Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0030305 (pancreatitis)
16,014 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Thalidomide has one of the most notorious drug histories because of its teratogenicity. Its widespread use in the 1960s led to a worldwide epidemic of phocomelia in inborns; this in turn led to its complete ban in most of the world. However, it has now been licensed for selected indications including graft-versus-host-disease (GVHD) after bone marrow transplantation, wasting associated with tuberculosis and human immunodeficiency virus infection, and leprosy. Little is known, however, about its use in children in these settings. Therefore, we report our experience and review the literature on thalidomide in children for GVHD after bone marrow transplantation. We studied 6 patients, 2 with chronic GVHD, 2 with acute GVHD, and 2 with acute GVHD progressing into chronic disease. One patient with chronic GVHD had a complete response, whereas the other had a partial response. Side effects consisted primarily of sedation and constipation, which are reported previously and well known side effects. None had neuropathy. One patient had rash, eosinophilia, and early pancreatitis that began shortly after initiation of thalidomide, persisted, and resolved only after discontinuation of thalidomide. Eosinophilia and pancreatitis are both previously unreported side effects or associated findings of thalidomide treatment. Review of the literature reveals three major studies of thalidomide in GVHD; of these two included children and adults together, and one in which age range of patients was not mentioned. In addition, four series of children receiving only thalidomide are reported. These series contained 1 to 14 patients each. Results show efficacy in at least 50% of children with chronic GVHD and little or no efficacy in children with exclusively acute GVHD. Side effects are similar to those reported in adults and consisted mostly of sedation and constipation, both of which subsided over time and resolved after discontinuing the drug. We speculate on the reasons for which thalidomide is more effective in chronic, compared with acute, GVHD in children, and make recommendations for future study.
...
PMID:Thalidomide in children undergoing bone marrow transplantation: series at a single institution and review of the literature. 1010 36

Lentinan is a beta 1-->3 glucan isolated from Lentinus edodes (Shiitake mushroom) which has immune modulating properties. We have conducted two phase I/II placebo-controlled trials on a total of 98 patients. In one study at the San Francisco General Hospital (SFGH), ten patients each were administered 2, 5, or 10 mg of lentinan or placebo i.v. once a week for eight weeks. In the second study at the Community Research Initiative in New York (CRI), two groups of 20 patients each were administered 1 or 5 mg of lentinan i.v. twice a week for 12 weeks, and ten patients were administered placebo (vehicle containing mannitol plus dextran 40) i.v. twice a week. Entry criteria were an HIV positive test, CD4 levels of 200-500 cells, age 18-60 years, and without current opportunistic infections. This study confirms, in Caucasian subjects also, the good tolerability of lentinan observed in Japanese cancer patients. Side effects were mainly mild, especially when infusion was carried out over a 30-minute period. In the SFGH study, where administration was over a ten minute period, there were nine side effects severe enough to be reported to the FDA (one case each of anaphylactoid reaction, back pain, leg pain, depression, rigor, fever, chills, granulocytopenia and elevated liver enzymes) and there were four patients who discontinued therapy because of side effects. In the CRI study, where infusion was over a 30-minute period, there were no side effects reportable to the FDA and there were four dropouts due to side effects or personal preference. Most side effects resolved promptly after the discontinuation of medication, and all of them were relieved within 24 hours. Patients in the study have shown a trend toward increases in CD4 cells and in some patients neutrophil activity. Because of the small numbers, these values do not have statistical significance. Inasmuch as no side effects such as anemia, leukopenia, pancreatitis or neuropathy were seen, and in view of the positive effects of lentinan on certain surrogate markers (recognizing that these were small studies), we recommended a long-term clinical trial of lentinan in combination with didanosine (ddI) or zidovudine in HIV positive patients. Most patients in these trials did not have measurable p24 levels. In the CRI trials of ten patients with elevated p24 levels, eight on lentinan and two on placebo had decreased p24 levels. Of these decreases, those with lentinan and one with placebo were marked. These results were provocative and needed confirmation. Subsequent to this study, a trial of lentinan in combination with didanosine (ddI) showed a mean increase of 142 CD4 cells/mm3 over a twelve month period, in contrast to a decrease in CD4 cells in patients on ddI alone (Gordon et al. 1995).
...
PMID:A placebo-controlled trial of the immune modulator, lentinan, in HIV-positive patients: a phase I/II trial. 1050 66

Despite potent antiretroviral activity, the HIV-1 protease inhibitors have recently been associated with abnormal serum lipoprotein concentrations. The purpose of this review is to describe serum lipid abnormalities related to protease inhibitor use. A MEDLINE search up to June 1, 1999, and abstracts from recent scientific meetings were primary data sources. Lipid disturbances in HIV-infected patients receiving protease inhibitors generally consist of elevated triglycerides and total cholesterol levels; HDL cholesterol is often reduced. The pathophysiological mechanism by which the protease inhibitors induce these lipid abnormalities has been hypothesized, but is unknown. Cases of pancreatitis and coronary heart disease have been described in hyperlipidemic patients receiving protease inhibitors. Treatment of protease inhibitor-related hyperlipidemia is unknown. Exchanging the offending protease inhibitor for nevirapine may be helpful in certain patients. Atorvastatin in combination with gemfibrozil has been used with limited success in a small number of individuals.
...
PMID:Hyperlipidemia associated with HIV protease inhibitor use: pathophysiology, prevalence, risk factors and treatment. 1082 94

