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Query: UMLS:C0027819 (
neuroblastoma
)
27,800
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
It is well known that there are many independent and inter-related clinical and pathologic factors which influence the prognosis of patients with benign and malignant conditions. Lymphocyte level is an index of cell-mediated immunity which is important in host defense against cancer. But it is surprising that a simple test such as peripheral lymphocyte count could be correlated with clinical stages and survival results in patients with Hodgkin's disease, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and non-lymphomatous solid tumors. Regarding the latter, lymphocyte count had prognostic values in patients with cancer of the bone, Ewing's sarcoma; breast; colon; kidney,
neuroblastoma
; uterine cervix, and other sites. In general, higher lymphocyte counts before therapy correlated with longer survival. Using newer immunologic techniques, T and B lymphocytes can be identified and the different subtypes of leukemia, immunodeficiency and lymphoproliferative diseases have been studied intensively.
Chronic lymphocytic leukemia
represents a proliferation of B cells, while the Sezary syndrome represents that of T lymphocytes. There is a qualitative and quantitative disturbance of Blymphocytes in patients with multiple myeloma. In Hodgkin's disease, there is hyperactivity of the B cells and functional defect of the T cells. Finally, the nodular non-Hodgkin's lymphoma resulted from neoplastic transformation of the B lymphocytes. In several nonmalignant autoimmune conditions, abnormality of T-cell or B-cell counts has been reported. For example, T cells were reported to be decreased in patients with ulcerative or granulomatous colitis and in patients with rheumatoid arthritis, However, it needs to be pointed out that, in 1973, Farid and associates (44) reported a significant increase in T and a proportionate reduction of B rosette in 17 patients with untreated Grave's disease and 16 with Hashimoto's thyroiditis as compared with 24 normal and eight goiter controls. In 1975, six publications later, they (143) had to announce a retraction because further studies by them and by other investigators could not repeat the earlier results. Despite variations and lack of standardization of the test systems, some consistent deviations of T-lymphocyte and B-lymphocyte counts have been reported. T lymphocytes were quantitatively decreased in patients with carcinoma of the brain, breast, head and neck, liver, lung and urologic organs and with malignant melanoma. In general, there is a marked decrease of T cells with increasing stage of disease and a return of T cells to normal level after successful therapy. Cellular immunity is depressed, often lasting for years after localized radiation therapy, whether or not the thymus is included in the treatment field...
...
PMID:Peripheral lymphocyte count and suppopulations of T and B lymphocytes in benign and malignant diseases. 30 Jan 79
FcRs (Fc Receptors) have been detected on the cell surface of two human
neuroblastoma
cell lines; IMR 32 and SK-N-SH, by immunocytochemistry and flow cytometric analysis, using a previously characterized polyclonal antiserum raised against the Fc gamma R isolated from a human
CLL
line (Gorini, Medgyesi, Garavini, Dorrington and Down, 1987; Rozsnay, Sarmay, Szabo, Medgyesi, Gorini and Gergely, 1990). FcR is expressed on all the cells of both lines at least at the same level as on the HL60 promyelocyte cell line used as positive control. Two electrophoretic components displaying apparent molecular masses of 70 and 43 kDa respectively have been identified by SDS-PAGE followed by Western blotting analysis of crude cell membranes. In addition, "in situ" hybridization experiments seem to exclude a correlation between FcR expression and N-myc oncogene activity. The presence of FcR in
neuroblastoma
could be related to a possible functional role even on these cells which do not belong to the immune system; moreover, they could also be exploited for a diagnostic characterization of this tumor.
