Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0032463 (polycythemia vera)
3,374 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In polycythemia vera (PV), treatment with chlorambucil and radioactive phosphorus (p32) increases the risk of leukemic transformation from 1% to 13-14%. This risk has been estimated to be 1-5.9% with hydroxyurea (HU) therapy. When compared with historical controls, the risk with use of HU does not appear to be statistically significant. The leukemogenic risk of HU therapy in essential thrombocytosis (ET) and in myelofibrosis with myeloid metaplasia (MMM) is unknown. HU remains the main myelotoxic agent in the treatment of PV, ET, and MMM. We studied 64 patients with these three disorders, seen at our institution during 1993-1995. The patients were studied for their clinical characteristics at diagnosis, therapies received, and development of myelodysplasia or acute leukemia (MDS/AL). Forty-two had PV, 15 ET, and 6 MMM, and 1 had an unclassified myeloproliferative disorder. Of the 42 patients with PV, 18 were treated with phlebotomy alone, 16 with HU alone, 2 with p32, 2 with multiple myelotoxic agents, and 2 with interferon-alpha (IFN-alpha). Two patients from the phlebotomy-treated group, one from the HU-treated group, and 1 from the multiple myelotoxic agent-treated group developed MDS/AL. In the larger group, 11 received no treatment or aspirin alone, 18 were treated with phlebotomy alone, 25 with HU, 5 with multiple myelotoxic agents, 2 with p32, 2 with IFN-alpha, and 1 with melphalan. Study of the entire group of 64 patients showed that only one additional patient (total of 5 out of 64) developed MDS/AL. This patient had been treated with HU alone. Statistical analysis did not show any association between clinical characteristics at diagnosis, or HU therapy, and development of MDS/AL (P=0.5). Thus, our data provide no evidence suggestive of increased risk of transformation to MDS/AL with HU therapy in PV, ET, and MMM. Larger, prospective studies are needed to study this issue further.
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PMID:Leukemogenic risk of hydroxyurea therapy in polycythemia vera, essential thrombocythemia, and myeloid metaplasia with myelofibrosis. 863 10

Myeloproliferative disorders (MPD) are prone to modification and evolution during the progression of the disease. While post-polycythemia myeloid metaplasia and chronic myelogenous leukemia following polycythemia vera have been frequently described, no report is available about the evolution of polycythemia vera into essential thrombocythemia. Our case is probably the first report on this occurrence. In the course of a fortuitous observation of electrocardiographic alterations, a diagnosis of polycythemia vera was ruled out in accordance with polycythemia vera study group criteria. At the time of diagnosis, RBC was 6 x 10(12)/L, WBC 15 x 10(9)/L, Ht 59% and platelets 1000 x 10(9)/L. The patient was treated with phlebotomies and radioactive phosphorus achieving a good remission or the disease. Five years later, platelets rose to over 3300 x 10(9)/L without significant modification or RBC, WBC and Ht. The restaging or the disease was consistent for an essential thrombocythemia. In particular, RBC mass was within normal levels. During the last ten years, the patient has been followed recurrently and the blood picture remained stationary, without an increase in the hematocrit but with a platelet count between 658 and 800 x 10(9)/L. We conclude that this report may complete data concerning the evolution of MPD in others.
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PMID:Essential thrombocythemia following polycythemia vera: an unusual sequence. 915 Dec 4

Forty-one patients with polycythemia vera (PV) according to the PVSG criteria were analysed retrospectively from January 1960 to March 1996. There were 23 male and 18 female patients with a median follow-up of 66.5 months (3-431 months). Median age was 62 (range: 37-85). The median hemoglobin level at diagnosis was 18.8 g/dl. Four patients were treated by venesection alone, 20 patients received hydroxyurea and intermittent venesection, 3 were treated with radioactive phosphorus alone, and 14 had both hydroxyurea and radioactive phosphorus. During the course of illness, 14 patients (34%) developed a total of 19 thrombotic events. Of the thrombotic events, 16 were arterial and 3 were venous. Two patients had both arterial and venous thrombosis sequentially. The probability of thrombosis-free survival after treatment was 83% at 10 years and 73% at 20 years. One patient developed post-polycythemic myeloid metaplasia 24 months after diagnosis. Of 17 patients exposed to radioactive phosphorus, only 1 developed secondary acute myeloid leukemia (AML) 9 years afterwards. Of the 20 patients treated with hydroxyurea for a median duration of 63.5 months (2-130 months), there is no case of secondary malignancy. Overall survival was 83% at 10 years and 62% at 20 years. In conclusion, PV in Chinese is a relatively benign disease with a low risk of thrombosis as compared to Caucasian patients. Hydroxyurea has a very low risk of secondary leukemia and is a safe drug to use in Chinese patients with PV.
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PMID:Polycythemia vera in Chinese patients: thirty-six years of experience. 929 70

