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)

Bone marrow biopsies from eighty-five patients with different stages of HIV infection were reviewed. Biopsies were generally indicated to evaluate peripheral blood abnormalities, but suspicion of lymphoma and other specific pathologies was another important indication. The histopathological features are described and are often suggestive of HIV infection but non-specific. Hypercellularity (72.9%), dysmyelopoiesis (78.8%), plasma cell hyperplasia (97.7%), lymphoid infiltration (27%) and histiocytosis with or without granulomata (11.7%) were the most striking abnormalities. Other frequent features include: increased stainable iron deposits, venous stasis and serous atrophy (gelatinous transformation). Marrow hypoplasia is rather infrequent (28.2%) and usually a terminal event of AIDS. Bone marrow biopsies revealed opportunistic and neoplastic complications in seven cases, with demonstration of pathogens in four cases (Mycobacterium avium, Cryptoccocus neoformans, Toxoplasma gondii and Leishmania donovanii) and malignant lymphomas in three other cases (one Burkitt's lymphoma and two Hodgkin's disease). Bone marrow biopsy provides useful information for the diagnosis and prognosis of HIV infection and for the diagnosis of complications.
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PMID:[Bone marrow changes at several stages of HIV infection, studied on bone marrow biopsies in 85 patients]. 175 64

The histopathologic changes of bone marrow during infection with the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) are described. Bone marrow biopsies from 73 patients at different stages of HIV-1 infection were studied. Indications for biopsy included peripheral blood abnormalities, suspicion of lymphoma, or search for specific pathogens. Common histopathological features, suggestive of HIV-1 infection but nonpathognomonic were hypercellularity (67%), myelodysplasia (86.1%), plasmacytosis (98.6%), lymphocytic infiltration (31.1%) and histiocytic infiltration with or without granulomata (13.7%). Increases in reticulin fibers (54.7%), and stainable iron deposits, vascular congestion and serous atrophy of fat were frequent features. Opportunistic infections and neoplastic complications were detected in 7 cases: pathogens were demonstrated in 4 cases (Mycobacterium avium intracellulare (MAI), Cryptococcus neoformans, Toxoplasma gondii and Leishmania) and lymphoma in 3 cases (1 Burkitt lymphoma and 2 Hodgkin's disease). Bone marrow hypoplasia is usually a terminal event in AIDS and may be iatrogenic.
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PMID:Bone marrow findings in HIV infection: a pathological study. 210 65

Hematological and cytogenetic characteristics of 75 cases of therapy-related acute non lymphoid leukemia (t-ANLL) occurring in Hodgkin's disease (HD) are analysed in this multi-institution study. Combined radio and chemotherapy had been given in 88 per cent of patients, either as adjuvant (44 per cent) or as salvage modality (44 per cent). Radiotherapy alone and chemotherapy alone had been given in 3 per cent and 9 per cent respectively. Eighty per cent of patients were in remission of HD and 71 per cent off-therapy while developing leukemia. The median latent time from remission of HD to leukemia was 34 months. The myeloblastic variety of leukemia accounted for 43 per cent of total cases; the myelomonocytic and monocytic for 17 per cent and 4 per cent, the promyelocytic and erythroblastic variants for 5 per cent and 7 per cent of t-ANLL. Twenty four per cent of cases were unclassifiable; one of these was TdT-positive. Dysplastic features of erythrocytic line were invariably present with circulating erythroblasts; defects of granulocytes, circulating megathrombocytes and micromegakaryocytes were also present. Bone marrow hypoplasia and marked fibrosis were documented in 47 per cent and 30 per cent of cases. Preleukemia heralded overt leukemia in 73 per cent of cases; 37 per cent had refractory anemia with no excess of blasts; 16 per cent of preleukemias were unclassifiable. Cytogenetics revealed chromosome abnormalities in 83 per cent of cases; 72 per cent presented chromosome 5 and/or 7 monosomy or partial deletion (5q- or 7q-) of the long arm (94 per cent in the combined modality therapy group). In 3 cases, a pure monosomy 7 was observed; in none 5q-alone. Response rate to conventional therapy was 14 per cent; low and high-dose cytarabine were of little benefit. Long-term CR (28 + and 16 + months) was achieved in 2 cases with allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT) as first-line therapy. A better knowledge of t-ANLL in HD and new therapies, including BMT, may improve the prognosis of this late complication of intensive HD treatment.
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PMID:Treatment-related leukemia in Hodgkin's disease: a multi-institution study on 75 cases. 243 31

