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)

Trisomy 13 occurring as a sole cytogenetic abnormality has recently been demonstrated to have adverse prognostic significance in acute leukemia. Trisomy 13 is seen primarily in an older male population, and has been reported in treatment-associated acute leukemia and acute leukemia evolved from myelodysplastic syndromes, as well as in de novo leukemia. The 36 cases of acute leukemia with trisomy 13 reported to date include 26 AML, 6 AUL, 2 ALL and 2 mixed lineage patients. Immunophenotyping studies have demonstrated an undifferentiated phenotype or biphenotypic markers in most cases. Trisomy 13 is associated with a low complete remission rate and with brief remission duration. The role of the additional copy of chromosome 13 in the pathogenesis of these cases of acute leukemia and the gene(s) of importance on chromosome 13 are yet to be determined.
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PMID:Trisomy 13 in acute leukemia. 147 19

The translocation (6;9)(p23;q34) is mainly found in specific subtypes of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS). The diagnosis of this translocation is not easy since the cytogenetic change is quite subtle. The two genes involved in this translocation were recently isolated and diagnosis at the DNA-level became an additional option. Both the dek gene on chromosome 6 and the can gene on chromosome 9 contain one specific intron where breakpoints of t(6;9) patients were found to cluster. The translocation results in a consistent chimeric dek-can mRNA which is generated from the 6p- derivative. Five centers participated in a study to estimate the incidence of t(6;9) in leukemic patients using conventional Southern blot analysis. Patients (n = 320) with either acute undifferentiated leukemia (AUL), AML, MDS or acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) were screened for rearrangement of the genes involved in this translocation. Four of these 320 patients showed rearrangement of the can gene on chromosome 9, of which one also had a rearranged dek gene on chromosome 6. A further 20 patients were studied with karyotypic aberrations in which either the short arm of chromosome 6 or the long arm of chromosome 9 were specifically involved. Both conventional Southern blot analysis and contour-clamped homogeneous electric field (CHEF) analysis failed to show dek-can rearrangement in any of these patients. The results of our study indicate that the incidence of the t(6;9) is a low as reported based on cytogenetic data and that rearrangement of the dek and can genes is mainly restricted to this specific translocation.
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PMID:Dek-can rearrangement in translocation (6;9)(p23;q34). 160 86

Four patients with acute leukemia displayed trisomy 13 as the primary chromosome abnormality. The two patients with acute nonlymphocytic leukemia FAB-type M1 (ANLL-M1) had the karyotypes 47,XY,+13/48,XY,+13,+13 and 47,XX,+13, a patient with the hypogranular form of ANLL M3 had 47,XX,+13, and the fourth patient, who had acute undifferentiated leukemia (AUL), had the karyotype 47,XY,+13/48,XY,+8,+13. Including these four cases, a total of 24 hematologic neoplasms with an extra chromosome 13 as the sole aberration have now been reported. Except for the AUL, all have been of myeloid origin--20 ANLL, one myelodysplastic syndrome, and two chronic myeloproliferative disorders. Trisomy 13 as the sole acquired karyotypic abnormality therefore seems to be strongly associated with myeloid differentiation of the neoplastic cells and with a differentiation block leading to acute leukemia.
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PMID:Trisomy 13 as a primary chromosome aberration in acute leukemia. 174 68

Trisomy 21 as an acquired clonal chromosome change has been described in 642 of the 10,625 human neoplasms with chromosome aberrations known from the cytogenetic literature. A total of 590 of the 642 cases (92%) are hematologic disorders and malignant lymphomas. The incidence of trisomy 21 is similar (4.1%-6.7%) in acute myeloid leukemia (AML), chronic myeloid leukemia, myeloproliferative disorders, myelodysplastic syndromes, chronic lymphoproliferative disorders, and malignant lymphomas; it is substantially higher (14.8%) in acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL). In most cases, the extra chromosome 21 is present together with other numerical and/or structural changes. Acquired trisomy 21 is the only karyotypic abnormality in only 0.4%. Trisomy 21 has never been reported as the sole anomaly in a solid tumor. The cytogenetic literature contains information on 62 patients with constitutional trisomy 21 and a malignant disorder in which the tumor cells have been analyzed by banding techniques. Thirty-four of the 62 patients had AML, 16 had ALL, and 2 had acute undifferentiated leukemia. The 52 leukemic Down syndrome (DS) cases account for 1.4% of the total acute leukemias, an overrepresentation that parallels the generally increased risk of leukemia development in DS. Sixty-three percent of the ALL patients and 79% of those with AML had additional changes superimposed on constitutional trisomy 21. These included several of the characteristic primary leukemia-associated aberrations: 5q-, 7q-, +8, and t(8;21) in AML, and t(1;19), t(4;11), 6q-, and 14q + in ALL. Thus, it seems that the pattern of acquired karyotypic changes is similar in patients with DS and in individuals with a normal constitutional karyotype.
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PMID:Trisomy 21 in neoplastic cells. 214 59

