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)

In 42 patients with induction treatment of acute myeloblastic and lymphoblastic leukaemia the authors compared efficacy of selective decontamination of the gastrointestinal tract in prevention of infections during neutropenia less than 0.5.10(9)/l in two comparable groups. Twenty-two patients were treated with Ofloxacin (Tarivid, Hoechst Co.), 20 patients with Trimetroprim-Sulfamethoxazol (Biseptol, Polfa Co.). Both groups had concurrently also Ketoconazol in prevention of mycotic infection. The investigation revealed that Tarivid is a suitable alternative drug for selective decontamination, because it delays the onset of acquired infection, as compared with Biseptol, it reduced more efficiently the frequency of Gram-negative colonization and life-threatening Gram-negative sepsis, caused by resistent strains; its tolerance is significantly better. There was no significant difference in the occurrence of febrile days, febrile episodes, the duration of antibiotic treatment, the number of sepsis in two groups. The effect of Tarivid and Biseptol on the Gram-positive microbial flora is inadequate. Subclavian catheter increases in particularly the risk of Gram-positive sepsis in both groups.
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PMID:[Comparison of Tarivid and Biseptol in the prevention of bacterial infections in patients with acute leukemia]. 159 5

Neutropenia is the most common hematologic abnormality detected as consequence of Trimethoprim Sulfamethoxazole (TMP-SMX) therapy. Its incidence is evaluated in 27 children affected by urinary tract anomalies and treated with low doses of TMP SMX (2 + 10 mg/kg/die) for more than one month. A slight neutropenia was detected in 8 children (6 of these were in their first two years of life). In all the 27 cases a supplementation of folinic acid was started: a significant increase of PMN count was noted in all cases. Neutropenia can also appear after low (prophylactic) dosage of TMP-SMX, and can be prevented by concomitant administration of folinic acid.
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PMID:[Neutropenia caused by low-dose trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole in children with chronic pathology of the urinary tract]. 237 63

Trimethoprim and sulfamethoxazole (Bactrim r) is a widely used antibiotic combination effective against a broad spectrum of microbial organisms. There are reports of neutropenia developing during even brief periods of oral therapy, particularly in individuals with either folate deficiency or increased folate requirements. We have investigated the effects of these drugs on circulating granulocyte precursors (CFU-C) from normal donors and the mechanism of inhibition on granulopoiesis using an in vitro CFU-C assay. In 12 healthy adults, the number of circulating granulocytes and granulocyte progenitors was not significantly altered by a 5-day course of therapy. However, in experiments that simulated the in vivo condition of folate deficiency (folate-free cultures were prepared with cells harvested from normal donors), trimethoprim (8 micrograms/ml) resulted in a 47% decrease in the total number of colonies; this inhibitory effect was prevented when 100 ng of folinic acid was also added to the culture. Sulfamethoxazole (40 micrograms/ml) had no discernible effect on granulopoiesis. The combination of 8 micrograms/ml of trimethoprim and 40 micrograms/ml of sulfamethoxazole resulted in a 52% decrease in the number of colonies generated and this inhibition was again prevented by folinic acid. Our results suggest that the neutropenia occasionally observed in patients treated with trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole is due to the inhibitory effects on granulopoiesis by trimethoprim, namely its antifolate action, which is reversed by folinic acid. Based on these studies, in patients with either folate deficiency or increased folate requirements, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole should be used with caution.
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PMID:Studies of the effects of trimethoprim and sulfamethoxazole on human granulopoiesis. 348 80

