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)

Chronically immunosuppressed individuals are susceptible to lymphoreticular tumors. Up to 15% of patients with congenital deficiencies such as ataxia=telangiectasia may develop malignancies, mainly high-grade B cell non=Hodgkin's lymphomas (NHLs). AIDS lymphomas are comprised of NHLs including Burkitt's lymphoma (BL) and primary cerebral lymphomas (PCLs). Almost 3% of all AIDS patients (2824 of 97,258 cases) developed NHL. Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) as a co-factor in AIDS lymphomagenesis has been studied: in 12 cases of 24 AIDS lymphomas EBV by DNA in situ hybridization was found. In an analysis of 6 primary cerebral lymphomas, .5 were positive for EBV DNA by Southern blotting. In Burkitt's lymphoma the characteristic genetic alteration affects the c-myc oncogene. In 1/3 of BL p53 mutations were found but none in the 43 NHLs suggesting that p53 mutations and c-myc activation act synergistically in the pathogenesis of these tumors. Cytotoxic agents dideoxyinosine, dideoxycytosine, and zidovudine may cause secondary neoplasia. 8 of 55 AIDS patients under zidovudine treatment developed high-grade lymphoma 23.8 months subsequently; recently doses were reduced. PCL was found in 21 of 90 patients. A 5.2 months survival was associated with combined treatment with cyclophosphamide, Oncovin (vincristine), methotrexate, etoposide, and cytosine arabinoside compared with 11.3 months with chemotherapy. Colony-stimulating factors (CSFs) alleviate drug-induced myelotoxicity and zidovudine-induced neutropenia, however, l8 of 11 patients receiving granulocyte-macrophage CSF developed hematological toxicity. Interleukine-2 produced by T-helper cells enhancing tumor cells cytotoxicity has been used in AIDS-associated cryptosporidial diarrhea and in 4 patients with AIDS lymphoma with modest response, but its stimulation of the HIV-infected substrate may increase viral proliferation.
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PMID:AIDS lymphomas. 161 63

EMA/CO (etoposide-methotrexate-actinomycin D and Cytoxan-Oncovin) is an effective and well-tolerated chemotherapy regimen for the treatment of high-risk gestational trophoblastic disease. However, it is associated with significant neutropenia often requiring dose reductions and treatment delays. We describe the use of granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) in three patients in order to maintain the treatment schedule. A subcutaneous injection of 5 micrograms/kg/day was administered on Days 3-6 and 9-14 of each chemotherapy cycle. No patients had any adverse effects and all received full chemotherapy doses without any treatment delay. The addition of G-CSF to the EMA/CO regimen may benefit patients by achieving dose intensity in the treatment of high-risk gestational trophoblastic disease.
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PMID:A novel strategy using G-CSF to support EMA/CO for high-risk gestational trophoblastic disease. 752 41

Records from 653 patients treated between 1991 and 1998 in the Oncology Practice Patterns Study (OPPS) were analyzed to determine contemporary chemotherapy delivery patterns in patients with intermediate-grade non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL). Of the 653 patient records reviewed, 90 (14%) omitted an anthracycline or mitoxantrone (Novantrone) from primary therapy. Among patients receiving CHOP (cyclophosphamide [Cytoxan, Neosar], doxorubicin HCl, vincristine [Oncovin], prednisone) or CNOP (cyclophosphamide, mitoxantrone, vincristine, prednisone), 134 (27%) of 492 received an average relative dose intensity of less than 80% of the literature-referenced dose, due either to an inadequate planned or delivered dose. Of 181 advanced-stage patients with responsive disease, 28 (15%) failed to receive at least six treatment cycles. Overall, 283 (43%) of 653 patients potentially received suboptimal chemotherapy due either to choice of regimen or chemotherapy delivered. Patient age > or = 65 years and cardiac comorbidity appeared to have the greatest influence on a physician's decision regarding chemotherapy administration. Among the 492 patients who received CHOP or CNOP, 235 (48%) experienced a delay or reduction in chemotherapy dose (usually neutropenia-related), 100 (20%) developed mucositis, and 116 (24%) were hospitalized for febrile neutropenia. Growth factor was administered to 261 patients (53%), and its primary prophylactic use was associated with a significant reduction in the incidence of hospitalizations for febrile neutropenia in all patient subgroups receiving appropriate chemotherapeutic dose intensity (P = .02). This assessment of chemotherapy delivery to patients with intermediate-grade NHL showed significant variation from current standards. Further analysis of factors influencing chemotherapy delivery might improve therapeutic outcomes.
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PMID:Patterns of chemotherapy administration in patients with intermediate-grade non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. 1170 59