The tendency to evolve into acute leukemia is a well-known characteristic of polycythemia vera (PV), which is shared with the remaining chronic myeloproliferative disorders and increases after the administration of cytotoxic agents. Acute transformation is usually of myeloid phenotype, whereas acute lymphoid leukemia (ALL) following PV is seldom observed. A 63-year-old woman is described who developed ALL at 6 years from the initial diagnosis of PV, for which she had received radioactive phosphorus and hydroxyurea. The ALL was of B-cell type, corresponding to the L-3 subtype of the FAB classification. Despite the administration of combination chemotherapy the patient died shortly after the diagnosis of acute leukemia. The present case adds to seven previously described patients with the above association, all of whom had received cytotoxic therapy for PV. Median interval from PV to ALL diagnosis was 10 years, and there was a predominance of the B-cell phenotype. The prognosis was poor since all but one of the patients had a short survival after ALL diagnosis. The possible etiological and pathogenetic link between PV and the subsequent ALL is discussed.
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PMID:Acute lymphoid leukemia following polycythemia vera. 1003 41

The use of radioactive phosphorus (32P) to treat the myeloproliferative disorders (chronic leukemia, polycythemia vera and essential thrombocythemia) began in 1939 when John H. Lawrence treated the first patient on the basis of work done in the laboratory animals that found localization of the radioisotope in the spleen, liver, bone and in leukemic cells sufficient to indicate a therapeutic potential. After World War II when 32P became widely available, it was used extensively to treat the chronic leukemias and polycythemia vera. Its use in the treatment of essential thrombocythemia began later in 1950. Today it is not widely used in the treatment of the chronic leukemia, if at all, its use in polycythemia vera appears to have decreased substantially and replaced by hydroxyurea, and its use in the management of essential thrombocythemia is not widespread. In each instance it has been replaced by a drug developed for use in cancer chemotherapy, and in some instances by interferon. It probably has wider use in polycythemia vera in the rest of Western Europe than in the UK, and there are cogent reasons to suggest that it may be the best tool for the treatment of polycythemia vera. Thus have we discarded a treatment modality that in polycythemia vera may be the best?
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PMID:Treatment of the myeloproliferative disorders with 32P. 1091 33

Myeloproliferative diseases (MPD) include polycythemia vera (PV), essential thrombocythemia, agnogenic myeloid metaplasia, and chronic myelogenous leukemia. The focus of this report is on PV, which is characterized by an increase in red blood cells, granulocytes, and platelets. Complications associated with PV are an increased risk of thrombosis and abnormal bleeding. Phlebotomy to a hematocrit less than 45% is the mainstay of treatment for erythrocythemia, but may further increase the platelet count, necessitating the use of a platelet-lowering agent in conjunction with phlebotomy. Other treatment strategies include low-dose aspirin or other antithrombotic therapy and cytoreduction. Mounting evidence of the leukemogenicity and mutagenicity of radioactive phosphorus and alkylating agents, as administered using "conventional" regimens, has restricted the liberal use of these treatments. Three drugs have emerged as useful because of their efficacy in reducing the elevated platelet count: anagrelide, hydroxyurea (HU), and interferon alfa (IFN). It is clear that no single agent satisfies all the needs for cytoreduction that arise during the course of PV. Future protocols should be designed that draw on the large body of experience already gained with these drugs to transcend the limitations of single-agent therapy and to improve quality of life as well as survival. Semin Hematol 38(suppl 2):25-28.
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PMID:Current management in polycythemia vera. 1124 99