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PMID:Fc gamma receptors are expressed on human neuroblastoma cell lines: lack of correlation with N-myc oncogene activity. 130 13
Using a database comprising 13,266 cytogenetically abnormal neoplasms, the geographic heterogeneity of neoplasia-associated chromosomal abnormalities was investigated by comparing the frequencies of characteristic aberrations in consecutive series of patients with the same diagnosis. Significant frequency differences between geographic areas were found for the aberrations +8, i(17q), +19, and an additional Ph1 chromosome in chronic myeloid leukemia (CML); -5, 5q-, and +8 in acute nonlymphocytic leukemia (ANLL); t(8;21) in ANLL-M2; t(15;17) in ANLL-M3; 5q- and -7 in myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS); t(9;22) and +21 in acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL); t(14;18) in follicular lymphoma; -8 and -22/22q- in meningioma; and structural abnormalities of 12q in pleomorphic adenoma of the salivary glands (PAS). No geographic incidence variation was detected for -7 and +21 in ANLL; +8 in MDS; 6q- and +8 in ALL; +12 in
chronic lymphocytic leukemia
; 6q- in non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL); t(8;14) in Burkitt's lymphoma; t(11;22) in Ewing's sarcoma; i(12p) in germ cell tumors; 1p- in
neuroblastoma
; structural abnormalities of 3q, 8q, and 9p in PAS; or 3p- in renal cell carcinoma. Intraregional frequency similarities between cytogenetically identical abnormalities in related tumor types were also analyzed. No significant correlations were found regarding the incidence of 5q- in ANLL and MDS, 6q- in ALL and NHL, -7 in ANLL and MDS, +8 in ANLL and CML, +8 in ANLL and MDS, +8 in ALL and ANLL, or +21 in ALL and ANLL. The findings indicate that some geographic heterogeneity of tumor-associated aberrations exists both in hematologic neoplasms and in solid tumors.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Geographic heterogeneity of neoplasia-associated chromosome aberrations. 195 98
In summary, carcinoma is the most frequent cancer that metastasizes to the skin; lung cancer in men and breast cancer in women. Clinically distinctive patterns of cutaneous metastasis of epithelial origin include alopecia neoplastica, pulsatile nodules, Sister Mary Joseph's nodules, morpheaform, and cellulitis-like lesions. Biopsying these lesions reveals adenocarcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma, or anaplastic carcinoma. The type of histologic pattern seen can be a clue to the organ of origin giving rise to the cutaneous metastasis. Skin that is damaged allows for circulating malignant cells, often of epithelial or leukemic origin, to lodge and proliferate locally (inflammatory oncotaxis). The commonest form of leukemia to affect the skin of elderly males is
chronic lymphocytic leukemia
. However, when leukemia involves the mucous membranes, acute myeloid leukemia (acute monocytic and acute myelomonocytic leukemia) is the most likely diagnosis. When papules, nodules, or plaques develop on the head, neck, or torso in a middle-aged male accompanied by lymphadenopathy, there must be a high index of suspicion that these lesions are metastatic lymphomatous deposits. Definitive histologic diagnosis on a skin biopsy specimen is difficult. In this situation, it is best to rely on histologic patterns seen in lymphoid tissue along with cellular marker studies. An elderly patient having bone pain, anemia, elevated blood calcium level, and renal failure along with purplish or skin-colored nodules and plaques on the trunk has a good chance of having multiple myeloma. Biopsying these lesions is most certain to reveal atypical plasma cells, and blood immunoelectrophoresis will demonstrate characteristic monoclonal gammopathy. There are two malignancies seen in children under 3 years of age that often times affect the skin in a characteristic fashion. Letterer-Siwe disease, which is distinguished from other histocytic disorders by its cell of origin, the Langerhans cell, clinically shows maculopapular and erosive lesions distributed in a seborrheic pattern.
