Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0029713 (immaturity)
4,335 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Circulating non-T lymphocytes had higher activities of 5'nucleotidase (plasma membrane), neutral alpha-glucosidase (endoplasmic reticulum) and basal leucine amino-peptidase than did T lymphocytes. Activities of catalase (peroxisomes), malate dehydrogenase (mitochondria), lactate dehydrogenase (cytosol) and N-acetyl-beta-glucosaminidase, beta-glucuronidase and acid phosphatase (lysosomes), were similar in the lymphocyte subfractions. Lymphocyte 5'nucleotidase (plasma membrane) in patients with common variable hypogammaglobulinaemia is much lower than normal. However, the decrease is less marked in X-linked hypogammaglobulinaemia, chronic lymphatic leukaemia or protein loosing enteropathy or in lymphocytes isolated from cord blood. Cells from patients with nephrotic syndrome had normal levels of 5'nucleotidase. Other plasma membrane marker enzymes (gamma-glutamyl transferase, leucine amino-peptidase) were normal in lymphocytes from patients with common variable hypogammaglobulinaemia. There is a selective reduction of mitochondrial (malate dehydrogenase) and cytosolic (lactate dehydrogenase) enzymes, with normal activities of lysosomal, peroxisomal and endoplasmic reticulum enzymes, in patients with common variable hypogammaglobulinaemia. The lymphocyte subcellular organelles in normal subjects and patients with common variable hypogammaglobulinaemia have similar properties on sucrose density gradient centrifugation. It is suggested that lymphocytes from patients with common variable hypogammaglobulinaemia show a specific enzymopathy and that this is not simply a reflection of cellular immaturity.
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PMID:Lymphocyte enzyme activities in immunodeficiency syndromes with particular reference to common variable hypogammaglobulinaemia. 630 45

The myelodysplastic syndromes represent a prognostically diverse group of disorders. Their study has recently been facilitated by the classification proposed by the French-American-British (FAB) Cooperative Group. Using this scheme it is now possible to define more precisely their natural history and clinical relationship to acute leukaemia. Using the longitudinal case control technique, we reviewed the clinical data and morphology of 69 patients (all elderly males) with chronic irreversible haematological cytopenia and dysplasia. Applying FAB criteria we found: refractory anaemia (RA) in 43%; sideroblastic anaemia (RA-S) in 33%; refractory anaemia with excess blasts (RAEB) in 13%; RAEB in transformation (RAEB-T) in 9% and chronic myelomonocytic leukaemia (CMML) in 1%. The median survival for the entire group was 27 months (RA, 52; RA-S, 29; RAEB, 12; RAEB-T 11; and CMML, 2 months). Short survival was predicted by transfusion requirement and other manifestations of severe cytopenia, as well as by myeloid immaturity. The presence or absence of sideroblastosis did not correlate with survival. Acute leukaemia developed in only eight patients (12%), six of whom initially had RA. Leukaemic transformation was not predicted by progressive cytological immaturity. This study demonstrates that even in the absence of leukaemic transformation, chronic myelodysplasia is a lethal haematological disorder.
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PMID:Chronic myelodysplastic syndrome: short survival with or without evolution to acute leukaemia. 660 68

A hematological picture simulating that seen in cases of leukemia often occurs in a variety of conditions. We recently treated a patient who had a leukemoid reaction in the peripheral blood while he was on parenteral nutrition. Throughout the period of treatment with parenteral nutrition, an abnormal shift towards immaturity in the neutrophilic granulocytes was seen, and the degree of this shift appeared to depend on the caloric intake. Moreover, the hematological picture resembling that seen in cases of leukemia disappeared shortly after discontinuation of the parenteral nutrition, and immature cells were no longer apparent. We assumed that the excess glucose-related calories included in parenteral nutrition produced the leukemoid reaction in this patient who was being surgically treated for carcinoma of the colon with hepatic metastasis.
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PMID:Leukemoid reaction associated with parenteral nutrition. 679 18

Cysteine auxotrophy and absence of cystathionase (CSE) has been associated with certain human and rodent leukemic cell lines. To determine whether this state was a marker of malignant transformation or of cellular differentiation, CSE content was measured in 16 well characterized human leukemia-lymphoma cell lines. Enzyme was easily detected in several lines but its level did not correlate with a proposed scheme of differentiation based on cell-surface markers. However, the apparent absence of enzyme in human bone marrow CFU-C determined by growth experiments suggests reduced levels of CSE may be a marker of cytoplasmic immaturity.
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PMID:Cystathionase: a potential cytoplasmic marker of hematopoietic differentiation. 686 Aug 1