Oral trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (Bactrim) plus erythromycin (TMZ-E) was tested versus placebo (P) as prophylaxis for bacterial infection in a randomized, double-blind trial in adult cancer patients receiving cytotoxic chemotherapy expected to result in significant neutropenia. The incidence of adverse reactions attributable to TMZ and/or E was higher in drug-treated episodes (18 of 28 vs 3 of 29 for P, P less than 0.0005) resulting in poorer compliance. The incidence of fever was not significantly different between episodes treated with TMZ-E (18/27) and those treated with P (17/29), nor was there a significant difference in the median interval between the onset of neutropenia and the onset of fever. However, 14 of 18 fevers in TMZ-E recipients were without a documented infectious source compared with only 6 of 17 in P recipients (P less than 0.05). The same patterns were apparent even when episodes in which compliance with the regimen was either excellent or good were considered separately. There was no significant difference in the number of deaths from infection between TMZ-E and P recipients (3/27 vs 1/29). It is concluded that TMZ-E prophylaxis is of no practical benefit, may mask the cause of infection in febrile neutropenic cancer patients, and is associated with substantial toxicity.
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PMID:Prophylaxis of fever and infection in adult cancer patients. A placebo-controlled trial of oral trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole plus erythromycin. 641 74

Purine analogs and alkylating agents are the most active drugs in the treatment of patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). Although fludarabine is the most widely tested purine analog in CLL, myelosuppression has limited its use in combination chemotherapy regimens. Because pentostatin (Nipent; SuperGen, San Ramon, CA), a related purine analog with proven activity in CLL, has less myelosuppression, we postulated that it would prove advantageous and could be more readily combined with alkylating agents. We are conducting a phase I/II trial of combination chemotherapy with pentostatin and cyclophosphamide for previously treated patients with CLL. Patients need to have Rai high-risk disease or "active" intermediate-risk disease. The treatment regimen consists of a fixed dose of pentostatin (4 mg/m2) combined with an increasing dose of cyclophosphamide. We plan to treat cohorts of three patients each at cyclophosphamide dose levels of 600, 900, 1,200, 1,500, and 2,000 mg/m2. Cycles will be repeated every 21 days. If unacceptable toxicity is encountered at one dose level, then three additional patients (total of six patients) will be accrued to that dose level before further dose escalations will be permitted. A second instance of unacceptable toxicity will close that dose level and identify the preceding level as the phase II dose. Additional patients will be accrued to the phase II dose level to better assess response. Supportive measures include the use of granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (5 microg/kg/d) to limit neutropenia. Sulfamethoxazole/trimethoprim will be given as prophylaxis against Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia and acyclovir will be administered as prophylaxis for herpes zoster. Response will be assessed according to standard criteria, and flow cytometry and fluorescent in situ hybridization will be used to assess for minimal residual disease in patients with trisomy 12.
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PMID:A phase I and II study of pentostatin (Nipent) with cyclophosphamide for previously treated patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia. 1087 51

A 45-year-old homosexual man with pneumocystis pneumonia and esophageal candidiasis tested positive in ELISA and Western blot analysis for HIV-1. His CD4+ T cell count was 43/microL and his HIV-RNA load was 250,000 copies/mL. He was treated with Trimetoprim-Sulfamethoxazole, Prednisolone and Fluconazole. Valganciclovir was added to treat CMV retinitis. During the clinical course, 21 days after admission, the patient presented with a temperature of 39 degrees C and blood analysis showed neutropenia. Cefepime and G-CSF were initiated, but new consolidation was observed in the upper left lobe in chest radiography. He underwent bronchoscopy and lavage culture was positive for Aspergillus fumigatus. Serum testing of galactomannan was also positive and pulmonary aspergillosis was diagnosed. The patient was initially treated with Micafungin but switched to Voriconazole when clinical symptoms worsened. An eventual clinical response was observed and pulmonary aspergillosis was controlled. Unfortunately, he died of sepsis due to MRSA 2 months later. Pulmonary aspergillosis is a devastating complication with poor prognosis in patients with HIV infection. Amphotericin-B has been the mainstay of pulmonary aspergillosis treatment, but reports indicate mortality exceeding 80%. Use of Voriconazole, a relatively new antifungal agent, may lower mortality with fewer adverse effects than conventional antifungal therapy.
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PMID:[Voriconazole as an effective therapy against pulmonary aspergillosis in a man with immunodeficiency virus-infection: a case report]. 1744 80