Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0026986 (myelodysplastic syndrome)
14,926 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We studied clinical and biological features of five cases of hybrid leukemia. Three of the five patients were classified as biphenotypic leukemia because of the coexpression of myeloid/B lymphoid markers in patients 1 (FAB M2) and 2 (FAB CMMoL) and myeloid/T lymphoid markers in patient 3 (FAB M4). Patient 4 was identified as bilineal-biphenotypic leukemia because acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) (FAB M4) and acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) (FAB L1) coexisted and each population coexpressed myeloid and T lymphoid markers. Patient 5 was identified as bilineal leukemia due to the conversion from AML (FAB M1) to ALL (FAB L1) at an interval of 3 months. The Philadelphia (Ph1) chromosome was negative in all cases. A leukemic blast colony formation using cell line 5637 conditioned medium as a stimulator was obtained in all four patients examined. Three of the five patients had been suffering from so-called stem cell disorders such as aplastic anemia in patient 2, trilineage myelodysplasia in patient 4 and refractory anemia with excess of blasts in transformation in patient 5. The pre-existing impairment of pluripotent stem cell was probably the background of these hybrid leukemia. Hybrid leukemia appears to have an inferior prognosis: an AML-directed chemotherapy resulted in a low remission rate (2/5) with a short duration of relapse free survival (1/2) and an ALL-directed chemotherapy produced no remission (0/3). Chronological phenotypic analysis revealed that hybrid features of leukemic blasts disappeared at the time of relapse in patient 1 and progression to AML in patient 2. Monitoring of lineage-associated markers should be required for the management of hybrid leukemia.
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PMID:Clinical characteristics of hybrid leukemia: report of five cases. 217 35

This thesis is a survey of nine previously published articles on MPO deficient PMN. The incidences in leukaemia and allied disorders of the presence of this abnormal subpopulation of mature neutrophils and the relationship to clinical course in AML, susceptibility to infections in AML, FAB classification in AML and MDS, cytogenetically defined aberrations in MDS and morphometrical characteristics were investigated. The aims of the studies were to examine the diagnostic as well as the prognostic value of the parameter, to examine the usefulness of the parameter as an predictive indicator of CR and relapse in AML and to examine the concept that MPO deficient PMN may originate from leukaemic precursors. MPO deficient PMN were found to occur in a minor number (less than 4% of the total number of PMN) in normal humans and the incidences of an abnormal number (greater than 4%) were found to be about 40% in AML (I, II, III, IV, VIII), 60% in CML (I, VII), 30% in MPD other than CML (VII) and 30% in MDS (V). The highest incidences in AML were found in the FAB subtypes possessing the most myeloid differentiation potential i.e. FAB M2 and FAB M4 (IV). In ALL, CLL, HCL, Hodgkin's disease, anaemia not related to leukaemia and leukaemoid reactions the incidences all were 0% (I, unpublished data). The abnormal MPO deficient PMN subpopulation, if present, disappeared when CR was achieved and reappeared when relapse eventually was developed (II, VIII). In both situations serial determinations showed that the change occurred before the usual routine blood examinations predicted CR and relapse; several days and several months prior, respectively (VIII). The probability of obtaining CR was lower in the AML patients with the abnormal subpopulation and the risk of developing relapse higher than in AML patients without the anomaly (II, VIII). These differences were not statistically significant, however. AML patients, showing an increased number of MPO deficient PMN, revealed a statistically significant increased susceptibility to infections (P less than 0.01) during the preremission phase accounting for 18% to 67% of the total number of infections in this period (III). This increase was positively correlated to the extent of the anomaly (P less than 0.002). The spontaneous occurrence of a subpopulation of MPO deficient PMN in MDS went together with a simultaneous progression in cytogenetically determined clonal chromosomal aberrations and were related to progression in FAB subtype as well (VI). Morphometrically MPO deficient PMN were characterized by a decreased total cell size and an increased nucleus size of the projected images (IX).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Myeloperoxidase deficient polymorphonuclear leucocytes in leukaemia and allied disorders. 285 15