Among 22 neonates treated at the Children's Cancer Research Center of Philadelphia, 11 had neuroblastoma, which in two cases was widely metastatic. There were three infants with teratoma, three with sarcoma, three with leukemia, one with Wilms' tumor, and one with parotid carcinoma. Nine of eleven patients (82%) are long-term survivors following complete surgical excision of tumor, whereas only one of eight (13%) has survived following incomplete surgical excision. All three neonates with leukemia died. The overall two-year actuarial survival is 45% (10/22). The problems associated with treating neonates with chemotherapy, radiation therapy, or both are especially difficult because of the immaturity of the organs and structures. Surgical excision alone has been the treatment of choice for solid tumors. Chemotherapy or radiation therapy, when indicated, require careful monitoring for both acute toxicities and potential long-term morbidities.
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PMID:Cancer in neonates: the experience at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. 711 Aug 16

By rigid cytological and cytochemical criteria, the diagnosis of acute and undifferentiated leukemia was established in 22 patients. According to defined criteria, the leukemic cells could not be classified by conventional light microscopic techniques employed in the study of hematopoietic tissue. Cytochemical studies including peroxidase, periodic acid schiff (PAS) and nonspecific esterase (alpha napthyl butyrate-reacting esterase) stains were done on fresh bone marrow samples, and the percentage of positive leukemia cells for each of these stains was determined on 200 cells. In this series of leukemias, cytochemistry at the light microscope level did not contribute to further classification. Subsequent electron microscopic examination of bone marrow samples from these patients confirmed the immaturity and nuclear/cytoplasmic asynchrony of the leukemic cells. Several in vivo neoplastic markers, such as nuclear blebs, increased nuclear bodies, and cytoplasmic fibrillar bundles could be demonstrated in these cells. Fourteen cases from this series exhibited peroxidase-positive developmental granule formation at the ultrastructural level and were reclassified as acute granulocyte leukemia (AGL). One case was reclassified as lymphoma (poor differentiated type), one case was diagnosed as acute monocytic leukemia (AmonoL), and six cases remained in the undifferentiated category (AUL). Clinical and laboratory features, response to treatment, and survival data were evaluated for these patients. This study demonstrated that electron microscopy is useful in the cytological diagnosis of human leukemia.
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PMID:Acute unclassified leukemia: A clinicopathologic study with diagnostic implications of electron microscopy. 743 2

Therapy with myeloid colony-stimulating factors has been safely and effectively used in a wide variety of situations associated with neutropenia. We present a case of pseudoleukemia occurring in a patient with lymphoma and pancytopenia after 2 days of treatment with granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF). Bone marrow aspirate and flow cytometry study results were consistent with acute myelomonocytic leukemia but were normal after G-CSF was discontinued for 4 days. As previous phase I studies of bone marrow morphology after G-CSF use have not described the extreme myeloid immaturity seen in this patient, it seems likely that the action of G-CSF was enhanced by factors associated with the patient's illness. We emphasize the clinical importance of this case in light of the widespread use of G-CSF.
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PMID:Pseudoleukemia after granulocyte colony-stimulating factor therapy. 753 47

Terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (TdT) was initially considered as a marker of immature lymphoid cells, but many studies have since provided conclusive evidence for the existence of TdT+ cases of acute myeloid leukemia (AML). The reported incidence of TdT+ AML cases varies largely (from 0% to 55%, average of combined data of the literature 18%, children 19%, and adults 21%) suggesting interlaboratory differences in the types of AML examined, the sensitivity of the method used, and the percentage of positive blasts taken as cut-off value. Significantly higher frequencies of TdT+ AML were reported in studies employing immunocytochemical staining (alkaline phosphatase anti-alkaline phosphatase or immunoperoxidase) than in series using immunofluorescence microscopy or biochemical assays. Statistical analysis of various cut-off levels demonstrates an inverse correlation between cut-off point and incidence. The combined data show that TdT-positivity is more common in the immature cell types (M0, M1), with no correlation with age or sex. Except for contested suggestions of an association with t(6;9) and t(8;21), no clear relationship between karyotype and TdT status has been documented. Although an association between T-cell receptor or immunoglobulin gene rearrangements and expression of TdT in AML was postulated, subsequent studies could not demonstrate this correlation. There was no significant relationship with other immunophenotypic markers except for CD34 positivity suggesting that the TdT+ cells represent an immature population. The percentage of positive cells was usually lower in AML than in ALL; in most cases only a subpopulation of the AML cells was TdT+. Thus, TdT could be viewed as a marker of hematopoietic immaturity. In about one-half of the studies on adults, TdT expression was reported to indicate a poor prognosis; others did not find any prognostic difference between TdT+ and TdT- AML cases. No correlation between TdT-positivity and prognosis was found in childhood AML.
Leukemia 1993 Aug
PMID:Terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (TdT) expression in acute myeloid leukemia. 768 37

