Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0038002 (splenomegaly)
9,873 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A series of 20 patients with granular lymphocyte proliferative disorders (GLPD) is reported. The criterion of inclusion was presence of persistent (> or = 6 months) granular lymphocytosis in the absence of any causative illness. Diagnoses made upon analytical control in half the patients of splenomegaly (25%) and hepatomegaly (25%) were infrequent. Clinical course was nonprogressive in 17/20 patients, but two developed high-grade NHL several years later and one showed progressive disease. Actuarial probability of survival at 5 years was 85%. Granular lymphocyte morphology was relatively homogeneous, and peripheral blood counts were preserved in the most patients. Bone marrow lymphocytic infiltration was low, as assessed by bone marrow aspiration and/or biopsy. Eosinophilia was an outstanding feature in eight cases. Ultrastructurally, all cases showed parallel tubular arrays; cytoplasmic granules and numerous short microvilli were noticed. The lymphoid phenotype was heterogeneous, the most common being CD2+CD3+CD4-CD8+, but six patients (30%) were CD4+ with variable expression of natural killer-associated antigens. Chromosomal analysis was abnormal in 4/10 patients [trisomy 19, t(5;6); inv(14) and inv(10)]. The study of beta-chain of the T-cell receptor revealed clonal rearrangements in 14 (78%), restricted to CD3+ patients (92%). In vitro culture of myeloid precursors showed decreased CFU-GM in 5/6 patients. Virological studies for HTLV-I and II were negative. In conclusion, the presence of a clonal proliferation was not correlated with the clinical course or an associated disease.
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PMID:Granular lymphocyte proliferative disorders: a multicenter study of 20 cases. 791 27

An unusual case of CD4+ helper T-cell lymphocytic leukaemia is reported in a 67-year-old Japanese woman. CD4+ cells showed convoluted nuclei and dense cytoplasmic granules, features usually present in CD8+ large granular lymphocytes and disorders of this particular cell type. Serum did not show antibodies to HTLV-I and HTLV-I proviral DNA integration was not evident by Southern blot analysis or after PCR. A monoclonal rearrangement of the TCR-beta chain gene was evident when hybridization methods were used. The patient died 11 months after diagnosis. No skin involvement, or splenomegaly was evident. Serum LDH levels were markedly elevated but serum calcium levels were within normal limits. The case is discussed and compared to other T-cell lymphoid leukaemias. The heterogeneity in the morphology of CD4+ T cell leukaemias is stressed.
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PMID:Unique T-helper leukaemia with cytoplasmic granules and convoluted nuclei. 809 21

A total of 41 non-cutaneous peripheral T-cell lymphomas were classified following the updated Kiel classification. Of these, 20 cases belonged to the low-grade group (T-cell chronic lymphocytic leukaemia, 3; lymphoepithelioid, 5; angioimmunoblastic, 4; pleomorphic small cell, 8) and 21 to the high grade group (pleomorphic medium and large cell, 11; immunoblastic, 3; large-cell anaplastic Ki-1 positive, 7). Seventy per cent showed a CD4+/CD8-phenotype, 39% a defective phenotype and 88% an activation phenotype. Eighty per cent had B-symptoms, 63% hepatomegaly, 48% splenomegaly and 26% had involvement of more than three lymphoid areas. Bone marrow was infiltrated in 34%, central nervous system in 4%, lung in 12% and skin in 14.6%. Seventeen per cent presented with extranodal disease and 82.8% had stage III/IV disease. Hypergammaglobulinaemia was found in 29%, hypercalcaemia in 7%, raised LDH serum levels in 58% and HTLV-I antibodies in only one case. Of the 37 treated patients 18 (48%) achieved a complete remission, but 33% relapsed. Mortality was 59% and actuarial overall survival at 38 months was 0.32. In the comparison of the clinical, analytical and immunophenotypic variables and outcome between low and high grade groups, only the average of bone marrow infiltration in the low grade and stage I-II, presence of defective phenotypes and higher Ki-67 positivity in the high grade group were significantly different.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Peripheral T-cell lymphoma: a clinicopathological study of 41 cases and evaluation of the prognostic significance of the updated Kiel classification. 851 73

