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

An 83-year-old male was admitted to our hospital because of pancytopenia and low grade fever on April 19, 1993. On admission, hematological data were as follows: WBC 1,000/microliters with 19% neutrophils, RBC 367 x 10(4)/microliters, Hb 9.5 g/dl and platelets 6.7 x 10(4)/microliters. Bone marrow examination revealed 6.6% myeloblasts and 33.5% erythroblasts. Morphological abnormalities included hypersegmentation, degranulation and pseudo-Pelger's nuclear anomaly in neutrophils. Based on these findings the diagnosis of refractory anemia with excess of blasts (RAEB) of the myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) was made and therapy with low dose Cytarabine (Ara-C) was initiated in April 1993. The patient had two episodes of severe pneumonia in June and July. Therefore, 75 micrograms/day of G-CSF was given in addition to antibiotic therapy for the second episode of infection in July. Thereafter the severe infection subsided, and G-CSF administration was switched to an intermittent schedule (75 micrograms twice a week) since September. Cytarabine ocfosfate (100 mg/day) was added for 10-14 days at interval 1-2 months from October,1993. He has been well with no episode of infection for more than two year. One major concern regarding the clinical application of G-CSF in MDS patients is related to the possible stimulation of leukemic cell proliferation. Frequent hematological monitoring is necessary in patients with RAEB who are prone to develop acute myeloid leukemia. However, we administered G-CSF at a relatively low dose twice a week for over two year and could successfully prevent infections without inducing the leukemic changes.
...
PMID:[Prevention of infections in a case with myelodysplastic syndrome by an intermittent subcutaneous administration of G-CSF]. 869 1

We report a patient with poor-prognosis myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) after successful treatment of lymphoma, who was given an allogeneic BMT, engrafted and achieved complete remission, but later had a relapse of his MDS with complete disappearance of donor haemopoiesis. After two episodes of CMV pneumonia and continued prophylactic use of ganciclovir thereafter, he experienced a spontaneous complete disappearance of all signs of MDS, including myelofibrosis, and a complete return to donor haemopoiesis. This case is the first one to suggest a graft-versus-leukaemia effect (GVL) in MDS patients. It depicts the complex relationship between GVL, graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) and graft rejection. It could also constitute a clinical illustration of the possible antileukaemic effect of CMV infection and its treatment with ganciclovir.
...
PMID:Spontaneous complete remission and recovery of donor haemopoiesis without GVHD after relapse and apparent marrow graft rejection in poor-prognosis myelodysplastic syndrome. 879 Jan 50

An unusual case of Werner's syndrome with myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) in a 63-year-old male is reported. He was transferred to our hospital for evaluation of pancytopenia in August 1994. He had surgery for cataracts at age 47. On admission, his weight was 39 kg and his height was 148 cm. He looked pale, had thin limbs, a bird-like face, loss of hair, a hoarse voice, and atrophic skin with ulcers. A complete blood count showed: hemoglobin 8.7 g/dl; platelet count 1.5 x 10(4)/microliters; and white blood cell count 2,900/microliters with 3% blasts. A bone marrow aspiration revealed hypercellularity with 11.8% blasts and trilineage myelodysplasia. A diagnosis of RAEB was made according to the FAB classification. Cytogenetic analysis of the bone marrow cells revealed multiple aberrations such as 44, XY, -3, -5, add (4) (q?31), add(6) (p2?), del(7) (q22), add(10) (q24), del(12) (q?), add(14) (q32), -15, -16, -17, + mar1, +mar2, +mar3. He died of pneumonia on day 11. Although approximately 700 cases (about 300 cases in Japan) of Werner's syndrome have been reported, the occurrence of hematopoietic malignancies in Werner's syndrome is rare, and the literature includes 8 cases of leukemia and 4 cases of MDS.
...
PMID:[Myelodysplastic syndrome with multiple chromosome aberrations in a patient with Werner's syndrome]. 882 85

Two familial cases of myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) are reported, one of whom had an abnormal karyotype of 45, XY, -7 (monosomy 7). Case 1 was a 60-year-old woman developed dizziness and nasal bleeding. She was treated with blood transfusion alone. About 11 months after diagnosis, she died of pneumonia. Case 2 was a 22 year-old man, who was the son of case 1, developed febrile disease because of recurrent skin and oral mucosa infections. He had a partial response to low-dose of cytarabine. Thirteen months after diagnosis, he died of severe pneumonia. Both cases were diagnosed as having refractory anemia with excess of blasts due to peripheral blood and bone marrow findings. Both patients had pancytopenia, erythroid hyperplasia in bone marrow, marked dyserythropoiesis, recurrent infectious diseases and severe pneumonia that resulted in death. These symptoms resembled to those reported for monosomy 7 syndrome. Familial MDS with monosomy 7 is rarely reported. These cases are of interest to investigate hereditary factors of MDS.
...
PMID:[Myelodysplastic syndrome developed in a mother and her son whose bone marrow karyotype showed monosomy 7]. 884 1

