Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0026764 (
multiple myeloma
)
36,148
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The clinical, laboratory and pathologic findings were studied in 62 consecutively autopsied patients with
multiple myeloma
between 1954 and 1975. All patients were 40 years of age or older.
Bone pain
was the initial symptom in 2/3 of patients. Anemia (81%), thrombocytopenia (29%), azotemia (41%), hypercalcemia (46%) and hyperuricemia (52%), were common laboratory findings at diagnosis. Ninety-seven percent had a monoclonal protein in serum or urine. Extensive plasma cell replacement of marrow was invariably seen at autopsy although in 15% of patients no abnormality was found on skeletal survey. Extraskeletal spread (67%) was due to direct extension to paraosseous tissue resulting from cortical destruction and to distant organ involvement mainly of splenic red pulp and hepatic sinusoids. The patients were susceptible to bacterial infection, mainly gram-negative, of the lung (56%), urinary tract (35%), and blood (24%). Fungal infection was less frequent and usually consisted of superficial candidal overgrowth of gastrointestinal tract ulcerations (18%). Amyloidosis (10%) was perivascular and associated with light chain proteinuria. Renal failure as a cause of death (21%) was secondary only to infection (52%). Severity of histologic findings in the kidney at autopsy had little correlation to initial BUN concentration. The median survival was 11.5 months with alkylating agent therapy (responders, 29 months; non-responders, 6 months), and 6 months with urethan. Initial azotemia (greater than 80 mg/dl) and hypercalcemia (greater than 12 mg/dl) were important prognostic indicators (median survival, less than 1 month and 3 months, respectively). A good response to alkylating agent therapy, initial BUN less than 40 mg/dl and serum calcium less than 12 mg/dl were favorable to prognostic indicators.
...
PMID:Multiple myeloma: a clinicopathologic study of 62 consecutively autopsied cases. 743 54
Clodronate (clodronic acid, dichloromethylene bisphosphonate) is a bisphosphonate which has demonstrated efficacy in patients with a variety of diseases of enhanced bone resorption including Paget's disease, hypercalcaemia of malignancy and osteolytic bone metastases. In addition, early reports demonstrating potential efficacy of clodronate in the treatment of osteoporosis suggest a possible role in this debilitating disease. Short term intravenous administration (usually 300 mg/day for 5 days) or longer courses of oral clodronate (usually 1600 mg/day for 6 months) effectively reduced
bone pain
and/or improved mobility in most patients with Paget's disease, and these effects persisted for up to 12 months after discontinuing clodronate. When administered intravenously (300 mg/day for up to 12 days) to patients with malignant hypercalcaemia, serum calcium levels declined significantly within 2 days of starting treatment and approximately 70 to 95% of patients became normocalcaemic. While there is less experience with oral administration, clodronate (800 to 3200 mg/day) achieved normocalcaemia in the majority of patients, usually within 1 week, and serum calcium levels remained significantly reduced from baseline for up to 6 months with continued treatment. Clodronate is clearly superior to placebo and, based on a retrospective analysis, appears to produce greater and more sustained reductions in serum calcium levels than calcitonin in patients with malignant hypercalcaemia. The few available prospective comparative trials showed that clodronate is at least as effective as etidronate, but comparisons with alendronate and pamidronate produced results of questionable clinical relevance because of low bisphosphonate dosages used in these trials. Nevertheless, single intravenous doses of clodronate 600 mg or alendronate 7.5 mg (both agents repeated on day 3 if necessary) were comparable in efficacy, whereas a single intravenous dose of pamidronate 30 mg was more effective than a single intravenous dose of clodronate 600 mg. Normocalcaemic patients with osteolytic bone metastases due to advanced breast cancer experienced significant reductions in the number of episodes of hypercalcaemia and terminal hypercalcaemia, incidence of vertebral fractures and overall rate of morbid events, including the need for radiotherapy to treat bone-related pain, following treatment with clodronate 1600 mg/day for 3 years in a large placebo-controlled study. A similar large placebo-controlled trial in patients with
multiple myeloma
demonstrated that clodronate 2400 mg/day orally for 2 years significantly reduced progression of osteolytic bone lesions. Follow-up data from clinical trials revealed that the effects on development of fractures and hypercalcaemia persisted for at least 12 months after the drug was discontinued.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Clodronate. A review of its pharmacological properties and therapeutic efficacy in resorptive bone disease. 752 33
Although osteosclerotic metastases are characteristic of prostate cancer, bone resorption is also accelerated. Clodronate is a specific inhibitor of osteoclastic bone resorption and relieves
bone pain
of osteolytic lesions in
myelomatosis
and breast cancer. The present open study included 16 prostate cancer patients who had painful bone metastases and who had failed hormonal therapy. Clodronate was given intravenously for six days (300 mg/day) followed by oral treatment for 21 days (3200 mg/day). A clear pain relief was found in nine of the 16 (56%) patients after intravenous administration. During the next three weeks with oral administration there was still pain reduction in five patients, while in three patients the pain increased. The treatment had no effect on conventional tumour markers but urinary hydroxyproline excretion decreased, indicating reduced bone resorption. Clodronate offers an alternative for treating patients with painful metastases from prostate cancer.