We report the clinical, ultrastructural, immunophenotypic and virological features of nine cases of a rare type of mature T cell disorder formerly designated Sezary cell leukaemia. All patients presented with lymphocytosis ranging from 12.7 to 133 x 10(9)/l, bone marrow infiltration, splenomegaly and lymphadenopathy. Skin involvement was absent at presentation but developed as a terminal event in two patients, one of whom showed a pattern of dermal infiltration different from that characteristic of Sezary syndrome. Cells from eight cases bore a mature T cell phenotype and electronmicroscopy revealed lymphocytes with cerebriform nuclei resembling Sezary cells. All cases except one were HTLV-I negative. Patients were treated with various chemotherapy regimens but with poor outcome, the median survival being 13 months. Laboratory and clinical data suggest great similarity between Sezary cell leukaemia and T prolymphocytic leukaemia (T-PLL), namely coexpression of CD4 and CD8 (3/9 cases), identical chromosomal abnormalities in the three cases studied (isochromosome 8q plus inversion 14 or t(X;14)(q28;q11)) and a remarkable sensitivity to CAMPATH-1H (complete remission of 21 months' duration in one patient), suggesting that this entity could be considered a variant form of T-PLL. The alternative diagnosis of adult T cell leukaemia/lymphoma could not be excluded in one patient in whom positive HTLV-I serology was documented.
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PMID:Sezary cell leukaemia: a distinct T cell disorder or a variant form of T prolymphocytic leukaemia? 920 83

In two lines of transgenic rats (pX rats) from WKAH and F344 strains and carrying the HTLV-I pX gene under control of the mouse H-2Kd promoter, mammary carcinomas developed predominantly in females starting at about 5 months of age. The incidence of the tumor reached about 40% when the rats were 12 months old. Histology of the tumor was undifferentiated carcinoma with massive infiltration of granulocytes into the tumor tissue. Systemic granulocytosis and hepato-splenomegaly due to extramedullary granulocytopoiesis were seen in pX rats and nude mice bearing pX mammary tumor. mRNAs of both pX and host genes, Gro and MIP-2, which are granulocyte chemoattractants of the IL-8 family, were highly expressed in the tumor tissue. Since expression and point mutation of several oncogenes and anti-oncogene, related with mammary carcinomas, were not demonstrated, hitherto unidentified novel oncogenic pathways may be transactivated by the pX transgene in these pX rats. pX mammary carcinoma cell lines, which have similar characteristics to the primary tumor, were established and the cells underwent apoptosis under the serum deprived conditions. The pX rats and the pX mammary carcinomas appear to be suitable models for analyses of HTLV-I pX oncogenesis and immune pathogenesis in vivo and in vitro.
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PMID:HTLV-I pX transgenic rats: development of cytokine-producing mammary carcinomas and establishment of the pX mammary carcinoma cell lines. 920 2

A 34-year-old woman of HTLV-I carrier with T-PLL, whose quality of life improved and survival was prolonged after splenectomy, is described. The patient had marked splenomegaly, generalized lymphadenopathy and marked proliferation of abnormal lymphocytes in the peripheral blood with an irregular nucleus, deeply basophilic cytoplasm and a single prominent nucleolus, which were positive for CD2, CD3, CD5, CD7, CD4 and CD8. Although the patient had serum antibody against HTLV-I, HTLV-I proviral DNA integration was not detected. She was diagnosed as an HTLV-I carrier with T-PLL and received combination chemotherapy and 15.1 Gy splenic irradiation. However, the generalized lymphadenopathy and splenomegaly did not improve. The patient underwent splenectomy to palliate abdominal distension and hypersplenism. After the operation, her symptoms improved dramatically and within a week her hemoglobin concentration and platelet count normalized. She was discharged from hospital two weeks after the splenectomy, however 11 months later, she relapsed and despite treatment with chemotherapy and alpha-interferon, she died two months after the second admission. Autopsy findings revealed that PLL cells had invaded the bone marrow, lymph nodes, liver, lungs, kidneys, uterus, ovaries and adrenal glands.
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PMID:Improvement of quality of life after splenectomy in an HTLV-I carrier with T-cell prolymphocytic leukemia. 1060 99


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