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 63 year-old woman was referred to our hospital because of fever and increased number of blasts in the bone marrow. On physical examination she had slight hepatomegaly but no splenomegaly. Laboratory tests disclosed a hemoglobin level of 8.5 g/dl; a WBC count of 13,200/microliter with 26% blasts; a platelet count of 51,000/microliter. A bone marrow aspirate was normocellular with 74% blasts and 37% blasts were stained positive for myeloperoxidase. Cell surface markers for HLA-DR, CD10, CD19, CD13, CD33 were positive. Karyotype analysis revealed 46, XX, t (9q+; 22q-) and 45XX, -7, t (9q+; 22q-). Southern analysis showed rearrangement of immunoglobulin heavy chain but not T cell receptor beta gene. Rearrangements in M-BCR were not detected with 5' or 3' bcr probes. After 2 courses of chemotherapy, blasts decreased to 7% with recovery of normal elements and 11 out of 20 metaphases of the bone marrow cells were normal karyotype. These findings suggest that this case was de novo Ph1 positive acute leukemia which demonstrated both lymphoid and myeloid features.
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PMID:[Biphenotypic acute leukemia with Ph1 chromosome, M-BCR-, myeloperoxidase+, and CALLA+]. 164 7

A 83-year-old man was diagnosed with primary myelofibrosis based on the presence of leukoerythroblastosis, splenomegaly, chromosome 46 XY, a dry tap bone marrow aspiration and fibrosis on bone marrow biopsy, when he was admitted for herpes zoster in June 1987. He was admitted for a second time with multiple subcutaneous tumors over his entire body in July, 1989. He had mild splenomegaly, but no hepatomegaly nor lymphadenopathy. Laboratory tests were as follows: RBC 214 x 10(4)/microliters, Hb 5.1 g/dl, Ht 17.7%, WBC 3,200/microliters with leukoerythroblastosis, platelets 11.6 x 10(4)/microliters, s-lysozyme 251 micrograms/ml, u-lysozyme 770 micrograms/ml, NAP ratio 98%, score 278. Bone marrow aspiration resulted in a dry tap. Bone marrow biopsy showed marked fibrosis. Histologic examination of subcutaneous tumor biopsy specimens revealed a diffuse infiltration of monocytes with flexuous nuclei. These cells were positive for alpha-naphtyl butyrate esterase stain, and negative for peroxidase, alpha-naphtol ASD chloroacetate esterase stain and platelet glycoprotein IIb/IIIa stain (APAAP). Ultrastructurally, these cells were mostly monocytes and promonocytes, while phenotypically, CD11b, CD13, CD14, CD33 and HLA-DR were positive. These date indicated that the subcutaneous tumors originated from monocytes.
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PMID:[Primary myelofibrosis transforming into multiple subcutaneous monoblastoma--a case report]. 175 57

Although the expression of myeloid-associated antigen CD13 has been reported in aggressive B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia, its expression in other mature B-cell neoplasms appears to be rare. We report a 74-year-old female with B-cell prolymphocytic leukemia (B-PLL) expressing CD13 antigen. On admission, splenomegaly was noted. Hematological examination revealed a platelet count of 90 x 10(9)/l and a white cell count of 68 x 10(9)/l with 73% PLL cells. The hemoglobin concentration was 10.6 g/dl. A bone marrow aspirate showed a normocellular marrow with 64% PLL cells. Surface marker analysis of the PLL cells was positive for CD11b, CD13, CD19, CD20, CD24, HLA-DR, FMC7, mu and lambda. Simultaneous expression of CD13 and CD19 antigen was confirmed by dual color flow cytometry. Southern blot analysis of DNA from circulating mononuclear cells gave a rearranged band for the immunoglobulin gene (JH) but not for TCR-beta. Cytogenetic analysis of marrow cells showed an abnormal karyotype involving numbers 1, 7, 10, 12, 14, 15 chromosomes.
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PMID:B-cell prolymphocytic leukemia expressing CD13 antigen. 752 29