Neuroblastoma
derived from cells of the neural crest demonstrates clinically widespread bluish papulonodules. Kaposi's sarcoma, a multifocal vascular malignancy, has a wide spectrum of clinical expression. Those patients who are immunocompromised secondary to concomitant disease or immunosuppressive therapy are more susceptible to a disseminated fulminant course accompanied by opportunistic infection. In conclusion, although specific signs of internal malignancy are less common than nonspecific ones, they are just as important; if the clinician managing the cancer patient is familiar with these clues to internal disease, proper patient management will ensue.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Specific cutaneous manifestations of internal malignancy. 307 47
Intravenous gammaglobulin is effective therapy of ITP and other autoantibody-mediated immune cytopenias. All children as well as adults unresponsive to splenectomy or with known immune deficiency are probably the best candidates for treatment with IVGG. Its major advantage, in addition to its efficacy of treatment and possible remission-inducing effect, is that it has the fewest side effects of any treatment of ITP so that it is the best maintenance therapy of patients when effective. Future uses of IVGG remain to be determined. Premature infants with a high mortality from sepsis and with hypogammaglobulinemia due to termination of pregnancy prior to transplacental antibody transfer may benefit from IVGG. A preliminary study suggested such benefit and also showed safety of IVGG treatment in that there was no impaired immune responsiveness of these prematures at 2 years of age (28). Another potential usage of IVGG involves the treatment of the hypogammaglobulinemia associated with certain types of malignancy. Patients with
CLL
, especially in the advanced stages, are often hypogammaglobulinemic. Multiple myeloma and Waldenstrom's macroglobulinemia are two other B-cell malignancies associated with antibody production defects which might benefit from antibody replacement therapy. Therapeutic IgG levels may be harder to obtain due to hypercatabolism of immunoglobulin. The issue of immune hyporesponsiveness during intensive chemotherapy is also unexplored. Secondary antibody responses do not seem to be impaired, but primary responses, as tested in numerous immunization studies, are decidedly impaired. Certain protocols, especially those treating high-risk acute leukemias and
neuroblastoma
during induction therapy are intensive with high rates of sepsis, and may warrant trials of prophylactic IVGG. Similarly, some form of humoral prophylaxis is becoming an important part of the handling of the patient undergoing bone marrow transplantation not only to prevent bacterial sepsis but also to prevent cytomegalovirus (CMV) interstitial pneumonitis. A likely additional usage is gammaglobulin replacement for patients undergoing plasmapheresis, especially if performed multiple times. Finally, the broad spectrum of antibacterial and antiviral antibodies present in the preparations (such as anti-CMV, anti-Group B strep, and antiendotoxin) and the ease and safety of delivery allow the preparations to be used in situations where a hyperimmune preparation might be desired and/or where more than one pathogen is possible. In summary, IVGG is a treatment capable of safely conferring significant benefits to selected patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Intravenous usage of gammaglobulin: humoral immunodeficiency, immune thrombocytopenic purpura, and newer indications. 404 Jul 95
T cells from the peripheral blood of a T-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia (T-CLL) patient, cultured in the presence of interleukin-2 (IL-2), were found to express the p19 structural core protein of the human T-cell leukemia/lymphoma virus (HTLV) and to release type C virus particles. Comparison of the T-
CLL
cell line with the original leukemic T cells revealed that both the fresh and the proliferating T-
CLL
cells were pleomorphic cells that showed a convoluted nucleus and formed rosettes with sheep erythrocytes (E-rosettes). They were reactive with the monoclonal antibodies OKT1, OKT4 and OKT11, but not with OKT3, OKT6 or OKT8, indicating that they were mature T cells but that they differed from normal T cells in their lack of reactivity with OKT3. In addition they did not bind peanut agglutinin or OKM-1, and were negative for Epstein-Barr nuclear antigen, surface immunoglobulin, non-specific esterase activity of Fc- or complement receptors. Part of the fresh T-
CLL
cells reacted with a monoclonal antibody recognizing HLA-DR antigens (p29, 34) (36%) and with anti-Tac (62%), a monoclonal antibody directed at the IL-2 receptor, indicating that the T-
CLL
cells were partially activated already in vivo. After culture in vitro all proliferating T-
CLL
cells expressed HLA-DR and Tac antigens. The fresh T-
CLL
cells were found to be defective in cell-mediated lympholysis (CML) generated in mixed lymphocyte culture (MLC), antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) and lectin-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (LDCC). In addition they failed to exhibit natural killer (NK) cell activity against targets that are usually very susceptible to lysis, such as K562, but were able to kill two tumor-derived cell lines, the melanoma NKI-4 and the
neuroblastoma
CHP-100. The same pattern of selective killing was observed using the proliferating T-
CLL
cells as effectors, or cloned T-
CLL
cultures obtained from them by limiting dilution procedures. Therefore, it was concluded that the T-
CLL
cells represented a clonal expansion of neoplastic T cells that retained their phenotype and cytotoxic properties after culture in vitro.