Two cases of myelodysplastic syndrome in the dog are described. Both cases were characterized by hepatomegaly, cytopenias, macrocytosis, cellular bone marrow, and dysplastic changes in all hematopoietic cell lines. Serum vitamin B12 and folic acid concentrations were within reference ranges in one dog, but vitamin B12 was slightly decreased in the other. Vitamin B12 therapy did not result in amelioration of the hematologic disorder. The duration of illness was approximately 5 months. Necropsy of one dog revealed an acute undifferentiated leukemia.
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PMID:Myelodysplastic syndrome in two dogs. 406 60

Bone marrow smears of 263 protocol patients with acute nonlymphoblastic leukemia (ANLL) and related disorders treated between 1970 and 1978 at MSKCC were reviewed blindly by two pairs of hematomorphologists and classified according to the FAB system. It was found necessary to add one category (MO) for acute undifferentiated leukemia and to define more precise quantitative criteria for the categories M1-M6 based on bone marrow differential counts. Using this modified FAB classification, agreement between the two observer groups based on morphology alone was 69%. Cytochemical stains were essential in establishing the diagnosis in 9%, led to a change of diagnosis by one observer team in 14%, and helped to confirm the diagnosis in 32% of cases. Complete remission rates, remission duration, and survival were not significantly different among diagnostic categories. Myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS: M6, RAEB, CMML; CR rate 48%) and ANLL without differentiation (M0, M1, M5a; CR rate 50%) appeared to do less well than ANLL with partial differentiation (M2, M3, M4, M5b; CR rate 59%) on all three protocols studied. Auer rods were present in 53% of all cases with 63% in the myeloid categories (M1-M4). Auer rods were found to be the single most important prognostic parameter in this study, with a complete remission (CR) rate of 68% in the Auer-rod-positive and of 40% in the Auer-rod-negative group (p < 0.0001). Survival was significantly longer for patients exhibiting Auer rods (p < 0.0002). Median survival for the total group was 13.5 mo and median remission duration for responders was 11.5 mo in the Auer-rod-positive group compared to 6.2 mo median survival and 9.2 mo median remission duration for the Auer-rod-negative group.
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PMID:Morphological classification, response to therapy, and survival in 263 adult patients with acute nonlymphoblastic leukemia. 693 77

We evaluated the in vitro proliferative response to exogenous IL-1 beta in terms of tritiated thymidine (3H-TdR) incorporation in leukemic cells obtained from 119 patients with various types of acute leukemia. The content of IL-1 beta in leukemic cells was measured by enzyme-amplified sensitivity immunoassay. We observed a significant proliferative response to exogenous IL-1 beta in leukemic cells from 27/66 patients with de novo AML, 1/29 patients with ALL, 2/3 patients with AUL, 8/12 patients with AML arising from MDS, 4/7 patients with myeloid crisis of CML, and 0/4 patients with lymphoid crisis of CML. Proliferation was marked in myeloid leukemic cells of a more premature stem cell origin. There were no significant differences in proliferative responses among the different FAB classes of de novo AML. The IL-1 beta content of leukemic cells was low in patients with lymphoid leukemia, but there was no significant difference among the various types of myeloid leukemia. There was no correlation between the proliferative response to exogenous IL-1 beta and the IL-1 beta content of leukemic cells. When we correlated the proliferative response to exogenous IL-1 beta with treatment outcome in patients with de novo AML, we found the rate of complete remission (CR) to be lower in those with a high proliferative response. We noted a longer duration of CR (p = 0.07) and of survival (p < 0.05) in patients with a low proliferative response. Thus, a high proliferative response to IL-1 beta in the cells of AML patients may indicate a poor prognosis.
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PMID:Interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta) and acute leukemia: in vitro proliferative response to IL-1 beta, IL-1 beta content of leukemic cells and treatment outcome. 783 16