...
PMID:The effect of combined intravenous and oral clodronate treatment on bone pain in patients with metastatic prostate cancer. 753 82
The use of bisphosphonates in hypercalcemia is fully accepted, but the long term therapy with bisphosphonates is still controversial. The aim of our study was to evaluate the influence of clodronate on the bone density of
myeloma
patients. 20 patients were included in the study. A total dose of 3000 mg clodronate was administered in 4 to 6 hourly infusions of 600 mg a day, once in 3 months. The effect of clodronate on bone density was evaluated by CT-densitometry over a period of 6 months. At the beginning of May 1994, 15 patients had completed at least 2 estimations of bone density. The amount of hydroxyapatite had increased in 9 patients, remained unchanged in 1 of them, and decreased in 4 of them during the 6 months. The mean bone density before the administration of clodronate was -2.6 SD (standard deviation of European standard bone density for the respective age and sex). After 6 months of therapy, bone density had increased to -2.3 SD. The mean amount of hydroxyapatite in spongiosa rose from the mean value of 32.71 mg/ml before clodronate administration to 38.91 mg/ml after the 6-month treatment period. The mean increase in calciumhydroxyapatite in trabecular bone mass was 6.2 mg. Clodronate contributed to alleviating
bone pain
in the majority of patients, but this effect is difficult to evaluate because of other treatment modalities administered concomitantly. The tolerance of clodronate was very good. No impairments of renal function, nor other adverse effects were observed. Only in 2 patients the decrease in calcium concentration caused slight tetania.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Increasing bone density in myeloma patients after the administration of clodronate. 754 57
We report on a 65-year-old female patient with an A-kappa
multiple myeloma
diagnosed on the grounds of
bone pain
, anemia and extremely elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR). Eight years prior to admission to the Clinic of Haematology the patient started to excrete a considerable amount of urine (4-6 liters per 24 hrs) with low specific gravity and to experience hardly controllable thirst. The disorder was specified in a specialised endocrinologic clinic as diabetes inspidus with ambiguous aetiology. The administered treatment with adiuretin had a small effect. A course of cyclophosphamide and glucocorticosteroids was started after
myeloma
was diagnosed--this had a considerable effect on the polyuria and polydipsia; the specific gravity of the urine increased. This effect, as well as the proven light chain proteinuria in the patient, leads to the interpretation of the early complaints of the patient as onset of the underlying disease in the form of nephrogenic diabetes insipidus--a rare light chain tubular syndrome.
...
PMID:Nephrogenic diabetes insipidus--prodromal phase of multiple myeloma. 760 96
The quality of life, as well as the length of survival, in patients with
myeloma
has improved since the introduction of melphalan chemotherapy. Although
myeloma
is a radio-responsive disease, radiotherapy should be chosen for relapsed and refractory
myeloma
, because prolongation of overall survival is not improved. The aim of radiotherapy for solitary plasmacytomas is to mainly relieve pain, rather than the curative local therapy. On the other hand, total body irradiation has been used, as palliative therapy, for relapsed and refractory
myeloma
but treatment related toxicity is commonly. The hemibody irradiation and whole bone marrow irradiation developed to decrease radiation pneumonitis and hematologic toxicity. On the other hand, the results of radiotherapy in combination with chemotherapy shows no better survival than that of chemotherapy alone. Radiotherapy should be used for severe intractable
bone pain
and should be employed, using a limited field in lytic lesions.
...