Dideoxynucleosides currently in use for anti-HIV therapy have been found to be inefficient in passing through the blood-brain barrier to enter and maintain therapeutic drug levels in brain, a very significant reservoir of HIV. The low bioavailability of these drugs combined with the bone marrow toxicity of AZT (3'-azido, 3'-deoxythymidine, Zidovudine), resulting in anemia and leukopenia, pancreatitis with ddI (2',3'-dideoxyinosine, Didanosine) and painful peripheral neuropathy in case of ddC (2',3-dideoxycytosine, Zalcitabine) are the limiting factors in their use. In addition, the emergence of strains of HIV resistant to AZT, the most commonly used drug, further restricts its use. Thus the control of AIDS and its complications, needs special therapeutic approaches to combat the disease. In order to overcome these limitations, AZT and ddI have been synthesized as ester-linked ceramide- and phosphatidylcholine-linked prodrugs possessing therapeutic attributes lacking in the parent compounds. There is greater uptake and longer retention of these prodrugs in NIH/3T3 cells in vitro. Pretreatment with our prodrugs blocked infection of these cells by Moloney murine leukemia virus (M-MuLV) for an extended period, which the parent drugs failed to do. When human CD4+ HeLa cells were continuously exposed to the AZT prodrug, subsequent infection of these cells by HIV was blocked. Similar results were obtained with NIH/3T3 cells exposed to M-MuLV. AE(6)C, a prodrug of AZT linked to ceramide via a cleavable ester bond and a six carbon linker, was less toxic to both mouse and human bone marrow progenitor cells than free AZT. Most significantly, the prodrugs concentration was greater and the retention longer, in well known sanctuaries for HIV, such as the brain, testes and thymus.
...
PMID:Improved uptake and retention of lipophilic prodrug to improve treatment of HIV. 1083 73

Massive hypertriglyceridaemia associated with fatty liver and abdominal pain or frank pancreatitis (the chylomicronaemia syndrome) is uncommon, but clinically important and under-recognized. It may arise as a result of severe genetic defects in lipolysis or, more commonly, from a moderate primary hypertriglyceridaemia that is exacerbated by a secondary cause. The latter include several drugs, among which the protease inhibitors, used for the treatment of human immunodeficiency virus infection, are increasingly apparent. In the acute situation plasma exchange, fat-free parenteral nutrition and acute insulin treatment, even in nondiabetic persons, may be valuable. A potentially major advance in prophylaxis is the use of high-dose antioxidant therapy, which has been shown to reduce attacks of pancreatitis even in the absence of a reduction in serum triglycerides. Asymptomatic patients with abnormal liver function tests are common in the lipid clinic, and can be a difficult group in which to make management decisions. Among those who are not taking excessive amounts of alcohol, many will have nonalcoholic steatohepatitis. The care of these patients is discussed, but there remains considerable uncertainty regarding their optimum management and prognosis.
...
PMID:Serum triglycerides, the liver and the pancreas. 1094 19

Data regarding the use of both parenteral and enteral specialized nutritional support (SNS) are available for a variety of common clinical scenarios. Herein, the data are reviewed for SNS in the context of critical illness, perioperative care, wasting syndromes (including HIV disease and cancer), and gastrointestinal disease (including short bowel syndrome, inflammatory bowel disease, and pancreatitis).
...
PMID:Evidence base for specialized nutrition support. 1106 Sep 99

We describe the case of a young HIV-positive patient undergoing three-drug antiretroviral therapy that included a protease inhibitor for 9 months, who was admitted to the hospital with an acute myocardial infarction. A coronary angiogram revealed occlusion caused by a thrombus in the proximal third of the anterior descending artery. Complete recanalization was obtained after an angioplasty was performed. At the time of the infarction, only the triglyceride levels were found to be high. Metabolic alterations associated with the prolonged use of protease inhibitors have been described such as an increase in the triglyceride and cholesterol serum levels, diabetes, resistance to insulin, lipodystrophy, and pancreatitis. The consequences of chronic hyperlipidemia are well known in the medical literature, especially premature coronary artery disease. No family history of coronary artery disease was identified in this patient. Whether the genesis of this localized coronary thrombosis was due to a change in the metabolism of the vascular endothelium caused by the protease inhibitors, or by related dyslipidemia, is still to be determined. In this case, the data suggest a strong link between coronary insufficiency and prolonged use of the protease inhibitor.
...
PMID:Acute Myocardial Infarction in a 34-Year-Old HIV-Positive Female Patient While Undergoing Active Antiretroviral Therapy Containing a Protease Inhibitor. 1108 68