The purpose of this study was to determine the efficacy of salvage chemotherapy with, P-IMVP-16/CBDCA, consisting of carboplatin (CBDCA), etoposide (VP-16), ifosfamide (IFM), and methotrexate (MTX), for patients with aggressive non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) who had previously received CHOP [a regimen of cyclophosphamide, hydroxydaunomycin, Oncovin (vincristine), and prednisolone], as first-line chemotherapy. The 45 consecutively enrolled patients received methylprednisolone (mPSL) 1000 mg per body for 3 d (from day 1 to day 3), IFM 1000 mg/m(2) for 5 d (from day 1 to day 5), MTX 30 mg/m(2) on day 3 and day 10, VP-16 80 mg/m(2) for 3 d (from day 1 to day 3), and CBDCA 300 mg/m(2) on day 1, with granulocyte colony-stimulating factor every 21 d. Patients 70 yr of age or older were given 75% of the standard dose. The response rate [complete response (CR) plus partial response (PR)] was 55.6% (25/45), including 12 (26.7%) CR and 13 (28.9%) PR. The overall survival rate for the 45 patients was 31.1% at 1 yr and 17.3% at 2 yr. The failure-free survival rate for the 45 patients was 6.7% at 1 yr and 4.4% at 2 yr. The survival rate for the 25 responders was 48.0% at 1 yr and 24.0% at 2 yr, and the survival rate for the 20 non-responders was 10.0% at 1 yr (P<0.001). Multivariate analysis demonstrated that prior chemotherapy (reduced-dose CHOP for age 70 yr or older) and the number of cases of extranodal involvement (>1) were significant unfavorable factors for overall survival. Although the major toxicity was neutropenia, no patient died of infection related to neutropenia. Non-hematological adverse effects were predominantly mild and tolerable. Unfortunately, the clinical outcome with P-IMVP-16/CBDCA was unfavorable, possibly because the study comprised consecutive patients who had received identified intensive chemotherapy, such as biweekly CHOP. Salvage chemotherapy with P-IMVP-16/CBDCA is not sufficient to cure relapsed or refractory aggressive NHL. Aggressive NHL should be cured by first-line chemotherapy with or without hematopoietic stem cell transplantation.
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PMID:A prospective study of P-IMVP-16/CBDCA: a novel salvage chemotherapy for patients with aggressive non-Hodgkin's lymphoma who had previously received CHOP therapy as first-line chemotherapy. 1222 93

The occurrence of delayed neutropenia following rituximab is poorly defined and of unknown cause. We hypothesized it may be related to perturbations of stromal derived factor-1 (SDF-1) and granulocyte homeostasis. Late-onset neutropenia (LON) was investigated in 130 patients with untreated aggressive B-cell lymphoma receiving DA-EPOCH (dose-adjusted etoposide, prednisone, Oncovin [vincristine], cyclophosphamide, and hydroxydaunorubicin) chemotherapy with or without rituximab. All patients were in remission and had no known causes for neutropenia. LON occurred in 6 (8%) of 76 patients receiving rituximab and 0 of 54 patients not receiving rituximab (P = .04). The median onset was 175 days (range, 77-204 days) after treatment with a median duration of 14 days (range, 11-16 days). In a subset of 24 patients, a significant correlation was found between rapid B-cell recovery and granulocyte decline over the 6-month recovery period (R = -0.53; P = .04). Rapid B-cell recovery directly correlated with prerecovery SDF-1 levels (R = 0.65; P = .015) and SDF-1 decline (R = -0.67; P = .013) after recovery. Our results suggest that early B-cell lymphopoiesis is important for B-cell recovery following rituximab, and that perturbation of SDF-1 during B-cell recovery retards neutrophil egress from the bone marrow. These findings illustrate the dual role of SDF-1 in human B-cell and granulocyte homeostasis.
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PMID:B-cell recovery following rituximab-based therapy is associated with perturbations in stromal derived factor-1 and granulocyte homeostasis. 1571 16

