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Query: UMLS:C0038002 (
splenomegaly
)
9,873
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
2-Chlorodeoxyadenosine
(2-CdA) yields high complete remission (CR) rates in patients with hairy cell leukemia (HCL) Two approaches were used to detect minimal residual disease. We studied two B-lineage antibodies, L26 and MB2, and a T-lineage antibody, UCHL-1, in fixed marrow core biopsies from 34 patients with HCL before and after 2-CdA to detect minimal residual in the marrow. In addition, the splenic index was calculated before and after treatment to detect residual
splenomegaly
. Prior to therapy, hairy cells exhibited intense cytoplasmic membrane reactivity with L26 and strong intracytoplasmic reactivity with MB2. UCHL-1 did not react with hairy cells. Thirty-one patients were assessable 3 months after therapy. Five of 24 (21%) patients in CR by routine evaluation had residual HCL detected by immunostaining. Four of these 5 patients have been reevaluated at 1 year. One patient relapsed by routine evaluation, 2 remained positive by immunostaining alone, and 1 patient became negative by immunostaining. A total of 19 patients have been evaluated at 1 year and 17 remain in CR. Three of these 17 were positive by immunostaining, 2 of whom had been positive at 3 months and 1 additional patient who became positive by immunostaining at 1 year. Of 9 patients evaluated at 2 years, an additional 2 of 3 patients with minimal residual disease detected previously by immunostaining at 3 months relapsed by routine morphology and 1 had persistent positive immunostaining. Only 1 patient in remission by morphology and immunostaining has relapsed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Assessment of complete remission after 2-chlorodeoxyadenosine for hairy cell leukemia: utility of marrow immunostaining and measurement of splenic index. 752 9
Hairy cell leukaemia is a rare chronic lymphoproliferative disease, characterized by
splenomegaly
, pancytopenia and recurrent infection. The characteristic 'hairy cells', present in the peripheral blood and bone marrow, are the hallmark of this leukaemia. The disease has a chronic, progressive course, and the majority of patients afflicted by it require therapy. The most common reason to initiate treatment is neutropenia with or without associated infectious complications, or the development of severe thrombocytopenia. Therapeutic options in hairy cell leukaemia include splenectomy, interferon administration, or the use of chemotherapeutic agents such as pentostatin (2'-deoxycoformycin) and 2-chlorodeoxyadenosine. Splenectomy is still indicated in the treatment of young patients with significant
splenomegaly
and only minimal bone marrow involvement. Interferon treatment induces remission in approximately 90% of patients with hairy cell leukaemia, but complete remission is obtained in only 5-10%. The development of antibodies against interferon was initially considered a major problem, but longer follow-up of patients who developed antibodies has shown that it is transient and does not have a significant impact on the overall response to treatment. Pentostatin induces complete remission in 60-70% of patients and partial remission in 20-40%.
2-Chlorodeoxyadenosine
is a very promising drug in the treatment of this rare leukaemia, inducing long-lasting complete remission in approximately 80% of patients. While interferon does not cure the disease, it is possible that a subset of patients treated with pentostatin or 2-chlorodeoxyadenosine are cured. Longer follow-up of these patients will determine whether this is true.
...
PMID:Hairy cell leukaemia. 791 37
The authors describe a female patient suffering from hairy-cell leukaemia. Already at the onset of the disease, apart from marked
splenomegaly
, sonography revealed marked retroperitoneal lymphadenopathy. During the subsequent course skin changes developed such as vasculitis and leukaemic infiltrates of the cornea on both eyes. The patient was successfully treated with 2-chlorodeoxyadenosine (2-CdA,
Leustatin
).
...
PMID:[An unusual course in hairy-cell leukemia with marked abdominal lymphadenopathy, leukemic infiltration of the cornea and skin changes]. 892 22
Hairy cell leukemia-variant (HCL-V) is an extremely rare chronic B-cell lymphoproliferative disorder clinically and morphologically distinct from classic hairy cell leukemia (HCL). HCL-V is thought to represent a hybrid between prolymphocytic leukemia and HCL, the nucleus more closely resembling a prolymphocyte and the cytoplasm a hairy cell. The clinical course of HCL-V is aggressive with short survivals. Since single courses of cladribine have profound activity in HCL, inducing durable complete responses in 91% of patients, we administered cladribine to 4 patients with HCL-V over a 7-year period. During this time interval 357 patients with classic HCL received cladribine at Scripps Clinic. Each patient received cladribine at 0.1 mg/kg per day by continuous intravenous infusion for 7 days, repeated at 28-day intervals depending on response status. The 4 patients ranged in age from 28 to 70. Two presented with B-symptoms, 1 had peripheral adenopathy, and all 4 displayed massive
splenomegaly
. Peripheral blood counts were notable for lymphocytosis associated with mild anemia and thrombocytopenia. Only 1 of the 4 patients had received prior treatment. Peripheral blood immunophenotypic analysis revealed monoclonal B cells with expression of CD11c in 3 patients, lack of CD25 expression in 3 patients and expression of CD103 in all but 1 patient. The number of cladribine courses administered ranged from two to five. Of these 4 patients, 1 (25%) achieved a complete response and 2 (50%) partial responses, for an overall response rate of 75%. Three patients underwent splenectomy after cladribine.
