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)

Between January 1986 and March 1990, the serum levels of thymidine kinase (TK) were evaluated at diagnosis in 97 patients with monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (MGUS) and 149 patients with multiple myeloma (MM) enrolled in a prospective protocol for treatment of MM. At presentation, patients with MGUS had lower TK levels than those with Stage I MM (P less than 0.05) and the overall population of those with MM (P less than 0.0005). TK levels were increased in advanced stages in comparison with earlier ones (P less than 0.01). The TK level was related to survival. With a median follow-up of 29 months, patients with TK levels greater than 7.0 U/microliters had shorter survival times than those with lower levels (medians, 23 and 42 months; P less than 0.0001). In a multivariate analysis, TK explained most of the variability of survival (P less than 0.0001), the remaining being accounted for by serum creatinine and beta-2 microglobulin. No changes in TK levels occurred during follow-up of patients with stable MGUS, whereas TK levels increased in two patients at time of progression to overt MM. In patients with MM, TK levels decreased (P less than 0.01) in those who responded to treatment but increased in those having relapses (P less than 0.03) and those with progressive disease (P less than 0.03). These results indicate that TK has clinical and prognostic relevance in monoclonal gammopathies, and additional investigations are warranted to determine whether it is a useful tool for the clinical evaluation, staging, and follow-up of patients with MM.
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PMID:Serum thymidine kinase in monoclonal gammopathies. A prospective study. The Cooperative Group for Study and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma. 154 Aug 74

In a retrospective and prospective follow-up study from 1968 to 1989, bone marrow biopsy specimens, serum beta-2-microglobulin (SB2M) levels, and the clinical features of 251 patients with multiple myeloma (MM) and 28 patients with monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (MGUS) were investigated. The main histologic variables (tumor cell type, tumor growth, tumor load, and fibrosis), SB2M level, serum thymidine kinase (STK) level, and various clinical parameters were analyzed to determine factors of value in monitoring the clinical phases of activity in MM. Our recently proposed prognostic strategy combining bone marrow histologic type, SB2M level, and signs of organ failure was tested for its ability to (1) diagnose the early and smoldering variants; (2) facilitate decisions on the time of initiation, the type and duration of initial induction therapy in the pretreatment phases (active and rapidly progressive phases); and (3) characterize variations in tumor regression and tumor-host interactions during chemotherapy (early treatment, plateau, relapse, transition, and refractory phases). The results indicate that this clinicopathologic monitoring combines information both on stage and aggressivity of MM and thus facilitates therapeutic decisions in the various clinical phases of MM.
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PMID:Histologic, biochemical, and clinical parameters for monitoring multiple myeloma. 191 61

Between January 1987 and October 1989, 561 consecutive untreated patients with monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined clinical importance (MGUS) (n = 295) or with multiple myeloma (n = 266) were evaluated in a multicentre trial. Both bone marrow biopsy and aspiration (performed at different anatomical sites) were required at presentation. Bone marrow biopsy data indicated that changes in bone marrow composition from MGUS to early multiple myeloma and to advanced multiple myeloma followed a precise pattern, including an increased percentage of bone marrow plasma cells (BMPC%), a shift from plasmocytic to plasmoblastic cytology, an increase in bone marrow cellularity and fibrosis, a change in bone marrow infiltration (becoming diffuse rather than interstitial), a decrease in residual haemopoiesis and an increase in osteoclasts. In multiple myeloma the BMPC% of biopsy specimens and aspirate were closely related, although in 5% of cases the difference between the two values was greater than 20%. Some histological features were remarkably associated with each other. For example, BMPC% was higher in cases with plasmoblastic cytology, heavy fibrosis, or reduced residual haemopoiesis. Anaemia was the clinical characteristic most influenced by bone marrow histology. The BMPC% was the only histological variable which affected the greatest number of clinical and laboratory characteristics, including, besides haemoglobin concentration, erythrocyte sedimentation rate, radiographic skeletal bone disease, and serum concentrations of monoclonal component, calcium, beta 2-microglobulin and thymidine kinase activity. These data indicate that comparative bone marrow histology in monoclonal gammopathies has clinical importance.
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PMID:Bone marrow biopsy in monoclonal gammopathies: correlations between pathological findings and clinical data. The Cooperative Group for Study and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma. 219 32