From 1999 to 2002, 20 patients with aggressive non-Hodgkin lymphoma, among 28 who failed autologous peripheral blood progenitor cell transplantation, were rescued with cyclophosphamide, hydroxydaunomycin, Oncovin (vincristine), and prednisone (CHOP)/rituximab (RTX) and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF). RTX was administered twice during each course of chemotherapy, before CHOP and after GM-CSF. This cytokine was given to increase the antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity and to reduce the leukopenia on the basis of our preliminary data, which suggested that this cytokine can upregulate CD20 expression. The relevant (World Health Organization grade 3-4) toxicity mainly consisted of myelosuppression (neutropenia in 60% of patients). Fifteen patients achieved complete remission (CR) or had a partial response, with an overall response rate of 75% (60% CR and 15% partial response). Six of the 12 patients who achieved CR relapsed: 2 died of progressive disease, 1 died of infectious complications after allogeneic transplantation, and 3 are alive in second CR. Eight patients showed progressive disease: 5 died of progressive disease, 1 of secondary acute leukemia, and 1 of infectious complications after allogeneic transplantation, whereas 1 is alive in second CR. At last follow-up, 10 patients are alive, 6 of whom are in complete continuous remission, with a median follow-up of 31 months (range, 3-51 months). The projected 4-year progression-free survival is 31.4%, and the 4-year overall survival is 50%. This new association (RTX, CHOP, and GM-CSF) was feasible in approximately 70% of patients; the overall toxicity was manageable. The good response rate and the promising outcome observed in this subset of patients could be explained by the possible increased synergy between chemotherapy, RTX, and GM-CSF, which should be explored in further studies.
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PMID:A new schedule of CHOP/rituximab plus granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor is an effective rescue for patients with aggressive lymphoma failing autologous stem cell transplantation. 1604 13

Vincristine sulfate liposome infusion (VSLI) is a sphingomyelin/cholesterol liposome encapsulated formulation of vincristine that results in an extended drug circulation time and the potential for enhanced malignancy targeting, exposure, and anticancer activity. We assessed the safety and activity of VSLI in patients with metastatic melanoma. VSLI, to provide VCR 2.0 mg/m without dose capping, was infused over 1 h every 2 weeks (one cycle). Safety, tumor response, and survival were determined. Twenty-seven patients with metastatic melanoma of cutaneous (n=19), uveal (n=4), mucosal (n=1), and unknown (n=3) primary were treated. Twenty-five (93%) patients had received one or more prior lines of chemotherapy and/or immunotherapy; 14 (48%) had received a vinblastine-containing regimen. Hematologic adverse events (AEs) primarily manifested as grade 1/2 neutropenia. Nonhematologic AEs primarily consisted of gastrointestinal and constitutional symptoms of grade 1/2 severity. Grade 3 AEs included one case of paresthesia and four cases of constipation. The disease control rate in 26 evaluable patients was 31%. One complete (uveal melanoma metastatic to lung) and two partial responses (previously untreated cutaneous melanoma metastatic to the bone, brain, spleen and lung, and another with melanoma of unknown primary involving the lung, liver, and lymph node) were found. Five patients had stable disease. The median time to progression was 1.9 months. The median survival was 9.6 months with 30% of the patients alive at 1 year. VSLI was generally well tolerated and showed promising antitumor activity against metastatic melanoma and uveal melanoma in particular. A phase 2 trial to further elucidate the efficacy and safety of VSLI in metastatic uveal melanoma is ongoing.
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PMID:A pilot study with vincristine sulfate liposome infusion in patients with metastatic melanoma. 1901 11