62 evaluable patients with myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) or acute leukemia were treated with different combinations of low dose ara-C, alpha-interferon (IFN), 1 alpha-hydroxyvitamin D3 (vit D3) and retinoic acid. The aim was to study the efficacy and toxicity of each combination. The overall rate was 44%. Of these, 50% responded favorably to the combination of IFN, vit D3 and retinoic acid (IDR), which was comparable to the response rate of 43% for low-dose ara-C. The results of the IDR treatment may be explained by additive or synergistic effects between the separate drugs in the combination. Ara-C and IDR treatment was generally well-tolerated but interferon gave more side effects than any other drug used in the study. Evaluation of the full combination of ara-C, IFN, vit D3 and retinoic acid was not possible because of toxicity. Marrow hypoplasia was infrequent (5/27 patients) in cases responding favorably to treatment. Complete remissions were not longer than partial remissions or significant responses.
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PMID:Therapeutic effects of low-dose cytosine arabinoside, alpha-interferon, 1 alpha-hydroxyvitamin D3 and retinoic acid in acute leukemia and myelodysplastic syndromes. 337 98

We describe the clinical, cytological and cytogenetic features of 49 cases of myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) in childhood. Three children had received prior cytotoxic treatment (group 1); all of these had cytogenetic abnormalities and died shortly after diagnosis. 22 children had constitutional anomalies (group 2). The remaining 24 MDS were considered as 'primary' (group 3). Hypoplastic marrow was found in nine cases, and only 53% of the MDS fitted the adult FAB classification. Transformation to AML occurred in 11 cases, development of aplastic anaemia in three cases, and spontaneous remission in one case each of RA and RAEB. Differences were observed between groups 2 and 3 in terms of mean age at diagnosis (11.1 months v 5 years), rate of cytogenetic anomalies (15% v 38%) and rate of progression towards acute leukaemia (13% v 29%). In group 2, all the fur girls studied exhibited a polyclonal pattern of X-inactivation, which suggests that MDS may be only the haematological expression of an embryological defect with different target tissues. This study suggests that some MDS in childhood can exhibit particular features such as congenital anomalies associated with MDS, bone marrow hypoplasia, polyclonality, and spontaneous remission. It emphasizes that the FAB classification is not adequate for children and addresses the question of whether these MDS are always malignant diseases.
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PMID:Myelodysplastic syndromes in childhood: report of 49 patients from a French multicentre study. French Society of Paediatric Haematology and Immunology. 885 63

Previous studies in pediatric patients with acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) have suggested that 2-chlorodeoxyadenosine (2CdA) is an effective therapeutic agent. Santana et al (J Clin Oncol 1992; 10: 364-370) reported a CR rate of 8/17 (95% Cl 23-72%) in children with relapsed AML and a median first CR of 21 months. The activity of 2CdA in adults with relapsed or refractory leukemia was therefore investigated in a phase I study. In the phase II study, based on biochemical modulation rationale, 2CdA was combined with Ara-C for adults with relapsed AML to test the effectiveness of this combination therapy. In the phase I study 27 patients (25 AML and two MDS) with a median first CR duration of 21 weeks, received 2CdA at doses ranging from 5 to 13 mg/m2/day by continuous infusion (CI) for 7 days. In vitro and ex vivo pharmacologic studies performed to determine the effect of pretreatment with 2CdA on Ara-CTP accumulation in leukemic blasts demonstrated a 50-65% increase in the rate of Ara-CTP accumulation. Based on this biochemical modulation, 2CdA (12 mg/m2/day x 5 days by CI) was combined with Ara-C (1 g/m2/day over 2 h) in a phase II study. Seventeen patients (15 AML, two MDS) with relapsed AML (median 1st CR of 19 weeks) were treated. In the phase I study two patients died before the day 14 marrow (ED). Marrow hypoplasia developed in 16 of the remaining 25. Leukemic regrowth occurred in nine after a median hypoplastic period of 2 weeks (range 1-3 weeks). The other seven patients died with aplastic marrows, median duration of hypoplasia was 2 weeks, range 1-4 weeks. None achieved CR and the median survival was 10.5 weeks. Toxicity generally was mild except for three late occurring cases of grade III or IV renal dysfunction and two cases of tumor lysis syndrome. The MTD was 10.8 mg/m2/day x 7 days. In the phase II study two patients, both with AML, achieved CR (95% CI 1-33%). In both cases leukemia relapsed after 10 weeks and 17 weeks. There was one ED. Most (11/16) cleared their marrow although leukemic infiltrate regrew in six cases. Toxicity was generally mild, with two episodes of grade 2 GI bleeding, one episode of severe renal dysfunction and one case of grade 2 CNS toxicity. We conclude that as a single agent 2CdA at the MTD is a cytoreductive agent but is not sufficient to achieve CR in adults with relapsed AML. While combination of Ara-C with 2CdA increases the Ara-CTP uptake in these heavily treated patients this regimen does not appear to be an improvement over existing modalities.
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PMID:Clinical and laboratory studies of 2-chlorodeoxyadenosine +/- cytosine arabinoside for relapsed or refractory acute myelogenous leukemia in adults. 884 90