PMN elastase is a useful additional parameter in the differential diagnosis of the leukaemias. In all patients with myelocytic leukaemias there were elevated levels of elastase-alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor (E-alpha 1PI), while in the lymphatic leukaemias complexed elastase levels were decreased. The highest values were found in the peripheral blood plasma and bone marrow plasma of patients with CML. Despite high E-alpha 1PI concentrations there were no signs of bleeding or consumption of plasmatic coagulation factors. In AML a wide range of E-alpha 1PI levels was observed, extending from slightly elevated to four hundred-fold increased. In myeloblastic leukaemias without maturation (FAB M 1) the concentrations of complexed elastase remained below 150 ng/ml. In myeloblastic leukaemias with maturation (FAB M2) the E-alpha 1PI values ranged between 214 ng/ml and 850 ng/ml (means = 402 +/- 69), and in myelo-monoblastic leukaemias (FAB M4) between 450 ng/ml and 720 ng/ml (means = 663 +/- 72). The only case of promyelocytic leukaemia (FAB M 3) exhibited an extremely high value of 4,550 ng/ml, while a monocytic leukaemia (FAB M5) showed an extremely low value of 5 ng/ml. During cytostatic therapy there was a rapid decrease in levels of complexed elastase, with E-alpha 1PI values returning to normal in remission. In recidivating cases there was an increase of E-alpha 1PI levels in AML and a decrease in ALL. There was a correlation between the E-alpha 1PI concentrations in peripheral plasma and leukaemic bone marrow infiltration, so providing a good basis for monitoring remission from leukaemia and indicating relapse. It was also interesting to observe an extremely low E-alpha 1PI level (5 ng/ml) in patients with myelodysplasia. Under Decortin/Plenastril therapy the concentration rose to 50 ng/ml. An E-alpha 1PI level of 10 ng per ml was observed in one case of Ranitidine agranulocytosis. Under corticoid therapy the value returned to normal within eight days.
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PMID:The importance of granulocyte elastase in haematological diagnosis. 316 79

A retrospective series of patients with the primary myelodysplastic syndrome has been reviewed and the survival updated. A scoring system is proposed that has advantages in predicting survival outcome. The importance of either dysmegakaryocytopoiesis or dysgranulocytopoiesis is emphasized because of its prognostic impact on leukaemic progression. Over 50 per cent of the patients die from either acute leukaemia or consequences of defective marrow production of granulocytes and platelets. Although only a few cases were included, the RAEB-T group has a very poor outcome and appears much closer to FAB M2 in biologic behaviour than RAEB. Both the criteria for the FAB subtypes and the scoring system can be applied easily in each case of myelodysplasia. Of the 56 patients only 9 were still alive as of April, 1984. Eight of these were in the RA-S and RA categories (or using the scoring system grouping 7 were group 1). All of the 16 patients who progressed to overt AML died within 4 weeks, and none was treated with chemotherapy. Of the remaining 31 patients, half died as a result of infection and/or haemorrhage and the remainder from apparently unrelated causes (cardiovascular, carcinoma, renal failure). These latter deaths are not surprising in light of the median age of 72 years.
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PMID:Modifications in the classification of primary myelodysplastic syndromes: the addition of a scoring system. 385 11

Cytopenias are typical of patients with connective tissue disease (CTD) and are usually related to autoimmune phenomena. In some cases, cytopenia may be the result of treatment with cytotoxic agents. Although multi-drug therapy is known to produce myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) and acute myeloid leukemia (AML) in patients with CTD, treatment with single-agent therapy, particularly methotrexate, has rarely been associated with secondary MDS or AML. Blood and marrow samples were studied from 3 men and 5 women with rheumatoid arthritis (5 cases), Behcet's disease (2 cases), and systemic lupus erythematosus (1 case) developing MDS or AML after methotrexate (5 cases), chlorambucil (2 cases), and cytoxan (1 case). The durations of CTD ranged from less than 6 months to more than 10 years. Five patients (63%) presented with MDS including refractory anemia (RA), refractory thrombocytopenia (RT), refractory anemia with excess blasts (RAEB), chronic myelomonocytic leukemia (CMML), and RAEB in transformation. Patients with RT, CMML, and RAEB in transformation developed AML. Of six patients presenting with or developing AML, four had AML with differentiation (FAB M2), one acute myelomonocytic leukemia (FAB M4), and one M4Eo. Inv 16 was seen in the M4Eo and t(8;21) in one case of M2. Four of six patients are alive up to 6 years after diagnosis of AML. One of three patients with MDS is alive 6 months after diagnosis of MDS. Cytopenias in patients with CTD may be due to therapy-related MDS or AML occurring in a setting of single-agent chemotherapy, including methotrexate.
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PMID:Myelodysplastic syndromes and acute myeloid leukemia in connective tissue disease after single-agent chemotherapy. 892 81