Mechlorethamine (Mustargen), Oncovin) (vincristine), procarbazine and prednisone (MOPP) chemotherapy is useful for relapsed canine lymphoma. This study evaluates the efficacy of MOPP after substitution of CCNU (lomustine, LOPP protocol) or BCNU (carmustine, BOPP protocol) for mechlorethamine in 60 dogs with relapsed lymphoma. Seven of 14 (50%) dogs treated with BOPP responded, for a median of 129.5 days for complete responders (range 9-354 days) and a median of 140 days for partial responders (range 4-276 days). Twenty-three of 44 (52%) dogs treated with LOPP responded for a median of 112 days for complete responders (range 48-250 days) and a median of 84.5 days for partial responders (range 69-290 days). Two dogs receiving a combination of LOPP and BOPP partially responded for 28 and 163 days, respectively. With BOPP chemotherapy, nine dogs (20.5%) and seven dogs (50%) had one or more episodes of Grade II or higher neutropenia and thrombocytopenia, respectively. Seven dogs (50%) had one or more episodes of Grade II or higher gastrointestinal toxicity. While receiving LOPP chemotherapy, 28 dogs (63.6%) and 17 dogs (38.6%) had one or more episodes of Grade II or higher neutropenia and thrombocytopenia, respectively. Seventeen dogs (38.6%) had one or more episodes of Grade II or higher gastrointestinal toxicity. Overall, there were 17 non-fatal treatment-related episodes of sepsis requiring hospitalization. Eight dogs (13%) died or were euthanized because of treatment-related sepsis and/or chemotherapy-related complications. Severe haematologic toxicity, coupled with the improved response duration observed in dogs receiving reduced doses during B/L-OPP rescue, underscores the need for protocol optimization.
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PMID:Efficacy and toxicity of BOPP and LOPP chemotherapy for the treatment of relapsed canine lymphoma. 1975 26

Background: Reactivation of hepatitis B virus (HBV) and hepatitis C virus (HCV) and febrile neutropenia (FN) are common in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) patients undergoing cyclophosphamide, hydroxyrubicin, Oncovin, and prednisolone (CHOP) or cyclophosphamide, hydroxyrubicin, Oncovin, prednisolone - rituximab containing (R-CHOP) chemotherapy. This ultimately leads to delaying the therapy, increasing hospital stay, and raising the pharmacoeconomic burden on patients. Aim and Objective: The aim of this study was to determine the incidence of HBV and HCV infection and febrile neutropenia in DLBCL patients treated with R-CHOP and CHOP. Methodology: This was an institutional approved study in which patient records from a private hospital, specialized in hematology and oncology (Karachi, Pakistan), were reviewed retrospectively from 2014 to 2016. Patients aged above 18 years with known diagnosis of DLBCL who underwent CHOP-21 or R-CHOP-21 chemotherapy regimen were included. Baseline blood chemistry and liver function tests along with the data regarding HBV (hepatitis B surface antigen [HBsAg], hepatitis B surface antibody [anti-HBs]), HCV (antibody anti-HCV), and febrile neutropenia were collected from patient records. Results: In total, 35 cases of DLBCL were treated during a 3-year period (ie, from 2014 to 2016), of which 16 were on CHOP-21 regimen whereas 19 were treated with R-CHOP-21. Of the 19 patients who underwent R-CHOP chemotherapy, only 2 (10%) patients were HBsAg reactive. Before commencing the second cycle, 2 (10%) patients reported to hospital with fever and had hematological (low neutrophil count) and microbiological (Escherichia coli) proven febrile neutropenia. The incidence of HBV infection post treatment was lower in group treated with CHOP (1 patient showed HBsAg reactivity).
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PMID:Detection of the Incidence of HBV, HCV Infection and Febrile Neutropenia Associated With CHOP With or Without Rituximab in Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma-Treated Patients. 3014 40