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)

An increase in the serum copper (Cu++) level has been described as a sensitive index of disease activity in several hematologic and nonhematologic malignancies. In order to explore the diagnostic value of Cu++ compared to other hematochemical parameters frequently abnormal in malignancies, Cu++, serum alpha2 globulin (alpha2), plasmatic fibrinogen (Fibr), the erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), and serum iron (Fe++) have been detected and evaluated in 267 patients affected with the following diseases: Hodgkin's lymphoma (HL), non-Hodgkin's Lymphomas (NHL), Acute Leukemias (AL), Chronic Myeloid Leukemia (CML), Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia (CLL), Myeloma (MM), and Breast Cancer (BC). The best correlation between Cu++ increase and disease activity has been found in HL, NHL, AL, and BC. In these diseases, when the considered parameters were compared, Cu++ and ESR showed a similar pattern, i.e., a high frequency of abnormalities in active disease. It is concluded that Cu++ represents a good complement to some other aspecific parameters in evaluating the activity and diffusion of neoplasias and the therapeutic results, particularly in HL, NHL, AL and BC.
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PMID:The diagnostic value of serum copper levels and other hematochemical parameters in malignancies. 7 79

Mitogen induced cellular cytotoxicity (MICC) was noted to be markedly increased in patients with multiple myeloma as compared to normal controls and to patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). Enhanced MICC was present at various effector-to-target cell ratios and at several mitogen concentrations. Removal of adherent, phagocytic cells by carbonyl iron, glass wool, or rayon columns abolished the MICC response from the peripheral blood of both multiple myeloma patients and normal controls. Thus, the effector cell mediating MICC may be monocytic in origin and closely resembles the suppressor cell for immunoglobulin synthesis described in patients with multiple myeloma. Our data suggest that the MICC assay with chicken red blood cells as targets may provide a convenient method for identifying pathologic conditions where this cytotoxic effector cell population plays an active role.
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PMID:Mitogen induced cellular cytotoxicity (MICC) in multiple myeloma. 32 83

A patient with regional enteritis had received iron dextran for treatment of iron deficiency. Subsequently he developed a large (3.1 g/100 ml) IgG-K serum spike which had precipitin activity against dextran sulfate but not a variety of other antigens. There has been no evidence of multiple myeloma and the spike gradually disappeared spontaneously over the course of 2 years. We speculate that the monoclonal protein may have developed as a response to the iron dextran injections under the immunologic stress of a chronic inflammatory disease.
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PMID:Transient monoclonal immunoglobulin G with anti-dextran activity. 41 80

Quantitation of the erythropoiesis with radio-iron (59Fe) was applied to 9 patients with untreated myelomatosis. The method included blocking of the 59Fe reutilization by injection of non-radioactive iron. There was no uniform pattern in the Fe-kinetics values. The Plasma Iron Turnover (PIT) and the Red Blood Cell Iron Turnover (RBCIT) varied from subnormal to values markedly increased above upper normal limit. The calculated average Mean Red Cell Life time (MRCL) of erythrocytes was just below normal range. The mean Marrow Transit Time (MTT) was normal in the patients, despite subnormal venous haematocrit, indicating insufficient stimulation of the bone marrow. The renal function, measured as 51Cr-EDTA clearance, was found positively correlated to the RBCIT (r = 0.78, P less than 0.05). The results suggest that the previously demonstrated relationship between anaemia and renal failure in patients with myelomatosis is caused mainly by an inability of the bone marrow to produce sufficient red blood cells under the stress of anaemia related to the degree of renal impairment.
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PMID:Quantitation of erythropoiesis in myelomatosis. 47 59

Radiotracer 67Ga-citrate is used as a tumor-seeking agent in clinical imaging investigations although fundamental reasons for its high uptake in certain malignant lesions remain unexplained. The mechanism by which 67Ga becomes concentrated in tumor cells has been investigated by comparing 67Ga and 59Fe uptake by cultured mouse myeloma cells with particular reference to uptake stimulation by transferrin. Concentrations of human transferrin down to 2 microgram/ml greatly stimulated cellular uptake of both tracers, whereas bovine transferrin proved relatively inactive. The rates of stimulated uptake of both tracers were similar as was their high degree of retention by cells, but their quantitative dependencies on transferrin concentration showed characteristic differences. Pretreatment of human transferrin with saturating amounts of nonradioactive Fe3+ canceled its ability to promote 59Fe uptake, but it had little effect on its promotion of 67Ga uptake. Further increase in the amount of added Fe3+ did cause a progressive depression of 67Ga uptake, but this effect probably relates to the iron distribution in the whole-cell culture system including the fetal calf serum component of cell growth medium. The results suggest that 67Ga and 59Fe reveal different aspects of the interaction of transferrin with cells.
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PMID:Transferrin promotion of 67Ga and 59Fe uptake by cultured mouse myeloma cells. 56 54