Serum thymidine kinase (STK) levels have recently been used to detect tumour regression and progression in a number of hematological malignancies. In this study, patients with myeloma were monitored longitudinally for STK and several other potentially useful tumour markers to determine which laboratory parameters are the most useful for differentiating between stable and progressive disease. STK was determined by radioenzyme assay, lymphocyte surface markers were analysed by flowcytometry, plasma cell labelling index (LI) by immunofluorescence with anti BU-1, serum B2-microglobulin (SB2M) by radioimmunoassay and M proteins by radial immunodiffusion. Detailed multiparameter longitudinal investigations of 5 patients and ongoing studies of 70 other patients suggest that STK is a more reliable marker of progressive disease than either SB2M, LI, M-protein or CD10 positive lymphocytes. A rise in STK during the emergence of progressive disease at least paralleled and usually preceded any change in the other parameters which often did not change at all. All samples from patients with progressive disease (n = 29) had a STK above the normal range (0-5U/l) whereas 76% of patients in clear stable disease had a STK within the normal range. All samples (n = 34) from patients with light chain isotype suppression (LCIS) had STK values of less than 12 U/L and 82% of samples (n = 33) from patients without LCIS had a STK above the normal range (0-5U/L). The correlation between STK and LI was r = 0.65; p less than 0.001 (n = 21). The radioenzyme assay for STK is simple, reproducible and a valuable tool for monitoring patients with myeloma and when used in conjunction with other clinical and laboratory investigations, aids in the separation of patients with stable myeloma from patients whose disease is progressive.
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PMID:Serum thymidine kinase as a marker of disease activity in patients with multiple myeloma. 252 40

Serum lactic dehydrogenase (S-LDH) was analysed at diagnosis in ninety-three patients with multiple myeloma. The patients were then followed up after a mean observation period of 39 months (SD 29). Serum lactic dehydrogenase was elevated in twenty-seven out of ninety-three patients and found to correlate with the serum concentrations of beta 2-microglobuline, creatinine, and thymidine kinase. In discriminant analysis of pretreatment S-LDH levels in relation to survival, the best discrimination level was 7.0 mukat 1(-1). Patients with values below 7 microkat 1(-1) ahd a median survival time of 45 months compared to 14 months for those with levels above 7 mukat 1(-1) (P less than 0.001). Serum lactic dehydrogenase at diagnosis, thus, has prognostic information in multiple myeloma.
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PMID:Prognostic value of serum lactic dehydrogenase (S-LDH) in multiple myeloma. 311 70

The analysis of individual biochemical and clinical variables in 121 patients with multiple myeloma showed that serum beta 2-microglobulin (S-beta 2m) had the most significant relation to survival. Other variables such as serum thymidine kinase (S-TK), serum lactate dehydrogenase (S-LDH), S-creatinine, haemoglobin (Hb), ESR, S-albumin, age and clinical stage were also significant. No such relationship was found with M-component, presence of light chains in urine, type of secreted immunoglobulin or S-calcium. The exclusion of clinical stage in the first multivariate analysis resulted in a model consisting of S-beta 2m, age and S-TK, none of the other variables gave additional information. When in the second multivariate analysis the basic variables involved in staging procedure were excluded and clinical stage included, stage III, but not stage II, was found to give additional information to the model described above. Individual analysis of the variables showed that Hb had the most significant relation to effect of initial therapy. Other significant variables were S-TK, S-beta 2m and age. When using the multivariate approach, Hb alone was found to contain all the relevant information.
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PMID:Biochemical markers in multiple myeloma: a multivariate analysis. 328 7

We evaluated the serum thymidine kinase (TK) and beta-2 microglobulin (beta-2) levels of 22 patients with monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (MGUS) and of 29 patients with multiple myeloma (MM). Both parameters were significantly lower in MGUS than in MM patients and in early (stage I + II) than in advanced (stage III) MM. TK was also lower in MGUS than in stage I MM (p less than 0.025). A seven-fold increase of TK level was documented in one patient who developed a full blown picture of MM 6 years after a diagnosis of MGUS. In 3 patients with stage III MM, a sharp decrease in TK (40-77%) and in beta-2 (29-53%) levels at remission was evident with respect to the levels measured at diagnosis. Patients with high levels of TK or beta-2 had a shorter survival than those with low levels; however, this was statistically significant only for beta-2 levels (p less than 0.02). Serum TK as well as beta-2 levels appear to be of clinical value in monoclonal gammopathies and related to the course of the disease.
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PMID:Serum thymidine kinase and beta-2 microglobulin in monoclonal gammopathies. 331 49