The translocation (6;9)(p23;q34) is a rare cytogenetic aberration found in patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML). The clinical, morphologic, and immunophenotypic findings of eight t(6;9) acute leukemias are described. The patients included six men and two women with a mean age of 38.5 years. The leukemias were classified in the French-American-British (FAB) system as AML FAB M2 in four cases and as FAB M4 in four cases. Underlying myelodysplasia was evident in six cases. Bone marrow basophilia was found at presentation in six of the seven cases studied. In two cases with basophilia, darkly stained granules were also present in many eosinophils. In one case, initial basophilia was absent, but was present at relapse, as were eosinophils containing darkly stained granules. Iron stains were available in five cases; four showed increased incorporation and three had ringed sideroblasts. All cases studied by flow cytometry (six at presentation and three at relapse) expressed CD13, CD33, and human leukocyte antigen-DR. At presentation, five cases were CD34 negative. In one case at presentation, a subset of blasts (18%) weakly expressed CD34. Three cases studied at relapse were positive for CD34. Two of seven cases studied were terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase positive. The t(6;9)(p23;q34) was the only cytogenetic abnormality in five cases. Trisomy 8 was found in two cases, and ring 12 was present in one case. Three patients are living with refractory leukemia 6 weeks to 6 months after initial diagnosis, and three patients died of complications of allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. Only one patient is alive without evidence of disease 3 years after bone marrow transplantation. t(6;9) leukemia is an unusual type of AML that is associated with poor prognosis, early age of onset, basophilia, myelodysplasia with frequent ringed sideroblasts, and a CD34-negative initial phenotype.
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PMID:Acute myeloid leukemia with t(6;9) (p23;q34): association with myelodysplasia, basophilia, and initial CD34 negative immunophenotype. 912 11

Myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) in childhood is considered to be very rare and detailed pathobiological data are scarce. More biological information regarding MDS in children is clearly needed and in vitro culture studies provide one possibility for gaining further pathophysiological insights into this malignancy. Here, we incubated bone marrow samples from 30 children with MDS in liquid suspension culture in order to grow the transformed cells in vitro. In most cultures, the hematopoietic cells died quickly and only fibroblastic (stromal) background layers proliferated temporarily; several normal Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-transformed B-lymphoblastoid cell lines (B-LCL) were established. Only in one instance, albeit from the peripheral blood and not from the bone marrow, could we establish a cell line, termed MUTZ-1, from the malignant cells of a 5-year-old girl with MDS (FAB subtype refractory anemia with excess of blasts). The MDS arose from a pre-existing Fanconi anemia and progressed quickly to an acute myeloid leukemia (FAB M2). Despite positivity for EBV, MUTZ-1 is not an EBV + B-LCL and further characterization of MUTZ-1 confirmed the derivation from the transformed clonal cells. Immunophenotyping showed a pre B-cell surface marker profile (CD10+ CD19+ cytoplasmic IgM+); receptor gene rearrangement analyses underlined the clonal B-cell nature of MUTZ-1 cells. MUTZ-1 cells exhibit a highly rearranged, unstable karyotype with a high frequency of spontaneous chromatid breaks and exchanges; del(5q) and additional rearrangements involving chromosome 5 [der(15)t(5;15)] were detected. The present data and results from a few other MDS-derived cell lines suggest that the transforming event in MDS seems to occur in an immature pluripotent progenitor cell. The new MDS-derived continuous cell line MUTZ-1 provides a useful in vitro model system for studies on the pathogenetic events leading to MDS.
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PMID:In vitro culture studies of childhood myelodysplastic syndrome: establishment of the cell line MUTZ-1. 916 45