Lactic acidosis has been described in persons with HIV infection particularly in association with the use of nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs). Little is known about the epidemiology of this problem. We reviewed the records of all HIV-infected adults with elevated lactate levels admitted to Barnes-Jewish hospital from 1996 to 1998. There were 37 patients identified with elevated lactate levels. The annual rate of elevated lactate levels was 22.6, 33.9, and 30.8 per 1,000 admissions in 1996, 1997, and 1998, respectively. The median age of the patients was 40.4 years; median CD4(+) count was 148 cells/mm(3); and the median HIV-1 RNA level was 4,401 copies/ml. The median lactate level was 4.5 mmol/liter (range, 2.2-19 mmol/liter). Twenty-nine patients (78%) had elevated lactate levels at admission. Elevated lactate levels were associated with sepsis (48.7%), pancreatitis (13.5%), liver failure (8.1%), multiorgan failure (8.1%), and other conditions. Five patients had lactic acidosis associated with the use of antiretroviral medications; one patient with unexplained lactic acidosis and four patients with pancreatitis. The mortality rate was 45.9% (17/37). Higher lactate levels were associated with increased mortality. In conclusion, elevated lactate levels were uncommon but not rare in hospitalized patients with HIV infection. Sepsis was the most commonly associated condition and antiretroviral medications were the second most frequently associated factor. There was no significant increase in the annual rate of lactic acidosis during this 3-year period.
...
PMID:Elevated lactate levels in hospitalized persons with HIV infection. 1117 1

The objective of this study was to compare the safety, tolerability and clinical response of once- versus twice-daily administration of didanosine given at a dosage of 270 mg/m2/day in children with symptomatic HIV-associated disease who were intolerant to or clinically deteriorated on zidovudine monotherapy. We carried out a randomized, open-label multicentre trial. Didanosine was supplied in buffered tablets, which could be chewed or dispersed in liquid. The children were recruited from 16 paediatric departments participating in the Italian Register for HIV Infection in Children. A total of 53 children (median age 5.5 years) started trial treatment; 26 were given didanosine twice daily and 27 once daily; 85% had AIDS and 98% had clinically deteriorated while on zidovudine therapy. Similar safety and tolerability results were demonstrated for the two schemes of therapy. A total of 11 children (20.7%) required discontinuation of didanosine for severe adverse events (five children (19.2%) in the twice-daily group; six children (22.2%) in the once-daily group, log-rank P = 0.81). Severe hepatic toxicity was uncommon (5.6%) while mild to moderate hepatic dysfunction was demonstrated in about 17% of the participants, without any difference between the two groups. Haematological toxicity was common (about 40% of the children, 11 in the twice- and 19 in the once-daily group) but never severe. Clinical pancreatitis and retinal lesions were never demonstrated. There was no significant difference in progression to death or to a new opportunistic infection between the two treatment regimens (log-rank P = 0.54). The modification of surrogate efficacy parameters during the study period was similar in the two groups. However, weight gain was poorer in children treated once daily. This study suggests that the safety and tolerability of 270 mg/m2/day of didanosine given once daily is substantially similar to that of the traditionally recommended schedule of two divided doses. Owing to the small sample and to the severity of the clinical condition of the children enrolled, no definite conclusions on the comparative efficacy of the two regimens can be drawn.
...
PMID:Once versus twice daily administration of didanosine in children with symptomatic HIV-associated disease who were intolerant to or clinically deteriorated on zidovudine. The Italian Pediatric Collaborative Study Group on Didanosine. 1132 66

Current antiretroviral therapy has lead to longer survival in patients infected with HIV, but it is also associated with new and important problems. Body fat redistribution and metabolic abnormalities, the so-called lipodystrophy syndrome, are among the most prevalent and worrisome ones. While an increasing number of patients infected with HIV are becoming affected by this syndrome, the pathogenesis of this syndrome and how to prevent and treat the problem all remain largely unknown. Body fat changes stigmatise the bodies of patients infected with HIV giving them a similar look to that seen in patients some years ago when the wasting syndrome was more prevalent and HIV infection was ultimately fatal. The psychological impact of body fat changes may be severe enough to affect a patients' desire to continue with antiretroviral therapy. Metabolic abnormalities, probably with the exception of symptomatic diabetes mellitus and hypertriglyceridaemia-induced pancreatitis, do not have an immediate impact on the quality of the lives of patients with HIV. However, their potential long term cardiovascular and bone consequences may increase the morbidity and the mortality of patients infected with HIV through noninfectious diseases. The impact of lipodystrophy on patients infected with HIV is not readily captured with the classic instruments used to measure quality of life and hence it is necessary to modify them urgently. Though treating lipodystrophy seems fully justified, there is no proven treatment for this problem, although a number of treatments have been used with varying success. Despite the recognition that lipodystrophy may have important psychological repercussions, the best psychological approach for this problem is not known at present. Although lipodystrophy has its own peculiarities, existing knowledge about how to psychologically help other patients with deforming body changes might be of help for patients infected with HIV, or at least may act as a starting point.
...
PMID:Lipodystrophy syndrome in patients with HIV infection: quality of life issues. 1134 20


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>