In this paper we describe a patient with polycythemia vera (PV), who presented with hypercalcemia due to a parathyroid adenoma. In November 1999, the patient was admitted to our hospital with meteorism and constipation. Her physical examination revealed plethora and hepatosplenomegaly. Laboratory data revealed hyperparathyroidism in addition to PV: Rbc 8 x 10(6)/mm3, Hct 63.7%, serum calcium 13.4 mg/dl, serum phosphorus 1.2 mg/dl, albumin 4.25 mg/dl, and alkaline phophatase activity 433 U/l. Intact Parathyroid Hormone level (iPTH) was 376 pg/ml (n.v.12-72 pg/ml). Twenty-four hour urinary calcium excretion was higher than normal (900 mg). A parathyroid adenoma was detected with Tc-99m sesta-MIBI scanning under the left lobe of the thyroid gland and an ultrasonographic examination of the neck also supported the diagnosis. The patient was recommended for surgery. The histopathological examination confirmed the diagnosis. Postoperatively, iPTH dropped to 53.4 pg/ml at the 15 th minute and to 33.5 pg/ml at the first hour. The calcium level was 7.5 mg/dl one hour after the operation. Five days later, Hct was 40.8%. This case represents a rare association between PV and primary hyperparathyroidism, and may provide evidence for a causal link between PTH and polycythemia vera in our patient. In conclusion, this case indicates that the differential diagnosis of hypercalcemia and polycythemia vera should also include the possibility of a parathyroid tumor in addition to malignancy.
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PMID:An unusual cause of hypercalcemia in polycythemia vera: parathyroid adenoma. 1210 88

Polycythemia vera (PV) is a chronic myeloproliferative disease characterized by an increase of total red cell volume; in 10% to 15% of cases, bone marrow fibrosis complicates the course of the disease after several years, resulting in a hematologic picture mimicking myelofibrosis with myelocytic metaplasia (MMM). This condition is known as post polycythemic myelofibrosis (PPMF). Among 30 patients with PPMF followed in Northern France, 27 (90%) expressed one or two abnormal clones in myelocytic cell cultures. Of these, 19 (70%) had partial or complete trisomy 1q. This common anomaly either resulted from unbalanced translocations with acrocentric chromosomes, that is, 13, 14, and 15, or other chromosomes, that is, 1, 6, 7, 9, 16, 19, and Y, or from partial or total duplication of long arm of chromosome 1. A single patient had an isochromosome 1q leading to tetrasomy 1q. In all cases, a common trisomic region spanning 1q21 to 1q32 has been identified. Given that most patients had previously received chemotherapy or radio-phosphorus to control the polycythemic phase of their disease, this study illustrates the increased frequency of cytogenetic abnormalities after such treatments: 90% versus 50% in de novo MMM. Moreover, karyotype can be used to distinguish PPMF-where trisomy 1q is the main anomaly-from primary MMM where trisomy 1q is rare and deletions 13q or 20q are far more common. Whether trisomy 1q is or is not a secondary event remains a matter of debate, as well as the role of cytotoxic treatments.
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PMID:Karyotypic abnormalities in myelofibrosis following polycythemia vera. 1264 49

X-radiation remains the treatment of choice in most cases of leukemia and lymphoma, but new agents are playing an increasing role in therapy. Radioactive phosphorus does not produce radiation sickness and results with it are comparable to those of x-ray therapy in chronic leukemia. Urethane and nitrogen mustard may produce remissions in patients with chronic leukemia who have become resistant to radiation. Triethylene melamine may be administered orally with nitrogen mustard-like effects and is undergoing further trial. Aminopterin, ACTH and cortisone often cause short remissions in acute leukemia. Urethane is the best treatment available for multiple myeloma. Polycythemia vera is well controlled by radioactive phosphorus combined with venesection. Nitrogen mustard is often effective and triethylene melamine shows promise in Hodgkin's disease. Antianemic substances such as iron and liver extract are of no value in the treatment of anemia caused by leukemia, lymphoma and myeloma.
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PMID:New therapy for leukemia, polycythemia, and lymphoma. 1301 1


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