Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0032285 (pneumonia)
54,520 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The records of 40 consecutive patients with newly diagnosed acute nonlymphocytic leukemia (ANLL) were reviewed to determine the risk of recurrent fungal pneumonia during multiple episodes of chemotherapy-induced granulocytopenia. Fungal pneumonias were diagnosed as proven or probable using defined pathologic, microbiologic, radiologic, and clinical criteria. Sixteen patients died without a complete remission; of these, all 11 who underwent autopsy were found to have invasive fungal pneumonia. The 24 patients who achieved a complete remission received one to nine (median, four) additional courses of intensive chemotherapy for remission consolidation and/or relapse, and experienced 132 episodes of severe granulocytopenia. Seven patients never had a pulmonary infection despite 34 granulocytopenic episodes. However, fungal pneumonia complicated 32 (33 percent) of 98 granulocytopenic episodes in the other 17 patients. Fifteen of the patients who achieved a complete remission had at least one episode of fungal pneumonia; 12 received further chemotherapy, and nine (75 percent) of these had a subsequent fungal pneumonia. In all, 17 (52 percent) of 33 subsequent granulocytopenic episodes experienced by patients with a prior fungal pneumonia were complicated by another fungal pneumonia. All four patients with a probable fungal pneumonia diagnosed antemortem who subsequently underwent autopsy were found to have invasive fungal disease. It would appear that patients with ANLL who have had one episode of fungal pneumonia are at high risk for recurrence during subsequent episodes of granulocytopenia. Empiric or even prophylactic amphotericin B therapy may be warranted for such patients.
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PMID:Recurrent fungal pneumonias in patients with acute nonlymphocytic leukemia undergoing multiple courses of intensive chemotherapy. 340 52

The empirical use of amphotericin B in febrile leukemic patients not responding to antimicrobial agents has previously led to a significant decrease in fatal fungal infections and a significant increase in complete remissions. In this series of 66 patients receiving induction therapy for acute myelogenous leukemia (AML), 49 (74%) received amphotericin B. The median interval between institution of antibiotics and amphotericin B was ten days. Fifteen patients had clinical evidence of fungal infection, but only two (3%) died of fungal infection during induction therapy for AML. We discontinued amphotericin B upon granulocyte recovery (greater than 500/cu mm) unless a pulmonary infiltrate was present. Even though only five of 15 patients with probable fungal infection received more than 1,000 mg of amphotericin B, no patient had recurrent fungal disease while in remission. The incidence of clinically suspected fungal pneumonia during consolidation therapy and reinduction therapy also suggested that our therapy was adequate. An increased incidence of late fungal pneumonia in patients receiving reinduction was associated with prolonged neutropenia (greater than 50 days). This study supports the empirical use of amphotericin B during induction therapy for AML, and suggests that doses can be smaller than those generally recommended for fungal infection.
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PMID:Clinical experience with amphotericin B in acute myelogenous leukemia. 346 Jan 80

Five children treated for acute myeloid leukemia according to the BFM protocol AML 83 experienced first bone marrow relapse after 7, 10, 14, 18, and 30 months and were retreated for second remission induction. The chemotherapy consisted of mAMSA (100 mg/m2 per day i.v., days 1-3), ARA-C (100 mg/m2, twice daily, days 1-6), and VP 16 (150 mg/m2 per day, days 4-6). Four of the children achieved a complete second remission after one course of chemotherapy, and the fifth child died of pneumonia during bone marrow aplasia. All surviving children received an identical second course within 4-5 weeks, followed by maintenance chemotherapy. Remission duration was 0, 3, 4, 5, and 5 months. Toxicity was confined to heavy bone marrow depression with thrombocytopenia (nadir 2-7000, days 7-13) and leukocytopenia (nadir 0-400, days 8-14). Bleeding episodes could be prevented by substitution with platelets. Four patients experienced infections (pneumonia, septicemia). We conclude that combination chemotherapy using mAMSA, ARA-C, and VP 16 is effective in inducing a second remission in patients with early bone marrow relapse. The main side effect was considerable bone marrow toxicity.
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PMID:Effective remission induction in children with recurrent acute myeloid leukemia by mAMSA, Ara-C, and VP 16. 347 74