PMID:[Radiotherapy for myeloma]. 769
Asymptomatic
multiple myeloma
was diagnosed in an 80-year-old woman with ischemic heart and cerebrovascular disease. The diagnosis was based on the finding of a rapid sedimentation rate (120 mm in the first hour), paraproteinemia with high levels of monoclonal IgA (4,582 mg%) and the characteristic findings on bone marrow aspiration. There was neither Bence-Jones protein nor hypercalcemia, nor clinical signs of
multiple myeloma
, such as
bone pain
, pathological fractures, or recurrent infections. We faced a dilemma in deciding whether or not to treat this elderly, asymptomatic woman. Chemotherapy in an elderly patient can be hazardous, and even life-threatening, due to adverse effects. On the other hand, untreated
myeloma
may be followed by rapid deterioration. It was decided not to start chemotherapy unless the clinical picture were to change for the worse. Although the hyperviscosity syndrome in this condition is usually due to elevated IgM paraprotein, it has been caused by IgG, or as in this case, by IgA hyperparaproteinemia.
...
PMID:[Multiple myeloma: a geriatric dilemma]. 774 27
The indication of bisphosphonates in hypercalcemia is fully accepted, the long term therapy with bisphosphonates is still controversial. The aim of our study was to evaluate the influence of clodronate on the bone density of
myeloma
patients. Twenty patients were included in the study. Clodronate is administered in the total dose of 3,000 mg, which is delivered in 4-6 hour infusions, 600 mg/day, once in tree 3 months. The effect of clodronate on bone density is evaluated by CT-densitometry in a period of 6 months. At the beginning of May 1994, 15 patients had completed at least two estimations of bone density. The amount of hydroxyapatite in these six months increased in 9 patients, in one of them there was no change and in 4 of them decreasing bone density was detected. The mean bone density before the administration of clodronate was -2.6 SD (standard deviation of European standard of bone density for age and sex). After 6 months of therapy the bone density increased to -2.3 SD. The mean amount of hydroxyapatite in spongiosa was raised from the mean value 32.71 mg/ml before clodronate administration to 38.91 mg/ml after the 6 month treatment period. The mean increase in calciumhydroxyapatite in trabecular bone mass was 6.2 mg. Clodronate contributed to the amelioration of
bone pain
in the majority of patients, but this effect is difficult to evaluate because of other treatment modalities administered concomitantly. The tolerance of clodronate was good. No impairments of renal function or other adverse effects were observed. Only in 2 patients the decrease in calcium concentration caused slight tetania. Therefore close monitoring of the calcium level is recommended and in the case of its decrease below the physiological level peroral substitution of calcium was started.
...
PMID:[Increased bone density in patients with multiple myeloma treated with clodronate]. 781 97
We have reviewed our experience in the management of
myeloma
patients who present with features of severe renal impairment, to examine the role of intensive treatment of the renal failure, and to assess the role of renal biopsy. Between March 1983 and August 1991, 16 patients, who were subsequently diagnosed as having
myeloma
, presented to the Department of Renal Medicine for investigation of renal failure; nine with symptoms of uraemia and seven with pneumonia,
bone pain
, emphysema, or ischaemic heart disease. Renal biopsy was performed on 14 patients. Eleven patients had
myeloma
cast nephropathy, two of whom had concurrent hypertensive nephropathy, two patients had light chain deposition disease, and one patient had interstitial nephritis. Renal function improved in six patients with aggressive rehydration, but three of them subsequently required dialysis. In all 11 patients required dialysis, two short-term and nine long-term. Seven patients were given conventional melphalan and prednisolone and nine patients received VAMP as induction cytotoxic chemotherapy. Five of the VAMP sub-group received interferon alpha 2b as maintenance therapy. The median renal survival was five months (range 0-36 months) and median overall survival was 20 months (range 1-54 months). We conclude that intensive treatment, including dialysis, in
myeloma
patients with renal failure may result in survival durations approaching those of unselected
myeloma
patients, and a significant proportion will enjoy a reasonable quality of life.
...
PMID:Intensive treatment of renal failure in patients with myeloma. 773 18
Multiple myeloma
occurs in over 2000 new patients in England and Wales each year. It presents most frequently as
bone pain
and patients tend to become dehydrated and may develop renal failure. No available treatment is curative, but about two thirds of patients achieve a stable response with low dose combination chemotherapy. Combination chemotherapy including doxorubicin and carmustine with the alkylating agents cyclophosphamide and melphalan achieve a higher stable response rate than conventional treatment with melphalan and prednisone without additional haematological toxicity. These responses are associated with loss of
bone pain
and patients remain symptom free for months without further treatment. Relapse occurs on average in a little under two years and, though second responses are frequently obtained, the disease eventually becomes refractory. This paper looks at who should be treated and the benefits that may be expected from the treatments available.
...
PMID:Multiple myeloma. 806 29
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>