We report on a patient with Fanconi's anemia (FA) who developed a myelodysplastic syndrome (RAEB-T) with complex karyotypic abnormalities (trp 1q23q42, monosomy 20, trisomy 13) at the age of 28. The patient achieved a complete hematological and cytogenetic remission after treatment with sequential high-dose cytosine arabinoside/mitoxantrone followed by G-CSF (5 micrograms/kg). Bone marrow hypoplasia was prolonged with 38 days of granulocytopenia < 500/microliters and 62 days of platelet transfusion dependency. Nonhematological toxicity did not exceed that of patients without underlying FA. Remission duration was 7 months. This observation shows the feasibility of high-dose Ara C treatment in patients with FA and MDS. Although hematopoiesis remained clonal in remission, the suppression of the cytogenetically abnormal clones transiently reversed the antecedent long-lasting pancytopenia.
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PMID:Induction of a hematological and cytogenetic remission in a patient with a myelodysplastic syndrome secondary to Fanconi's anemia employing the S-HAM regimen. 923 12

Thirty patients with malignant pheochromocytoma (PHEO) or paraganglioma (PGL) were treated with high-dose 131I-MIBG. Patients were 11-62 (mean 39) years old: 19 patients males and 11 females. Nineteen patients had PGL, three of which were multifocal. Six PGLs were nonsecretory. Eleven patients had PHEO. All 30 patients had prior surgery. Fourteen patients were refractory to prior radiation or chemotherapy before 131I-MIBG. Peripheral blood stem cells (PBSCs) were collected and cryopreserved. 131I-MIBG was synthesized on-site, by exchange-labeling 131I with 127I-MIBG in a solid-phase Cu2+-catalyzed exchange reaction. 131I-MIBG was infused over 2 h via a peripheral IV. Doses ranged from 557 mCi to 1185 mCi (7.4 mCi/kg to 18.75 mCi/kg). Median dose was 833 mCi (12.55 mCi/kg). Marrow hypoplasia commenced 3 weeks after 131I-MIBG therapy. After the first 131I-MIBG therapy, 19 patients required platelet transfusions; 19 received GCSF; 12 received epoeitin or RBCs. Four patients received a PBSC infusion. High-dose 131I-MIBG resulted in the following overall tumor responses in 30 patients: 4 sustained complete remissions (CRs); 15 sustained partial remissions (PRs); 1 sustained stable disease (SD); 5 progressive disease (PD); 5 initial PRs or SD but relapsed to PD. Twenty-three of the 30 patients remain alive; deaths were from PD (5), myelodysplasia (1), and unrelated cause (1). Overall predicted survival at 5 years is 75% (Kaplan Meier estimate). For patients with metastatic PHEO or PGL, who have good *I-MIBG uptake on diagnostic scanning, high-dose 131I-MIBG therapy was effective in producing a sustained CR, PR, or SD in 67% of patients, with tolerable toxicity.
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PMID:Malignant pheochromocytomas and paragangliomas: a phase II study of therapy with high-dose 131I-metaiodobenzylguanidine (131I-MIBG). 1710 15