...
PMID:Phenotypic and functional characterization of HTLV positive neoplastic T cells cultured with interleukin-2--I. Retention of morphology, phenotype and selective cytotoxic properties in long term culture. 632 59
A monoclonal antibody designated PI153/3, which reacts with
neuroblastoma
and fetal brain, is shown to identify also a cell surface determinant shared by pre-B and mature B cells and their corresponding leukemias including
chronic lymphocytic leukemia
, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, B acute lymphoblastic leukemia, and hairy cell leukemia, but not plasmacytoma. Almost all non-T, non-B acute "lymphoid" leukemias bind PI153/3. The latter includes 71 of 74 common ALL tested, most but not all "unclassified" or "null" ALL and cases of both acute undifferentiated leukemia and Ph1 positive chronic myeloid leukemia in blast crisis with common ALL phenotypes. The antigen is absent or present at very low density on normal and leukemic T lymphocyte, myeloid and erythroid cells. The determinant appears to co-redistribute with cell surface immunoglobulin in B lymphocytes and segregates independently of other cell surface antigens associated with B cells and/or cALL including HLA-DR (Ia-like antigens) and the cALL (gp 100) antigen.
...
PMID:A monoclonal antibody identifying a cell surface antigen shared by common acute lymphoblastic leukemias and B lineage cells. 696 98
Data from the annual survey on transplant activity 1997, collected from 457 transplant teams in 31 European countries by the European Group for Blood and Marrow Transplantation (EBMT) were used to describe current status and to assess relative and absolute changes in indication, donor type and stem cell source compared to 1991. A total of 16950 patients were reported to have a first blood or marrow transplant in 1997, a total of 18 923 procedures, including re- and double transplants were performed. Of the 16950 first transplants, 4751 (28%) were allogeneic, 12199 (72%) autologous transplants. Of the autologous transplants, 829 (7%) were bone marrow derived, 11370 (93%) from peripheral blood stem cells or combined bone marrow and peripheral blood stem cell transplants. Of the allogeneic transplants, 3311 (70%) were bone marrow, 1440 (30%) were peripheral blood stem cell transplants. In 1991, the respective figures were 2175 allogeneic (44%) and 2786 (56%) autologous transplants, more than 90% of the autologous, all allogeneic transplants bone marrow derived. Main indications in 1997 were leukemias with 5253 transplants (31%), 70% allogeneic; lymphomas with 6773 transplants (40%), 94% autologous; solid tumors with 4154 transplants (24%), 99% autologous; non-malignant disorders with 770 transplants (5 %), 85 % allogeneic. There was an absolute increase of 11971 transplants since 1991. An increase was observed in all disease categories. Marked differences were found, when the relative increase index (RII) for specific disease categories over time was analyzed. In allogeneic transplants, relatively more transplants were performed in 1997 for acute myeloid leukemia beyond 1st complete remission (RII 1.28), myelodysplastic syndromes (RII 1.58),
chronic lymphocytic leukemia
(RII 1.33) and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (RII 1.58). For autologous transplant indications, a high relative increase index was observed in myelodysplastic syndromes (RII 3.77), in multiple myeloma (RII 2.12) and carcinoma of the breast (RII 6.37) with a relative decrease in leukemias (RII 0.39) and certain solid tumors such as glioma (RII 0.27) and
neuroblastoma
(RII 0.46). These data present the current status of blood and marrow transplantation in Europe. They show the change from bone marrow to blood as stem cell source and highlight shifts in indication. They provide a basis for patient counselling and health care planning.