The Seattle Marrow Transplant Team treated about 130 patients (age 4-68 yr) for hematologic cancer with supralethal chemoradiotherapy and bone marrow transplantation (BMT) from the normal genetically identical twin. The procedure was well tolerated. The principal problem was tumor resistance. Nevertheless, BMT for acute leukemia in relapse still cured about 20% of the patients. Moreover, BMT performed while in complete remission cured about 50% of patients with acute lymphocytic leukemia or acute nonlymphocytic leukemia. Sixteen patients received transplantation in the chronic phase of Ph1+ chronic granulocytic leukemia (CGL). All showed disappearance of all Ph1+ cells. Two died of pneumonitis. Of the 14 who are alive, 3 continue to have CGL 37-76 months after BMT and 11 remain in complete hematologic and cytogenetic remission without any Ph1+ metaphases at 31-108 months (median = 68) after BMT. Thus the Ph1-positive clone can be ablated and blast crisis prevented. BMT in the accelerated or blastic phase was far less effective. Syngeneic BMT also benefited or cured patients with lymphoma, hairy-cell leukemia, and multiple myeloma. Therefore, BMT should be considered for every patient who has a hematologic cancer and an identical twin.
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PMID:Identical-twin (syngeneic) marrow transplantation for hematologic cancers. 352 68

In acute myeloid leukemia (AML-46 patients) and various entities of chronic myeloproliferative diseases (CMPD-58 patients) an evaluation and comparison of clinical and postmortem findings has been performed. This study included also aspirates and core biopsies of the bone marrow which were initially taken on admission of those patients. Classification of CMPD was done following the concept of Georgii et al. (1984) into CGL -24-, CMGM-6-, E-MS-13- and MS/OMS-15 cases. There was a significant increase in blastic crisis in CGL compared with the other entities and in the latter a prolongation of the total course of disease due to a long period between symptoms--clinical diagnosis. As revealed by the autopsies causes of death were mostly infections (pneumonia, septicemia-50%) and lethal hemorrhages (gastrointestinal and cerebral--about 30%) in both AML and CMGM patients. Rare causes comprised fatal pulmonary embolism due to a peripheral thrombocytosis in CMPD, acute rupture of the spleen and extensive leukemic infiltrates of the myocard in AML. In addition to the well known giant enlargement of the spleen in MS/OMS, the relatively high frequency of a meningeal involvement (meningeosis leukemica) in AML (about 35%) and during an acute transformation in CMPD (up to 30%) was conspicuous. The examination of the bone marrow at various sites became feasible during the postmortem procedure and thus provided the opportunity to investigate the development and extent of a myelosclerosis evolving in CMPD. In contrast to the a- or hypoplasia and regeneration of the hematopoiesis following chemotherapy, the evolution of myelosclerotic lesions showed a very uniform pattern throughout the skeleton and obviously no reversal of a manifest MS/OMS after cytotoxic treatment.
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PMID:Autopsy and clinical findings in acute leukemia and chronic myeloproliferative diseases--an evaluation of 104 patients. 385 35

A spontaneous complete remission of 34 months' duration was observed in an adult patient with acute myeloblastic leukemia. The remission occurred after a severe febrile pneumonia, which was treated with leukocyte transfusions. At relapse, chromosomal abnormalities reappeared slowly. Such spontaneous complete remissions, almost always associated with bacterial infections and blood transfusions, are extremely rare, and are usually of short duration. Previous cases are summarized, and the role of etiologic factors, including those related to the leukemic proliferation, are discussed.
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PMID:Spontaneous remission in adult acute leukemia. 386 Feb 80