A 66-year-old female was admitted to our hospital because of leukocytosis, anemia and splenomegaly in August 1989. The white cell count was 3.49 x 10(10)/l with 88.5% of the leukemic cells which were morphologically similar to prolymphocytes. On flowcytometric analysis, the leukemic cells were found to be positive for B-cell markers such as CD19, CD20, FMC7, Sm-IgM and Sm-IgD and negative for CD5 and CD25. The chromosome analysis demonstrated hyperdiploidy of 48, XX, (+3, +18). She was diagnosed as having B-cell prolymphocytic leukemia, and treated with alpha-interferon and VP therapy with progression. Complete remission was achieved after three courses of ranimustine (MCNU) administration. She relapsed after about one year without therapy, but when MCNU was administered again, a secondary remission followed. The prolymphocytes during the relapse stage also had the phenotypes of CD11b, CD13 and CD25. This case is considered to be rare with respect to both complete remission by MCNU and the immunophenotypic change of leukemic cells during the relapse period.
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PMID:[Successful treatment by ranimustine (MCNU) of a patient with B-cell prolymphocytic leukemia (B-PLL)]. 825 9

A 59-year-old female with splenomegaly was admitted in November, 1989. Her WBC was 7,900/microliters with 51% myeloblasts and 10% megakaryoblasts. Analysis of the surface markers showed that 56.5% were CD13 positive and 66.8% carried platelet GpIIb/IIIa. The Ph1 chromosome was 100% positive. VPM therapy was started but proved ineffective, as was subsequent MCNU therapy. The patient was given intramuscular human lymphoblastoid interferon-alpha (1.2 million IU daily) for more than 20 months. She had improved to the accelerated phase after INF-alpha therapy for 13 months. Thus there appears to be a relationship between INF-alpha and myelo-megakaryoblastic crisis.
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PMID:[Hematologic response to low dose natural interferon-alpha in a case of CML with myelo-megakaryoblastic crisis]. 849 24

A 58-year-old woman complicated with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) was admitted to our hospital with right axillar lymphadenopathy and splenomegaly in November 1992. She was diagnosed as an anaplastic large-cell lymphoma (Ki-1 +) (stage IIIB) on the histological findings of the right axillar lymph nodes. She was treated with 11 courses of CHOP regimen between February 1992 and May 1993, and with mitoxantrone, etoposide (VP-16) and predonisolone in April 1992 and May 1993. The right axillar lymph nodes and spleen were irradiated at a dose of 36Gy in October 1992 and May 1993 respectively. In May 1993, peripheral blood showed WBC 89,000/microliter with 96% myeloblasts, Hb 8.3 g/dl, and Plt 124,000/microliter. Bone marrow aspirate revealed hypercellularity with 90% myeloblasts, which were positive for CD13 and HLA-DR. She was diagnosed as AML (M1). The karyotype showed normal. Southern blot analysis did not reveal the rearrangement of the MLL gene. She received the BHAC-DMP regimen and obtained complete remission. However, she relapsed during consolidation therapy, and died of cerebral bleeding. An autopsy revealed absence of a residual tumor. The mean interval from exposure to alkylating agent to the onset of secondary leukemia has been reported to be about 5 years, in contrast to a shortened interval of about 2 years for VP-16-induced leukemia. In our patient, it took only 1 year to have AML following chemotherapy for Ki-1 lymphoma. This suggests that her AML might be induced not only by treatments for RA and Ki-1 lymphoma, but also by immunological background such as RA.
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PMID:[Acute myeloid leukemia (M1) following chemotherapy for Ki-1 lymphoma complicated with rheumatoid arthritis]. 858 73