In 67 cases of newly diagnosed blood malignancies, NonT-ALL, T-ALL, AMLL, AML, CML, CLL, HCL, PLL, MDS, B splenic lymphoma, AUL, as well as in 9 cell lines (U937, HEL, Jurkat, HL60, UHKT2, KG1, Raji, K562, REH), we have analysed the expression and distribution of 2 relatively incompletely studied antigenic markers from the CD nomenclature: CDw12 and CD17, individually and in combination with well characterized ones. We present our data for the usefulness of these molecules in immunodiagnosis of leukemias and lymphomas.
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PMID:Expression of CDw12 and CD17 cell surface antigens on leukemic cells from patients with blood malignancies. 815 32

To help elucidate the mechanism responsible for graft failure (GF) following a T-cell depleted bone marrow transplant (BMT) from an unrelated donor, five patients (2 chronic myelogenous leukemia, 1 acute undifferentiated leukemia, 2 myelodysplastic syndrome) who experienced this complication were studied. All patients were HLA class I identical with their donors as determined by serology and one-dimensional isoelectric focusing (IEF); two were serologically matched with their donors for HLA class II antigens, whereas three donor-recipient pairs were serologically mismatched for one HLA-DR antigen. All patients received total body irradiation (fractionated, 1,500 rads), VP-16 (750 mg/m2), and cyclophosphamide (120 mg/kg) pre-BMT and antithymocyte globulin (15 mg/kg every other day) and methylprednisolone (2 mg/kg) post-BMT. Three patients experienced primary nonengraftment and two experienced secondary GF. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells obtained from the patients at the time of GF were studied to examine their functional and phenotypic characteristics. Emerging cells were of host origin and were found to be specifically cytotoxic to donor target cells and suppressive to the in vitro growth of donor BM, especially in the cases of primary nonengraftment. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells from these patients were expanded to form T-cell lines (TcLs). The cytotoxic activities of TcLs were tested in the presence of blocking MoAbs directed against various HLA determinants in an attempt to determine if HLA antigens expressed on donor cells were the target for cytotoxicity. The observed cytotoxic activity was blocked by antibodies to HLA-B, -C (1 patient), HLA-DR (1 patient), and HLA-DQ (1 patient). In two cases, antidonor cytotoxicity could not be blocked by MoAb directed against HLA-A, -B, -C, or -DR. Phenotypic characterization of four successfully maintained TcLs showed 100% CD3+ cells with 100% CD4+ (3 patients) or 50% CD4+/50% CD8+ (1 patient). In two of the three patients with 100% CD4+ cells, antidonor cytotoxicity was blocked by an anti-HLA class II MoAb. In contrast to our previous findings in cases of GF following T-cell-depleted HLA nonidentical family member BMT in which host T cells were CD8+ and cytotoxicity was directed against HLA class I antigens, our present study indicates host T cells emerging at the time of GF following BMT from an HLA class I IEF-identical unrelated donor can be of the CD4+ subset and seem to be capable of recognizing antigenic disparities in the HLA class II region.
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PMID:Characterization of cells emerging at the time of graft failure after bone marrow transplantation from an unrelated marrow donor. 833 33

Thirty-two hematologic malignancies--nine with cytogenetically identified 12p abnormalities and 23 with whole or partial losses of chromosome 12--were selected for fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) investigations of 12p. These analyses revealed structural 12p changes, such as translocations, deletions, insertions, inversions and amplification, in 20 cases. ETV6 rearrangements were detected in three acute leukemias. One acute undifferentiated leukemia had t(4;12)(q12;p13) as the sole anomaly. The second case, an acute myeloid leukemia (AML), displayed complex abnormalities involving, among others, chromosomes 9 and 12. The third case, also an AML, had an insertion of the distal part of ETV6 into chromosome arm 11q and into multiple ring chromosomes, which also contained chromosome 11 material, resulting in an amplification of a possible fusion gene. The fusion partners in these cases remain to be identified. Thirty-one additional breakpoints on 12p could be characterized in detail. The majority of these breaks were shown to result in interchromosomal rearrangements, possibly indicating the location of hitherto unrecognized genes of importance in the pathogenesis of hematologic malignancies. The FISH analyses disclosed terminal or interstitial 12p deletions in 18 cases. Seven myeloid malignancies showed deletions restricted to a region, including ETV6 and CDKN1B, which has been reported to be frequently lost in leukemias. In four cases, the deletions involved both these genes, whereas two AML displayed loss of CDKN1B but not ETV6, supporting previously reported findings indicating a region of deletion not including this gene. However, one myelodysplastic syndrome lacked one copy of ETV6 but not CDKN1B. Hence, we suggest a minimal region of deletion on 12p located between the ETV6 and CDKN1B genes.
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PMID:Fluorescence in situ hybridization analyses of hematologic malignancies reveal frequent cytogenetically unrecognized 12p rearrangements. 952 34


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