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PMID:Blood and marrow transplantation activity in Europe 1997. European Group for Blood and Marrow Transplantation (EBMT). 1045 92
We have used a continuous fluorescence monitoring method to assess cyclin D1 mRNA expression in a variety of hematological and non-hematological processes. We examined 14 cell lines, 11 reactive lymphoid tissues, and 57 primary hematopoietic neoplasms including mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) (n = 10),
chronic lymphocytic leukemia
/small lymphocytic lymphoma (CLL/SLL) (n = 11), acute lymphoblastic leukemia/lymphoma (n = 15), follicular lymphoma (n = 6), peripheral T-cell lymphoma (PTCL) (n = 3), anaplastic large cell lymphoma (n = 3), hairy cell leukemia (n = 3), Burkitt lymphoma (n = 1), Burkitt-like lymphoma (n = 4), and plasmacytoma (n = 1) for the expression of cyclin D1 mRNA using fluorescently labeled sequence-specific hybridization probes. Fluorescence (F) was plotted against cycle (C) number over 45 cycles. The log-linear portion of the F versus C graph identified a fractional cycle number for threshold fluorescence. A beta-globin mRNA transcript with equivalent amplification efficiency to that of cyclin D1 was used for assessment of RNA integrity and normalization. In general, the MCLs demonstrated substantially higher levels of cyclin D1 mRNA than the other lymphoproliferative processes. Moderately high levels of cyclin D1 mRNA were detected in one PTCL. On average, the CLL/SLL cases showed cyclin D1 mRNA levels two to three orders of magnitude lower than observed in the MCLs. Cell lines derived from non-hematopoietic neoplasms such as fibrosarcoma, small cell carcinoma, and
neuroblastoma
showed comparable or higher levels of cyclin D1 mRNA than the MCLs. Our results indicate that quantitative real-time reverse transcription (RT) polymerase chain reaction is a simple, rapid, and accurate technique for assessing cyclin D1 expression, and while it is not specific, it can reliably be used in the distinction of MCL from CLL/SLL.
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PMID:Fluorescence PCR quantification of cyclin D1 expression. 1198 99
Haematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) is now an established treatment fora number of non-malignant and malignant conditions. Bone marrow- or peripheral blood-derived allogeneic SCT from an HLA-identical sibling or matched unrelated donor cures more than half the patients with severe aplastic anaemia, thalassaemia major, congenital immunodeficiency diseases and genetic metabolic disorders. Among the malignant conditions, acute and chronic leukaemia, multiple myeloma, Hodgkin and non-Hodgkin lymphoma, and high risk
neuroblastoma
are important conditions that can be treated by HSCT. The major morbidities associated with HSCT are regimen-related toxicities, development of acute or chronic graft-versus-host disease (GVHD), failure of engraftment of the bone marrow and complications related to the immunodeficiency that occurs in the post-transplant period. Peripheral blood stem cells are now being used as an alternative to bone marrow stem cells for allogeneic HSCT and exclusively for autologous HSCT. Reduced intensity conditioning for allogeneic HSCT has resulted in a lower frequency and severity of GVHD and risk of infections. This has resulted in allogeneic HSCT being done in older patients and for those with co-morbid conditions. Patients with low grade Hodgkin and non-Hodgkin lymphoma,
chronic lymphocytic leukaemia
and multiple myeloma appear to benefit more with this approach. Prevention of acute GVHD while maintainingthe graft-versus-tumour effect and close monitoring of the kinetics of chimerism hold promise for improving the outcome of those receiving reduced intensity allogeneic HSCT. In recipients ofautologous HSCT, identification of patients at increased risk for relapse and use of agents (interferon, interleukin-2) post-transplant to augment the graft-versus-tumour effect are possible areas of further research.
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PMID:Haematopoietic stem cell transplantation: current status. 1786 17
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