Clinical and cytologic characteristics were correlated to immunologic markers in 154 patients with newly diagnosed acute myeloid leukemia (AML). The panel of monoclonal antibodies (MoAbs) was selected to identify differentiation-associated antigens of both the myeloid and the lymphoid lineages (CD13, CD33, CD14, CD15, CD7, CD34, CD10, HLA-DR, CD19, CD2, CD5, TdT). The expression of multidrug resistance P-glycoprotein (P-170) was also evaluated in 117 patients. Differences in antigenic expression was observed among the various French-American-British (FAB) subgroups. HLA-DR was poorly expressed on the blasts of acute promyelocytic leukemia (M3), and was always found in FAB M5. CD34 was detectable in all M0 cases and only in one M3 (p < 0.001). Lymphoid-associated antigens were positive in 74 cases (48.1%). In particular, CD7 was found in 49 patients (31.8%), and TdT in 30 (21.3%), 15 samples displaying coexpression of these two antigens. The incidence of CD7+ cases was particularly elevated in M0 and M5 AML (p = 0.005). It significantly correlated with the expression of CD34, HLA-DR, P-170 (p < 0.001, p = 0.018 and p = 0.034 respectively), and with a leukocyte count > 50 x 10(9)/l (p = 0.038). Sixty-nine (59%) samples demonstrated P-170 positivity. Again, this phenotype was particularly expressed in the poorly differentiated forms (M5, M0 and M1) and showed significant correlation with the immaturity markers CD34, CD7 and HLA-DR (p = 0.013, p = 0.022 and p = 0.001, respectively). Expression of individual antigens correlated with prognosis. Refractoriness to first line therapy was associated with CD7 expression (p = 0.002) and P-170 (p = 0.001). The CD7 marker was also significantly associated with a very low overall survival (p < 0.001) and continuous complete remission (p < 0.001). CD14 expression also significantly predicted lower survival rates (p = 0.033). The combination (CD7+ CD14+) identified a subset of patients with a particularly adverse outcome. The prognostic value of CD7 expression, alone or in combination with other markers, was confirmed in multivariate analysis.
Leukemia 1994 Mar
PMID:Prognostic value of cell marker analysis in de novo acute myeloid leukemia. 790 93

Reports of treatment of patients with minimally differentiated acute myeloid leukemia (AML-M0) are limited, heterogeneous, and controversial. We verified the prognosis of this subtype by analyzing the results of 189 consecutive patients with de novo AML. Fifteen cases fitting the criteria of AML-M0 were identified. No clinical features distinguished them from other patients with AML. The median age was 61 years (range 27 to 70), with a leukocyte count ranging from 0.6 to 185 x 10(9)/L. In all cases the leukemic cells expressed CD34 and reacted with at least one of the antibodies to early myeloid antigens, ie, CD13, CD33, or myeloperoxidase. Immunophenotypic analysis also showed positivity for CD7 in seven samples and the multidrug-resistance P-glycoprotein (P-170) in six. Cytogenetic analysis was abnormal in 12 of the 13 patients in whom an adequate number of mitoses could be evaluated. No single abnormality prevailed, the most common findings being trisomy 8 (three cases) and aberrations of chromosome 7 (two cases). Antileukemic treatment differed according to age, but for remission induction, all patients received a combination of cytosine arabinoside and an anthracycline or mitoxantrone. The prognosis of patients with AML-M0 was remarkably poor as compared with the other French-American-British subtypes. Whereas the overall rate of complete remission (CR) was 58% with a median survival of 63 weeks, only 6 of the 15 patients with AML-M0 achieved a CR, and the median survival of this group was 16 weeks (range 3 to 39). The major determinant of treatment failure was unresponsiveness to chemotherapy, as only one patient died of infection during the hypoplastic phase. The CR duration of responders was short, ranging from 3 to 22 weeks, and no second remissions were observed. We conclude that conventional combination chemotherapy yields disappointing results in AML-M0. The reason for this may be the convergence of various unfavorable prognostic factors, such as (1) the high incidence of cytogenetic abnormalities; (2) the lack of differentiation features and the expression of immaturity markers such as CD34 and CD7; and (3) the frequent expression of P-170. Nonconventional therapeutic approaches should be developed to alter the prognosis of this form of leukemia.
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PMID:Analysis of treatment failure in patients with minimally differentiated acute myeloid leukemia (AML-M0). 812 53


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