Increased bone-marrow mast-cell content and lymphoproliferative disorders have been previously linked. Using a semiquantitative method we examined bone-marrow mast-cell content in 120 marrow specimens from patients with multiple myeloma, chronic lymphocytic leukemia, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, and reactive lymphocytosis. Results indicated a statistically significant increase of marrow mast-cell content in patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, and reactive lymphocytosis when compared with iron-deficient control subjects (p less than or equal to 0.0005). Patients with multiple myeloma had decreased marrow mast-cell content, clearly separating them from patients with lymphoproliferative disorders and reactive lymphocytosis. Linear regression plot of marrow mast-cell content against percentage of marrow lymphocytes showed a direct relation, indicating that marrow mast-cell density may be related more to the degree of lymphoid proliferation than to the specific lymphoproliferative process. Marrow mast-cell content may therefore be reproducibly determined and used to support the morphologic diagnosis of lymphoproliferative disorders and differentiate them from atypical myelomas.
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PMID:Bone-marrow mast cells in lymphoproliferative disorders. 66 33

The percentage of fat-cell areas in bone marrow particles from 22 patients with untreated myelomatosis was estimated. In only 1 patient was the mean fat cell area below 25% of the bone marrow area measured. A negative correlation was found between the area of fat cells and plasma cells, indicating a displacement of the fat cell area by the plasma cells. 28% of the patients had empty bone marrow deposits of iron. However, based on a normal iron saturation of S-transferrin and a normal sideroblast count in the bone marrow, the supply of iron to the erythropoiesis was considered sufficient. All patients but one had normoblastic bone marrows. Using a deoxyuridine suppression test in 10 patients, no biochemical defect could be demonstrated. To judge from the correlation coefficient a minor degree (9-14%) of the variation in Hb values could be predicted from the cellularity in the bone marrow while a major degree (70%) could be predicted from the renal glomerular filtration rate. The results do not support a displacement of blood-forming elements, iron deficiency, vitamin B12 or folic acid deficiency to be of general significance in the pathogenesis of anaemia, but agrees with a causal relationship between anaemia and renal failure.
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PMID:Bone marrow studies in myelomatosis. 71 78

Ferritins are a group of isometric proteins having an important function in iron storage and metabolism and are found in high concentration in the liver, spleen and bone marrow. Acidic isoferritins are found in human fetal liver, primary mammary, gastric and pancreatic carcinomas, and are termed carcinofetal ferritins. Elevated levels of serum ferritin were found in patients with various malignant diseases such as Hodgkin's disease, chronic myeloblastic, granulocytic and lymphatic leukemias and myeloblastosis, in patients with breast cancer, multiple myeloma, malignant lymphoma, carcinoma of the gastro intestinal tract and germinal cell tumors of the testis. Recently a subpopulation of circulating T lymphocytes bearing surface ferritin was found in patients with breast cancer and untreated Hodgkin's disease. No such lymphocytes were demonstrated in normals or in patients with benign breast disease. The appearance of such subpopulation in the circulation is an early manifestation of the neoplastic disease, and its identification may provide a tool of potential diagnostic and prognostic importance in the management of Hodgkin's disease and breast cancer.
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PMID:The significance of ferritin in malignant diseases. 73 72

We have investigated the pathogenesis of the polyclonal hypogammaglobulinemia associated with BALB/c plasmacytomas TEPC-183 and SPQC-11 to gain insight into the hypogammaglobulinemia observed in human myeloma. With pokeweed mitogen-driven IgM biosynthesis by mouse splenocytes as the indicator system for suppression, we found that a protein extract of asscites cells obtained from these tumor-bearing animals could suppress immunoglobulin production, whereas like extracts from a non-suppressing plasmacytoma, modified RPC-5, caused no suppression in vitro. Extracts of tumor ascites depleted of mononuclear phagocytes by iron carbonyl treatment showed little suppressor activity. The active extract was not cytotoxic and contained no mycoplasma or common murine viruses. Furthermore, the active suppressor factor appears to be a low m.w. protein that is not affected by treatment with ribonuclease. These results and others are consistent with the idea that the hypogammaglobulinemia of myeloma is due to the formation of immunoregulatory macrophage-like cells which synthesize a suppressor substance.
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PMID:Hypogammaglobulinemia in experimental myeloma: the role of suppressor factors from mononuclear phagocytes. 85 68

A cell of lymphoid morphology capable of killing antibody-coated chicken erythrocytes was isolated from nonimmune mouse spleen using a combination of carbonyl iron treatment and glass bead column passage. This non-phagocytic effector cell, which is referred to as the nonadherent K (killer) cell, is distinguished from the non-phagocytic myeloid K cell described earlier (Greenberg, A.H., Shen, L. and Roitt, I.M., Clin. Exp. Immunol. 1973. 15:251) by its relatively weak surface adherence properties and low concentration within the mouse spleen. The cell is further characterized by its relatively large size, lack of theta or immunoglobulin determinants, the presence of Mg++-independent complement receptors, affinity for aggregated IgG2 myeloma proteins, inhibition by cytochalasin B and good survival in cell culture. The possible lineage of the cell is discussed.
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PMID:Characteristics of the effector cells mediating cytotoxicity against antibody-coated target cells. II. The mouse nonadherent K cell. 97 11


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