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)

This study shows the progression of a myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) to pre-B acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) with an unusual phenotype. On diagnosis of leukaemia bone-marrow mononuclear cells were labelled with murine monoclonal antibodies HLA-DR, VIL-A1 (CALLA), 3813, VIM-D5 and with a rabbit antiserum to TdT using a double colour indirect immunofluorescence technique. In addition simultaneous detection of cytoplasmic mu chains (Cy mu) and of TdT was carried out and a direct immunofluorescence analysis for surface membrane immunoglobulins (SmIg) was performed. Two main populations were present: the major one being HLA-DR+, Cy mu+, VIM-D5+, TdT-, CALLA-, SmIg-; the minor one HLA-DR+, Cy mu+, VIM-D5-, TdT+, CALLA-, SmIg-. The progression of our case to acute leukaemia with a population of leukaemic cells each of which demonstrated features of lymphoid and myeloid cells suggests that MDS would originate at the pluripotential stem cell level.
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PMID:Progression of a myelodysplastic syndrome to pre-B acute lymphoblastic leukaemia with unusual phenotype. 353 73

A 34-year-old man with diffuse eosinophilic fasciitis and a hypocellular myelodysplastic syndrome underwent marrow transplantation from an HLA-identical brother. Prompt hematopoietic reconstitution was observed, strongly suggesting that the marrow hypocellularity was caused by neither a serum inhibitory factor nor a microenvironmental disorder. The patient died of disseminated cytomegalovirus infection too early to evaluate the impact of hematopoietic reconstitution on the eosinophilic fasciitis. Nevertheless, marrow transplantation may offer a therapeutic option for those patients with this disorder who develop severe hematopoietic dysfunction and who have a suitable marrow donor.
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PMID:Bone marrow transplantation in a patient with myelodysplasia associated with diffuse eosinophilic fasciitis. 354 83

Allogeneic bone marrow transplantations were carried out between March 1983 and July 1985 in 31 patients aged 7 to 45 years (median 18 years). Acute lymphoblastic leukaemia in 1st to 5th remission was present in 8 patients, acute myeloblastic leukaemia in 1st and 2nd remission in 4 patients, chronic myeloid leukaemia, with various remission status, in 6 patients, 3 patients had severe aplastic anaemia and there were single cases of myelodysplasia and immature cell megakaryocytic myelosis. Transplantation was carried out during relapse in 8 patients with either acute myeloid or lymphoblastic leukaemia. Phenotypic HLA-identical mothers (n = 2) as well as genotypic HLA-identical siblings (n = 27), and in two cases HLA-non-identical mothers, served as bone marrow donors. In leukaemia patients the conditioning treatment consisted of fractionated total body irradiation and high dose cyclophosphamide or etoposide. Patients with severe aplastic anaemia received cyclophosphamide (4 X 50 mg/kg) and fractionated total nodal irradiation (total dose 8 Gy). 19 patients (61%) survived 14 to 605 days after bone marrow transplantation. 15 patients (48%) continue to remain in complete remission with Karnofsky indices of greater than or equal to 90%. Causes for death were infection (n = 3), interstitial pneumonia (n = 3), relapse (n = 3) as well as single cases involving acute graft-versus-host-disease, non-engraftment of donor marrow and veno-occlusive disease of the liver.
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PMID:[Allogeneic bone marrow transplantation after fractionated whole body irradiation. Results at the Kiel transplantation center]. 389 27