Cladribine
is an active agent in HCL-V albeit with a lower response rate than in classic HCL. The role of other treatment modalities, such as splenectomy, interferon-alpha, and 2'-deoxycoformycin, alone or in combination with cladribine awaits further evaluation.
...
PMID:Treatment of hairy cell leukemia-variant with cladribine. 1070 59
Chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL) is a disease of late middle age and older. The majority of patients are diagnosed because of a lymphocytosis of at least 5 x 10(9)/L on an incidental blood count. It needs to be distinguished from mantle cell lymphoma and splenic marginal zone lymphoma by lymphocyte markers. The immunophenotype of CLL is sparse surface immunoglobulin, CD5+, CD19+, CD23+, CD79b-, and FMC7-. The disease is staged according to the presence of lymphadenopathy and/or
splenomegaly
and the features of bone marrow suppression. Most patients have an early stage of disease when diagnosed and perhaps 50% will never progress. This group of patients have a normal life expectancy and do not require treatment beyond reassurance. Progression involves an increasing white cell count, enlarging lymph nodes and spleen, anaemia and thrombocytopenia. Complications of progression include autoimmune haemolytic anaemia and thrombocytopenia, immunodeficiency, and the development of a more aggressive lymphoma. A range of prognostic factors is available to predict progression, but most haematologists rely on close observation of the patient. Intermittent chlorambucil remains the first choice treatment for the majority of patients. Combination chemotherapy offers no advantage. Intravenous fludarabine is probably more effective than chlorambucil, but no trial has yet shown a survival advantage for using it first rather than as a salvage treatment in patients not responding to chlorambucil. It is at least 40 times as expensive as chlorambucil.
Cladribine
may be as effective as fludarabine, although it has been used less and is even more expensive. Patients who relapse after chlorambucil should be offered retreatment with the same agent and if refractory should be switched to fludarabine, which may also be offered for retreatment on relapse. For patients refractory to both drugs, a variety of options are available. High dose corticosteroids, high dose chlorambucil, CHOP (cyclophosphamide, prednisolone, vincristine and doxorubicin), anti-CD52, anti-CD20 and a range of experimental drugs which are being evaluated in clinical trials. Younger patients should be offered the chance of treatment with curative intent, preferably in the context of a clinical trial. Autologous stem cell transplantation after achieving a remission with fludarabine has relative safety and may produce molecular complete remissions. Only time will tell whether some of these patients are cured but it seems unlikely. Standard allogeneic bone marrow transplant is probably too hazardous for most patients, but non-myeloablative regimens hold out the hope of invoking a graft-versus-leukaemia effect without a high tumour-related mortality. Trials of immunotherapy are exciting options for a few patients in specialised centres.
...
PMID:Achieving optimal outcomes in chronic lymphocytic leukaemia. 1136 85
In the last half of this century, hairy cell leukemia was recognized as a distinct B-cell malignancy, accounting for 2% of all leukemias. Characteristics include
splenomegaly
, pancytopenia, a usually indolent course, and responsiveness to both interferon and purine analog therapy. Accurate diagnosis requires the demonstration of malignant cells in the bone marrow and peripheral blood which contain cytoplasmic projections and characteristic surface antigens. Splenectomy was identified early as a palliative therapy, and in 1984 systemic treatment with interferon alpha was first reported to induce complete remissions. Soon thereafter, the purine analog deoxycoformycin was found to induce more durable complete remissions in a higher percentage of patients. In 1990,
2-Chlorodeoxyadenosine
, a new purine analog therapy, was reported to be capable of inducing long-term durable responses in most patients after a single cycle. Current challenges include identifying which purine analog is the least toxic since both appear similarly effective, and neither appear to add to the already increased rate of second malignancies occurring in these patients. Moreover, up to 25% of patients with hairy cell leukemia fail initially or eventually to respond to standard therapy, making the development of new approaches necessary. The characteristic bright expression of several B-cell antigens on the malignant cells, including CD20, CD22 and CD25, has led to the development of targeted biotherapeutic approaches. A recombinant immunotoxin targeting CD25 has recently been reported to induce major responses and it is likely that other successful targeted approaches will be reported early in the new century.