DNA synthesis in mouse myeloma (MPC-11) cells and L cells was rapidly and progressively inhibited by infection with vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV). No significant difference in cellular DNA synthesis inhibition was noted between synchronized and unsynchronized cells, nor did synchronized cells vary in their susceptibility to VSV infection after release from successive thymidine and hydroxyurea blocks. Cellular RNA synthesis was inhibited to about the same extent as DNA synthesis, but cellular protein synthesis was less affected by VSV at the same multiplicity of infection. The effect of VSV on cellular DNA synthesis could not be attributed to degradation of existing DNA or to decreased uptake of deoxynucleoside triphosphates, nor were DNA polymerase and thymidine kinase activities significantly different in VSV-infected and uninfected cell extracts. Analysis by alkaline sucrose gradients of DNA in pulse-labeled uninfected and VSV-infected cells indicated that VSV infection did not appear to influence DNA chain elongation. Cellular DNA synthesis was not significantly inhibited by infection with the VSV polymerase mutant tsG114(I) at the restrictive temperature or by infection with defective-interfering VSV DI-011 (5' end of the genome), but DI-HR-LT (3' end of genome) exhibited initially rapid but not prolonged inhibition of MPC-11 cell DNA synthesis. DNA synthesis inhibitory activity of wild-type VSV was only slowly and partially inactivated by very large doses of UV irradiation. These data suggest that, as in the effect of VSV on cellular RNA synthesis (Weck et al., J. Virol. 30:746-753, 1979), inhibition of cellular DNA synthesis by VSV requires transcription of a small segment of the viral genome.
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PMID:Inhibition of cellular DNA synthesis by vesicular stomatitis virus. 616 31

Mouse thymidine kinase negative (tk-) L-cells were cotransformed with two different kappa light chain genes (cloned from mouse myeloma) and the tk gene from Herpes simplex virus I. (Transformation is defined as change in the genotype by introduction of foreign DNA.) About 80% of the tk+ -transformants contained varying amounts of transferred kappa light chain sequences, one transformant about 150 copies per genome. The transferred immunoglobulin genes appear to be organized in a nucleosomal substructure, as deduced from digestion experiments with micrococcal nuclease. In situ hybridization experiments revealed, that the transferred genes are not distributed randomly across the chromosomes of the recipient cell. Instead they are clustered at one or a few chromosomal locations.
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PMID:Localization in mouse-L-Cell chromosomal sites of transferred immunoglobulin genes. 628 Sep 34

We have previously demonstrated that retrovirus-mediated genes were transferred to mouse glioma cells in a meningeal gliomatosis model (Yamada et al.: Japanese Journal of Cancer Research 83:1244-1247, 1992). This retrovirus vector contains the Escherichia coli. beta-galactosidase (beta-gal) gene as a marker for integration of the lacZ gene, which is controlled by the SV40 early promoter. We investigated whether lacZ genes could be specifically controlled in mouse glioma cells by glial-specific promoters, including the 2.5 kb 5' flanking region of the mouse glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) gene, the 1.3 kb 5' flanking region of the myelin basic protein (MBP) gene, and the 1.5 kb 5' flanking region of the myelin proteolipid protein (PLP) gene. Psi-2 packaging cells were transfected with each retrovirus vector (GFAP promoter-, MBP promoter-, and PLP promoter-lacZ) and the infectious virus particles were recovered from the supernatants. Blue staining for beta-gal was detected in various fibroblast, myeloma, and glioma cell lines transduced with the retrovirus BAG vector. On the other hand, blue staining was only detected in glioma cells after transduction with the lacZ gene-bearing retrovirus controlled by glial-specific promoters. The strongest promoter activity was detected after transduction with the retrovirus in which the MBP promoter controlled the lacZ gene. Mouse glioma cells transduced with retrovirus containing the MBP promoter directing the herpes simplex virus type 1 thymidine kinase (HTK) gene were extremely sensitive to ganciclovir, while the parental cells and cells transduced with retrovirus containing the lacZ gene were not sensitive to ganciclovir.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Selective expression of foreign genes in glioma cells: use of the mouse myelin basic protein gene promoter to direct toxic gene expression. 750 43


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