to the inhibitors of canonical Wingless pathway (Wnt), namely Dickkopf 1 (Dkk1). Our purpose was to verify if neuroblastoma cells derived from bone marrow metastases (SH-SY5Y, LAN1) or primaries (NB100, CHP212) hamper the differentiation of mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs) into osteoblasts in a paracrine manner, and to test whether this ability depends on Dkk1 activity. We found that all neuroblastoma cells increased the proliferation of hMSCs collected from pediatric-aged donors, with a corresponding decrease in osteoblast differentiation markers, including alkaline phosphatase (ALP), analyzed as gene expression, enzymatic activity and number of ALP-positive colony forming units, osteoprotegerin (OPG) release, OPG and osteocalcin gene-expression. Dkk1 mRNA and protein were detectable in all cell lines, and the use of neutralizing anti-Dkk1 antibody reversed the effects induced by SH-SY5Y cells. Taken together, our results confirm that neuroblastoma hinders osteoblastogenesis, and that Dkk1 release seems to play a crucial role in blocking the differentiation of osteoprogenitor cells, though the ability to promote osteoclast activation remains an essential requirement for the development of skeletal metastases. Finally, our findings suggest that strategies regulating Wnt signaling and Dkk1 activity could be considered for adjuvant therapies in neuroblastoma metastasizing to the skeleton.
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PMID:Paracrine inhibition of osteoblast differentiation induced by neuroblastoma cells. 1862 32

We report the case of a 40-year-old man whose bone marrow metastases occurred 57 months after the initial diagnosis and 9 months after completing radiotherapy for an anaplastic oligodendroglioma. Four months before the demonstration of visceral metastases was obtained by bone marrow biopsy, the patient developed diffuse bone pain, pancytopenia, hypercalcemia, and panhypogammaglobulinemia. These abnormalities and other clinical signs of extracranial dissemination of the primary brain tumor were initially unrecognized until the patient was admitted with the suspicion of a nonsecretory multiple myeloma. We also briefly review the factors predisposing these tumors to spread outside the CNS, albeit rarely, and discuss the clinical implications of a misdiagnosis of extracranial invasion by anaplastic oligodendroglioma, whose chemosensitivity has been definitively demonstrated.
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PMID:Bone marrow metastases from anaplastic oligodendroglioma presenting with pancytopenia and hypogammaglobulinemia: a case report. 2232 51