...
PMID:Malignancy: Current Clinical Practice: Treatment of Hairy Cell Leukemia at the Close of the 20th Century. 1139 70
Hairy cell leukemia is an indolent B-cell non-Hodgkin's lymphoma with a characteristic presentation of pancytopenia,
splenomegaly
, and circulating hairy cells. An immunophenotypic pattern of CD11c, CD25, and CD103 expression. TRAP staining, reticulin deposition, and morphology of bone marrow and circulating cells help establish the diagnosis. Although up to 10% of patients might not require systemic treatment, for the vast majority effective treatments are available with the purine-nucleoside analogues cladribine and pentostatin.
Cladribine
is considered the drug of choice in the first-line setting due to the very high complete remission rate and prolonged duration of response following a single 7-day infusion.
Cladribine
and pentostatin both have unique but different mechanisms of action, with a lack of cross-resistance between them, which might be exploited in the relapsed or refractory disease setting. Therapy for relapsed and refractory patients also includes novel biologic agents as well as splenectomy. Despite the effective treatment options, the prospect of cure remains elusive due to the frequent presence of MRD even in complete responders. Future studies employing combination therapies targeting the eradication of MRD will hopefully improve relapse-free survivals as well as overall survival, and might even offer the prospect of cure.
...
PMID:Hairy cell leukemia. 1828 87
Hairy cell Leukemia (HCL) is a chronic lymphoproliferative disorder that was characterized in the late 1950s. HCL is defined, according to the WHO classification, as a mature (peripheral) B-cell neoplasm (1). HCL accounts for between 2-3% of all leukemia cases, with about 600 new cases diagnosed in the U.S. each year (1). HCL occurs more commonly in males, with an overall male to female ratio of approximately 4:1. The median age of onset is 52 years. This disease is seen more commonly in Caucasians and appears to be especially frequent in Ashkenazi Jewish males, with rare occurrence in persons of Asian and African descents (1). Hairy cells are distinct, clonal B cells arrested at a late stage of maturation. They are small B lymphoid cells that possess oval nuclei and abundant cytoplasm with characteristic micro-filamentous ("hairy") projections. They strongly express CD103, CD22, and CD11c (2). These cells typically infiltrate the bone marrow, the spleen, and to a lesser extent the liver, lymph nodes, and skin. Many patients present with
splenomegaly
and pancytopenia. Other clinical manifestations include recurrent opportunistic infections and vasculitis. Historically, HCL was considered uniformly fatal (2). However, recent treatment advances, using purine analogues such as
Cladribine
and Pentostatin, led to a significant improvement in prognosis with achievement of high response rates and durable remissions (2).
...
PMID:Hairy cell leukemia: current concepts. 1879 68
Skin involvement in hairy cell leukemia (HCL) at presentation is a relatively rare manifestation of the disease. A 60-year-old male patient in whom cutaneous lesions were the initial manifestation of hairy cell leukemia together with leukocytosis, monocytopenia, massive
splenomegaly
, and leukemic maculopapulous infiltration of the almost whole skin is described. The present case is the forth mentioned in the literature with specify of leukocytosis in peripheral blood, consisting mostly of hairy cells. The patient was treated with two courses of 2-chlorodeoxiadenosine (2-CdA,
Cladribine
) and splenectomy and after this cutaneous lesion disappeared and general condition is improved.
...
PMID:Specific skin lesions in hairy cell leukemia at presentation: case report and review of literature. 1953 22
Hairy cell leukemia (HCL) is a chronic B-cell lymphoproliferative disorder associated with pancytopenia,
splenomegaly
, and recurrent infections. Although interferon alpha and pentostatin were initially found to be effective in this disease, cladribine has emerged as the preferred initial therapy.
Cladribine
given as a single continuous intravenous seven-day infusion is the dosing schedule with the most durable complete remissions and evaluated in the greatest number of patients with HCL. Patients who relapse after purine analogue therapy, whether it be cladribine or pentostatin, can be successfully retreated with cladribine. Patients with HCL may develop complications of recurrent infection and second malignancies. Although both complications are postulated to be related to therapy, they may also be due to the duration and burden of the disease. Minimal residual disease detected on bone marrow biopsy is thought to predict for future relapse. We will review the initial and subsequent results of cladribine in the management of HCL.
...
PMID:Cladribine in the treatment of hairy cell leukemia: initial and subsequent results. 1981 92
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