Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0027947 (neutropenia)
17,527 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The regimen of doxorubicin (DOX), ifosfamide (IFF), and dacarbazine (DTIC) (AID) for previously untreated inoperable or metastatic sarcoma has acceptable toxicity with significant activity. Twenty patients received 79 courses of DOX (60-75 mg/m2) with or without DTIC (900 mg/m2) by continuous infusion over 72 hours with escalating doses of IFF and mesna uroprotection. Nineteen patients were evaluable for toxicity. Myelosuppression was dose-limiting. The maximum tolerated dose was DOX at 60 mg/m2, DTIC at 900 mg/m2, and IFF at 7500 mg/m2 per course. Of the 79 courses analyzed, 33 (42%) resulted in wbc counts less than 1000/microliter; 14 (18%) were complicated by fever and neutropenia, and three by sepsis. There were no toxic deaths. Relative platelet sparing was observed and nadirs were brief. In contrast to bolus-dose DTIC divided over 5 days, DTIC by continuous infusion did not add significantly to gastrointestinal toxicity. Nausea and vomiting was well controlled by antiemetics. Mucositis occurred sporadically. Unlike our phase II study of IFF alone, no CNS or renal toxicity was observed. No cardiac toxicity was encountered, although only four patients have received greater than 450 mg/m2 of cumulative DOX. One episode of DOX extravasation occurred despite a long iv line that extended to the axilla. No serious tissue damage was observed, perhaps due to the dilute solutions of DOX used. Partial responses were seen in eight of 18 evaluable patients (44%) and in six of 11 patients at or near the phase II level. Two additional patients with minimal response have continued tumor regression. The median number of courses before partial response was four (range, one to five). The median duration of response has not been reached (3+ to 10+ months). An inoperable primary has been rendered surgically resectable in one patient. Activity in previously untreated sarcomas should be further evaluated in a randomized phase III study against a standard DOX-containing combination.
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PMID:Doxorubicin, ifosfamide, and dacarbazine (AID) with mesna uroprotection for advanced untreated sarcoma: a phase I study. 308 17

Recent studies have shown that mutations in a newly described RNA editing enzyme, activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID), can cause an autosomal recessive form of hyper IgM syndrome. To determine the relative frequency of mutations in AID, we evaluated a group of 27 patients with hyper IgM syndrome who did not have defects in CD40 ligand and 23 patients with common variable immunodeficiency. Three different mutations in AID were identified in 18 patients with hyper IgM syndrome, including 14 French Canadians, 2 Lumbee Indians, and a brother and sister from Okinawa. No mutations were found in the remaining 32 patients. In the group of patients with hyper IgM syndrome, the patients with mutations in AID were older at the age of diagnosis, were more likely to have positive isohemagglutinins, and were less likely to have anemia, neutropenia, or thrombocytopenia. Lymphoid hyperplasia was seen in patients with hyper IgM syndrome and normal AID as well as the patients with hyper IgM syndrome and defects in AID.
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PMID:Mutations in activation-induced cytidine deaminase in patients with hyper IgM syndrome. 1111 57

A young woman presenting respiratory infections, polyarthritis, severe neutropenia, and increased serum IgM was treated with intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) with good clinical and laboratory outcome followed by a loss of efficacy. The increased serum IgM associated to recurrent infections and autoimmune manifestations suggested the diagnosis of a hyper-IgM syndrome (HIGMs). The frequency of peripheral T cells, the expression of CD40 on the patients' B cells and CD40L on T cells and the activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID) and uracil-DNA glycosylase (UNG) at mRNA level was comparable to controls. In contrast, the frequency of B cells was one half of the healthy control and all cells showed an atypical phenotype. Although AID and UNG were normal, class-switch recombination was not very efficient because circulating switched memory were reduced and, once stimulated with CpG, generated less antibody-secreting cells than controls. An increase in serum B Lymphocytes stimulator (BLyS) was also found. The patient presented a peculiar clinical and immunological phenotype fitting for many aspects of both HIGM4 and Common Variable Immunodeficiency (CVID). These findings underline the need to better explore the complex link between these two diseases.
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PMID:Hyper-IgM, neutropenia, mild infections and low response to polyclonal stimulation: hyper-IgM syndrome or common variable immunodeficiency? 2223 Apr 4