Intensive chemotherapy has improved the prognosis of patients with AML. The success rate of relapse treatment correlates with the length of first remission. Thus early relapses and primarily refractory diseases have a grave prognosis. New chemotherapeutic regimens could be useful for those patients. Patients treated for newly diagnosed or relapsed AML with polychemotherapy regimen of the AML-BFM-studies containing induction, consolidation and high-dose cytarabine combined with mitoxantrone (HAM) and relapsed within 2 up to 31 months after the first CR entered a pilot trial, the so called IDA-FLAG regimen. This regimen includes G-CSF (day 0 up to ANC > 1000/microliter, 400 micrograms/m2.d), fludarabine (day 1-4, 30 mg/m2.d), high-dose cytarabine (day 1-4, 2000 mg/m2.d) and idarubicin (day 2-4, 12 mg/m2.d). 10 patients aged 1,8 to 28,1 years (mean = 9,6 years) having the first (n = 8) or second relapse (n = 1) of AML or an acute blastcrisis of myelodysplastic syndrome (n = 1) (FAB classification: M1/M2 = 3, M4/M5 = 5, M7 = 1, CMML = 1) received 14 courses. Overall, 7 patients achieved CR with a mean duration of 8,9 months (1-22 months), one patient showed a partial remission and two were nonresponders. 4 patients are in continuous CR for 7,5 to 22 months (mean = 13,2 months). 3 patients got a bone marrow transplantation (allogenic = 2, autologous = 1) in CR following this treatment. Toxicity was considerable, mainly bone marrow aplasia with leucopenia < 1000/microliter for 15 to 40 days (mean = 26,1 days), neutropenia < 500/microliter for 14 to 39 days (mean = 26,0 days) and thrombocytopenia < 30,000/microliter for 14 to 90 days (mean = 36,5 days). Further important side effects were fever, mucositis and pneumonia. One patient died from an fulminant aspergillus sepsis during long-term neutropenia. The sequential administration of G-CSF, fludarabine, cytarabine and idarubicin is effective in treatment of relapsed AML in childhood and an advisable option prior to allogenic or autologous bone marrow transplantation. With regard to the unfavorable prognosis of relapsed or refractory AML the toxicity of this regimen seems acceptable.
...
PMID:[IDA-FLAG (idarubicin, fludarabine, high dosage cytarabine and G-CSF)--an effective therapy regimen in treatment of recurrent acute myelocytic leukemia in children and adolescents. Initial results of a pilot study]. 892 88

We analyzed the 67 of 278 patients with newly-diagnosed AML or 'high-risk' MDS, treated in 1994 and 1995, who developed pneumonia during course 1 of their induction therapy. Pneumonia responded to treatment in 66%, but outcome depended on when pneumonia was diagnosed. Patients with pneumonia diagnosed during week 1 or 2 (group 2 patients) had the lowest response rate (43%). Patients who developed pneumonia in the 3rd week after treatment initiation had the best outcome with all 16 patients recovering. Patients presenting with pneumonia had an intermediate response rate (75%). The different patient groups were comparable with regard to age, underlying disease, prophylactic therapy, and G-CSF application. Although a lower CR rate was not entirely responsible for the lower response rate in group 2, failure to achieve CR predicted unsuccessful treatment of pneumonia in all groups. Fungal pathogens appeared more common in group 2 patients. However, in these patients, administration of amphotericin B was associated with a significantly higher failure rate (15/21 failures vs 2/9 who received no amphotericin B). We conclude that patients who develop pneumonia during week 1 or 2 are a high-risk group, and that use of amphotericin B indicates a particularly poor prognosis, although we present data suggesting that earlier use of amphotericin might be beneficial. Furthermore, since achievement of CR was an important prognostic factor in all groups, WBC transfusions particularly from donors given G-CSF should be considered as a therapeutic option. Finally, since time to failure of induction therapy and time to CR were similar in high-risk patients, new chemotherapy regimens could potentially improve both the CR rate and the outcome of pneumonia.
...
PMID:Pneumonia during remission induction chemotherapy in patients with AML or MDS. 894 24