Marrow transplantation is effective treatment for a number of hematological diseases in patients under the age of 50 who have an HLA-identical sibling donor. It is successful in the treatment of aplastic anemia with 70-85% long-term survival. It offers 10-30% apparent cures for patients with acute leukemia who have relapsed at least once, and for those with chronic myelocytic leukemia in blast crisis. Although still somewhat controversial, it appears to be the treatment of choice for patients with acute nonlymphoblastic leukemia in first chemotherapy induced remission, and for those with chronic myelogenous leukemia in the chronic phase since approximately 50-60% of these patients experience long-term, disease-free survival. Patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia grafted in second or subsequent remission may expect a 30% "cure" of their disease. Marrow grafting is the only effective treatment for many patients with inherited immunologic deficiencies and certain genetic storage diseases. Cures of congenital Fanconi's anemia, Blackfan-Diamond anemia, osteopetrosis, paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria and thalassemia major have been achieved. Marrow transplantation is being explored for the therapy of patients with lymphoma, Hodgkin's disease, preleukemia, multiple myeloma, hairy cell leukemia, small cell lung cancer, testicular cancer, ovarian cancer and neuroblastoma. Marrow transplantation has been limited by the fact that many patients do not have HLA-identical siblings and very few have monozygotic twins. More recently, marrow transplants from HLA-nonidentical family members and even from unrelated donors have been successfully explored.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Marrow transplantation: the Seattle experience. 391 47

The serum levels of beta 2-microglobulin (beta 2m), which is the light chain moiety of the HLA (-A, -B, -C) antigens, are increased in many of the haematological malignancies. In the lymphoproliferative disorders there is generally an association between serum beta 2m and estimates of tumour load. This relationship is especially close in myelomatosis, where serum beta 2m is a powerful prognostic indicator and can be used in stratification and monitoring. Increases in serum beta 2m are also frequent in the myeloproliferative disorders, notably in myelofibrosis, and in the myelodysplastic syndromes; particularly high levels are seen in chronic myelomonocytic leukaemia. In addition to suggested cellular sources of the beta 2m in these diseases--malignant lymphoid cells and cells of the monocyte-macrophage series--the possibility that T lymphocyte sub-sets could be important contributors to the increased beta 2m production is discussed.
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PMID:Serum beta 2-microglobulin in lymphoproliferative and myeloproliferative diseases. 639 93

Secondary acute nonlymphocytic leukemia or its earlier stages, preleukemia or an acute myeloproliferative syndrome with refractory cytopenia and clonal cytogenetic abnormalities of the bone marrow, was diagnosed in 55 patients previously treated for other malignant diseases. In patients with overt leukemia, cytologic, and cytochemical studies showed predominance of the French-American-British (FAB) type M2. Cytogenetic examination demonstrated a normal karyotype in 11 cases, whereas clonal abnormalities were observed in 44 patients. Defects of chromosome 7 were observed in 24 cases, most often -7, and defects of chromosome 5 in 14 cases, most often 5q-. In addition, chromosomes 3 and 17 were possibly nonrandomly involved. Other abnormalities commonly observed in de novo acute nonlymphocytic leukemia as t(8;21) and t(15;17) were not observed and +8 rarely seen in secondary leukemia. The survival from the leukemic complication was short for the whole group of 55 patients (median, 7 months). However, a significantly longer survival was observed in a subgroup of 11 patients with a normal karyotype (P less than 0.01), due to a favorable response to antileukemic chemotherapy, and in a subgroup of 11 patients with -7 or -C as the only cytogenetic abnormality (P less than 0.01), due to a prolonged preleukemic phase, compared with the remaining 33 cases with mostly multiple karyotypic abnormalities. Three preleukemic patients with -7 who were studied during transformation to overt leukemia all developed additional cytogenetic abnormalities. According to the two-step or multistep hypothesis for malignant transformation, the prolonged preleukemic course in patients with -7 as the only abnormality could represent a premalignant stage, in which further evolution is required for development of overt leukemia. The patients showed a random distribution of blood groups and HLA types.
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PMID:Acute nonlymphocytic leukemia, preleukemia, and acute myeloproliferative syndrome secondary to treatment of other malignant diseases. II. Bone marrow cytology, cytogenetics, results of HLA typing, response to antileukemic chemotherapy, and survival in a total series of 55 patients. 673 76