Partial tandem duplications of the MLL gene have been associated with trisomy 11 in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and recently, have also been reported for karyotypically normal AML. In order to test the incidence and prognostic importance of this molecular marker, we have analyzed eight cases of AML with trisomy 11 and 387 unselected consecutive cases with AML for partial duplications of the MLL gene. Patients with normal karyotypes and those with various chromosome aberrations were included. De novo as well as secondary leukemias including all FAB subtypes were analyzed. Performing a one-step RT-PCR with 35 cycles using an exon 9 forward primer and an exon 3 reverse primer partial tandem duplications of the MLL gene were demonstrated in 3/8 (37.5%) patients with trisomy 11. In addition, 13/387 (3.4%) of unselected cases revealed a tandem duplication. Ten of these 13 cases were cytogenetically normal, the other three cases had < or =2 additional chromosomal alterations. Sequencing of the RT-PCR products of all 16 positive cases revealed fusions of MLL exon 9/exon 3 (e9/e3) (six cases), e10/e3 (three cases), e11/e3 (four cases) or combinations of differentially spliced e10/e3 and e11/e3 (three cases) transcripts. The duplications were confirmed by genomic long range PCR and Southern blot hybridization. Twelve cases with the MLL duplication were de novo myeloid leukemia, one was a secondary AML after MDS, three were therapy-related AML (t-AML). Of the 16 MLL-duplication positive cases, seven were classified as FAB M2, two as M1, five as M4, one as M0, one as M5b. The mean age was 62.3 years for patients with MLL duplication vs 50.3 years for the control group. Of 15 adult patients, 12 received treatment. Of these, three were nonresponders, five had early relapse (< or =6 months), four relapsed between 7 and 12 months. Median survival and relapse-free interval of the MLL duplication positive group was significantly worse than those of an age-matched karyotypically normal control group. In conclusion, MLL tandem duplications (1) are less common than previously reported; (2) are preferentially observed in AML with normal karyotypes, but can also be found in the presence of chromosome alterations; (3) are not strongly associated with an FAB subtype; (4) were not observed with the prognostically favorable t(8;21), inv(16), and t(15;17), other recurrent translocations, or in complex karyotypes; and (5) identifies a subgroup of patients with an unfavorable prognosis.
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PMID:Screening for MLL tandem duplication in 387 unselected patients with AML identify a prognostically unfavorable subset of AML. 1080 9

A t(11;20)(p15;q11) is a rare but recurrent chromosomal aberration, reported in one case of polycythemia vera and a few cases of de novo acute myelocytic leukemia (AML) and therapy-related myelodysplastic syndrome (t-MDS). In t-MDS cases, the translocation resulted in the NUP98/TOP1 fusion transcript. The NUP98 gene has been suggested as the target for therapy-related malignancies. The reciprocal TOP1/NUP98 chimera, however, has not yet been encountered. We report a further case of de novo AML, subtype M2 in the French-American-British (FAB) classification, in which the reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) revealed the NUP98/TOP1 chimera and also, for the first time, its reciprocal TOP1/NUP98. The literature review disclosed that, among six cases of de novo AML with t(11;20), the NUP98 gene was shown to be involved in one case and the NUP98/TOP1 chimera was detected in another. The translocation seems to be frequently associated with the FAB M2 subtype, younger age, hyperleukocytosis, and poor prognosis; thus, this translocation may identify a subset of not-therapy-related AML patients with shared clinical features.
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PMID:A t(11;20)(p15;q11) may identify a subset of nontherapy-related acute myelocytic leukemia. 1503 93

A Native American-Indian female presenting with anemia and thrombocytosis was diagnosed with myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS, refractory anemia). Over the course of 5 years she developed cytopenias and periods of leukocytosis with normal bone marrow (BM) blast counts, features of an unclassifiable MDS/MPS syndrome. The patient ultimately progressed to acute myelogenous leukemia (AML, FAB M2) and had a normal karyotype throughout her course. The episodes of leukocytosis were associated with infectious complications. Transformation to AML was characterized by a BM blast percentage of 49%. Peripheral blood and BM samples were obtained for serum protein analysis and gene expression profiling (GEP) to elucidate her disease process. An ELISA assay of the serum analyzed approximately 80 cytokines, which demonstrated that hepatocyte growth factor/scatter factor and insulin-like growth factor binding protein 1 were markedly elevated compared to normal. GEP demonstrated a unique "tumor molecular profile," which included overexpression of oncogenes (HOXA9, N-MYC, KOC1), proliferative genes (PAWR, DLG5, AKR1C3), invasion/metastatic genes (FN1, N-CAM-1, ITGB5), pro-angiogenesis genes (c-Kit), and down regulation of tumor suppressor genes (SUI1, BARD1) and anti-apoptotic genes (PGLYRP, SERPINB2, MPO). Hence, a biomics approach has provided insight into elucidating disease mechanisms, molecular prognostic factors, and discovery of novel targets for therapeutic intervention.
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PMID:Transcriptosome and serum cytokine profiling of an atypical case of myelodysplastic syndrome with progression to acute myelogenous leukemia. 1683 25


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