A 46-year-old man with Werner's syndrome was admitted with epigastralgia and body weight loss. The peripheral blood findings showed anemia, thrombocytosis and eosinophilia. Bone marrow aspiration and biopsy revealed increases in eosinophils and megakaryocytes, myelodysplastic change with 6.6% myeloblast, and myelofibrosis. Chromosomal analysis revealed 46, XY, +der(1;7), -7, del(20). He was diagnosed as having myelodysplastic syndrome with myelofibrosis or essential thrombocythemia. Three months later, pancytopenia appeared with a relative increase of blasts positive for CD41 and negative for myeloperoxidase. He died of respiratory failure due to pneumonia. An autopsy revealed severe myelofibrosis with proliferation of megakaryocytes and blasts. A final diagnosis of acute megakaryoblastic leukemia was made. Werner's syndrome is rare, and it is even more unusual to have the complication of acute leukemia with der (1;7) seen in this case.
...
PMID:[Werner's syndrome developing acute megakaryoblastic leukemia with der(1;7)]. 902 58

One hundred nineteen patients with relapsed or refractory Hodgkin's disease (HD) received high-dose therapy followed by autologous hematopoietic progenitor cell transplantation. Three preparatory regimens, selected on the basis of prior therapy and pulmonary status, were employed. Twenty-six patients without a history of prior chest or pelvic irradiation were treated with fractionated total body irradiation, etoposide (VP) 60 mg/kg and cyclophosphamide (Cy) 100 mg/kg. Seventy-four patients received BCNU 15 mg/kg with identical doses of VP and Cy. A group of 19 patients with a limited diffusing capacity or history of pneumonitis received a novel high-dose regimen consisting of CCNU 15 mg/kg, VP 60 mg/kg and Cy 100 mg/kg. Twenty-nine patients (24%) had failed induction therapy and 35 (29%) had progressive HD within 1 year of initial chemotherapy. At 4 years actuarial survival was 52%, event-free survival was 48% and freedom from progression (FFP) was 62%. No significant differences were seen in survival data with the three preparatory regimens. Six patients died within 100 days of transplantation and 5 died at a later date of transplant-related complications. Secondary malignancies have developed in 6 patients, including myelodysplasia/leukemia in four patients and solid tumors in two patients. Regression analysis identified systemic symptoms at relapse, disseminated pulmonary or bone marrow disease at relapse and more than minimal disease at the time of transplantation as significant prognostic factors for overall and event-free survival and FFP. Patients with none of these factors enjoyed an 85% FFP at 4 years compared with 41% for patients with one or more unfavorable prognostic factors (P = .0001). Our results confirm the efficacy of high-dose therapy and autografting in recurrent or refractory HD. Although longer follow-up is necessary to address ultimate cure rates and toxicity, our data indicate that a desire to reduce late effects should drive future research efforts in favorable patients whereas new initiatives are needed for those with less favorable prognoses.
...
PMID:High-dose therapy and autologous hematopoietic progenitor cell transplantation for recurrent or refractory Hodgkin's disease: analysis of the Stanford University results and prognostic indices. 902 11

Twenty-five transfusion-dependent myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) patients (with < 20% blasts) were treated in a phase II study with antithymocyte globulin (ATG) at 40 mg/kg/d for four doses and then followed with blood counts every 2 weeks and clinic visits every 3 months, for a median of 14 months (range 1-38 months). 11 (44%) patients responded and became transfusion-independent after ATG, including three complete responses, six partial responses, and two minimal responses. Responses were observed in 9/14 patients (64%) with refractory anaemia (RA) and 2/6 patients (33%) with refractory anaemia with excess blasts (RAEB). Median response duration was 10 months (range 3-38 months). The Kaplan-Meier estimate of overall survival was 84% at 38 months, with one early death due to pneumonia and two deaths from disease progression to leukaemia. Side-effects consisted mainly of mild serum sickness in all patients. A single course of ATG restored haemopoiesis in some patients with MDS and was well tolerated.
...
PMID:Antithymocyte globulin for patients with myelodysplastic syndrome. 940 Oct 87

A 37-year-old female highly alloimmunized by multiple transfusions received a sex matched HLA-identical unrelated bone marrow transplant for hypoplastic MDS-RA with moderate myelofibrosis. Conditioning consisted of total body irradiation, cyclophosphamide and ATG, GVHD prophylaxis consisted of CsA, MTX and prednisolone. The CD34+ stem cell content of the first graft was relatively low due to an inadequate harvest. The patient appeared not to have engrafted by day 23 post-BMT. She therefore received a second sex mismatched HLA-identical unrelated bone marrow graft on day 25 after two days of 3.5 mg/kg methylprednisolone from a different donor. Over the ensuing days, the first marrow showed slow engraftment followed by engraftment of the second graft. The first graft was then rejected, as monitored by peripheral blood studies of chimerism. No signs of acute GVHD were observed. Despite successful trilineage engraftment and complete second donor chimerism, the patient died from disseminated toxoplasmosis encephalitis and pneumonia on day +104.
...
PMID:Second unrelated bone marrow transplantation without additional conditioning therapy after engraftment failure. 948 60


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>