We report on a patient with very severe aplastic anemia (SAA) unresponsive to immunosuppressive therapy (cyclosporine A, ATG). Because no HLA-identical family or unrelated donor could be found, a trial with recombinant human granulocyte stimulating factor (G-CSF) was started. This was followed by a rapid 3-lineage response with near-normal blood counts and transfusion independence. A similar response was obtained by 2 further G-CSF cycles which were given for relapsing SAA after G-CSF withdrawal. Following the third cycle, an acquired platelet function disorder was observed which preceded a myelodysplastic syndrome.
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PMID:[3-line response following long-term therapy of severe aplastic anemia using glycosylated rHuG-CSF: dysfunctional thrombocytes as early indication of a myelodysplastic syndrome]. 750

By serially measuring serum levels of alpha-1 microglobulin and beta-2 microglobulin following allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT), we tried to define their relationship to renal dysfunction, acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) and infection as complications of the transplantation. The study involved a total of 25 patients with leukemia, myelodysplastic syndrome and aplastic anemia who received BMT in this department; one patient received re-transplantation, thus bringing the total number of transplants to 26. Twenty-four patients received BMT from HLA-identical siblings while two others received BMT from unrelated donors. Alpha-1 microglobulin was within normal limits in all patients before BMT; among various complications such as nephrotoxicity, acute GVHD and infection which took place after transplantation, a raised alpha-1 microglobulin level was found only in nephrotoxicity; however, the increase was not significant compared with the pre-transplantation level. The pre-transplantation beta-2 microglobulin level was higher than normal in some patients; it was significantly increased in all of the above complications compared with the pretransplantation level (1.57 +/- 0.57 mg/l). A significant correlation was found between the serum creatinine level and the beta-2 microglobulin level (r = 0.849) in patients with renal dysfunction. In some patients, however, the beta-2 microglobulin level increased earlier than the serum creatinine level, and this finding was considered useful for the early diagnosis of renal dysfunction following allogeneic BMT.
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PMID:Change of serum alpha-1 microglobulin and beta-2 microglobulin following allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. 753 65

Myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) form a heterogeneous group of clonal hematopoietic disorders with unfavourable prognosis. Allogeneic bone marrow transplantation is the only potentially curative treatment, but remains limited to a small subgroup of younger patients with HLA-compatible donors. As autologous stem cell transplantation is currently being explored as an alternative treatment strategy for MDS, more information needs to be acquired regarding the clonal nature of the progenitor cells in these autografts. Therefore, we have analyzed the clonal patterns of highly purified hematopoietic progenitors and their mature daughter cells in mobilized peripheral blood collections produced from five female patients with high-risk MDS in complete hematologic remission. X-chromosome activation patterns of flow-sorted immature (CD34 + 38low, CD34 + 33low) and committed (CD34 + 38high, CD34 + 33high) progenitors were studied with the polymerase chain reaction-based HUMARA assay. In four patients, a polyclonal remission was shown in all stem cell subpopulations and their mature daughter cells whereas one patient was found to remain skewed in all fractions, except T lymphocytes. This study provides strong evidence that polyclonal immature hematopoietic progenitors can be mobilized and harvested in patients high-risk MDS after treatment with high-dose chemotherapy.
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PMID:Polyclonal primitive hematopoietic progenitors can be detected in mobilized peripheral blood from patients with high-risk myelodysplastic syndromes. 757 31

Eighty-two patients treated surgically for myelomeningocele or myelodysplasia between 1945 and 1993 are presented. Family and environmental history has been studied. The presence of genetic markers (HLA B27, ABO, Rh) has been investigated. Heterogenicity of localization and type of defect in the series reviewed has been found. Associations between certain genetic features confirm multisite mechanism of closure of the neural tube. The relationship between site of neural tube defect and concurrence of developmental defects has been substantiated. A higher site often results in multiple defects.
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PMID:[Clinical heterogeneity of myelomeningocele as evidence of multisite closure of the neural tube]. 767 38


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