Four patients with acute leukemias resistant to various ARA-C containing regimens and one patient with rapidly progressive malignant nonseminomatous tumor of the testis, who failed to conventional therapy were treated with HD ARA-C from december 1979 to september 1980. The drug was monitored by HPLC in plasma and in CSF. The first patient received only one course of HD ARA-C, developed fever and died of septicemia ten days later. The leucocyte count of her AML (FAB 2) decreased from 120,000/microliter to 30,000/microliter on the third day after HD ARA-C. Patient 2 reached CR criteria of the bone marrow for 23 days, then resistant AML (FAB 2) recurred. A male patient of 30 years was treated for recurrent acute undifferentiated leukemia (AUL) with a high cumulative dose of 176 gs of ARA-C. The repeated courses of treatment included a period of 50 days of CR. Toxicity was remarkable including pulmonal and cerebral dysfunction. A fourth patient with monocytic leukemia did not respond to HD ARA-C, neither did the patient with the malignant teratoma. Adverse reactions were tolerable. Only the third patient suffered from severe toxicity, pneumonitis, blurring vision, cerebral dysfunction and dermatitis. His pretreatment regimen had included X-ray prophylaxis to the skull. Since there was no possibility to prolong the remission duration in 1980, we decided not to treat further patients with HD ARA-C. Nowadays bone marrow transplantation offers some patients a capability of eradication of the leukemic disease.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Results of therapy with high-dose cytosine arabinoside]. 388 22

A total of 22 patients with leukemia (10 ALL, 11 AML, 1 CML) have undergone allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT) by the Quebec Co-operative Group for Marrow Transplantation from 1980 to 1982. All patients received 900 cGy total body irradiation (TBI), in a single fraction, on the day preceding BMT. The first 11 patients were treated on a cobalt unit at a constant dose rate of 4.7 to 6.3 cGy/min. Six of these patients developed interstitial pneumonitis (IP). The clinical course of three patients, two with idiopathic and one with drug-induced pneumonitis, was mild and recovery was complete in all. The other three patients developed severe infectious IP and two died. The next 11 patients were treated with a sweeping beam technique on a 4 MV linear accelerator delivering a total tumor dose of 900 cGy at an average dose rate of 6.0 to 6.5 cGy/min but an instantaneous dose rate of 21.0 to 23.5 cGy/min. Eight patients developed severe IP. Five of these were idiopathic and four died. Three were infectious and all died. The fatality of interstitial pneumonitis appeared to be greater in the group treated with the sweeping beam technique.
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PMID:Interstitial pneumonitis following total body irradiation for bone marrow transplantation using two different dose rates. 389 97

Use of SM-4300, which is a newly developed human immunoglobulin preparation for intravenous administration, has clinically been evaluated in the patients with severe or intractable bacterial infections. Of total 13 cases of the admitted patients at the 1st department of internal medicine, faculty of medicine, Kyushu university, 10-pneumonia case were associated with blood diseases like acute myelocytic leukemia (AML) and multiple myeloma (MM), and in addition, with other underlying diseases like lung cancer and bronchiectasis, 1 was prosthetic valve endocarditis, 1 cholecystitis associated with pericarditis and 1 fever of undetermined origin (FUO). SM-4300 of 5 g single bolus or 3 daily doses of 2.5 g per day were infused with chemotherapy drugs preceedingly administered for more than 3 days and the results were evaluated; good in 4, fair 4, poor 2 and unknown 3, and the efficacy rate was 40%. Bacteriologically, the results were decreased in 1, persisted 1 and the majority was unknown. Observed were no side reactions nor the changes in clinical examination variables incurred by this drug. It is therefore considered that SM-4300 is of use for the treatment of intractable bacterial infections when used with antibiotics.
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PMID:[Clinical studies on SM-4300]. 407 19

The causes of early deaths (12 weeks from diagnosis) were analyzed in 41 patients, i.e. 29% of total acute leukemia material, hospitalized 1976-1981. The most common cause of death was infection, mainly pneumonia and septicaemia, infection and haemorrhagic diathesis or haemorrhagic diathesis alone. In 3 patients suddenly dead, large brain infiltrations were found. Analysis of prognostic factors revealed significantly higher leukocyte count and significantly lower platelet count in the peripheral blood than in the control group of acute myeloid leukemia patients.
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PMID:Causes of early death in adult acute leukaemia. 620 5


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