A variety of oncogenes are activated by specific chromosomal translocations, which are associated with distinct subtypes of leukemia. The identification of these rearrangements provides critical diagnostic and prognostic information, which may contribute to the selection of specific anti-leukemic therapy. The translocation t(9;22), the equivalent of the BCR/ABL rearrangement, is associated with a poor prognosis. We therefore used RT-PCR to detect this molecular event in a prospective study including 890 children. 673 of them suffered from acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) at primary diagnosis and a transcription of the chimeric gene was detected in 21 of 648 with a successful analysis (3.2%). All children were treated by one of the two German multicenter childhood ALL therapy studies ALL-BFM-90 or COALL-05-92, respectively. Comparison of clinical features between BCR/ABL-positive and -negative children showed no significant differences regarding WBC, percentage of blasts, splenomegaly, hepatomegaly and age. Immunophenotypic studies at diagnosis in 21 BCR/ABL-positive children identified common ALL in 16 patients (76.2%), pre-B-ALL in four (19.0%), and an early T-lineage ALL in one (4.8%). Coexpression of myeloid antigens (CD13 and/or CD33) was observed in six of 16 common ALL patients as well as in the one child with early T-lineage ALL phenotype. The type of breakpoint (m-BCR/ABL: n = 14; M-BCR/ABL: n = 7) showed no correlation with clinical parameters. A comparison of cytogenetic and molecular data was performed in 16 positive patients and was concordant in all of them. We analyzed the response to the prednisone pretreatment and found a higher incidence of poor responders among the BCR/ABL-positive children. Regarding the event-free survival (EFS) of BCR/ABL-positive (0.53) and -negative patients (0.79) after a follow-up of 2 years, significant differences (P < 0.05) between both groups could be demonstrated.
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PMID:Incidence and clinical outcome of children with BCR/ABL-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). A prospective RT-PCR study based on 673 patients enrolled in the German pediatric multicenter therapy trials ALL-BFM-90 and CoALL-05-92. 866 52

A 60-year-old Japanese woman was admitted to our hospital because of fatigue, weight loss and abdominal distension. Myelofibrosis was diagnosed, based on anemia, huge hepatosplenomegaly, leukoerythroblastosis and bone marrow fibrosis. Following treatment with ranimustine, anemia and splenomegaly improved. Seven months after initial therapy of ranimustine, however, polycythemia (RBC 7.39 x 10(6)/microliter; Hb 19.1 g/dl, Ht 65.9%) developed gradually, then RBC decreased to normal level following venesection (total 1,200 ml). After 32 months, blastic transformation occurred. The blasts were negative for myeloperoxidase. By flow cytometric analysis, the cells were positive for CD2, CD13, CD33 and HLA DR. Thus, AML (M0) was diagnosed. Despite of treatment with multicytotoxic agents, she died of DIC 36 months after the initial diagnosis of myelofibrosis. The progression from myelofibrosis to polycythemia is rare and only 15 cases have been reported so far. In addition, although a chromosomal abnormality, 46, XX, t(3; 12) (q25; p11), was present at the time of first diagnosis of myelofibrosis, the development of an additional abnormality, del(11) (q-), might be related to the transformation to AML.
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PMID:[A case of myelofibrosis that developed polycythemia vera following treatment with ranimustine and then acute myelogenous leukemia (M0)]. 882 83

It has been suggested that in blast crisis (BC) of chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML) the clinical and laboratory features of patients with 'lymphoid' phenotype differ from those of patients with non-lymphoid BC. In order to assess any differences, 97 patients consecutively diagnosed with BC that followed a known chronic phase of CML were analysed. 19 patients had 'lymphoid' BC: in 17 the blasts expressed a B-lineage phenotype: in the remaining two they corresponded to T lymphoblasts. Four cases of B-lineage phenotype BC were considered as biphenotypic, due to the co-expression of myeloperoxidase and one or two other myeloid markers (CD33, CD13 and CD68) on the blast cells; in the other six cases of B-lineage BC the blasts expressed one or both of the myeloid markers CD33 (n = 4) and CD13 (n = 3). Patients with 'lymphoid' BC seldom had an accelerated phase prior to BC (1/19 v 36/78 with non-lymphoid BC, P = 0.002), had less frequent splenomegaly (9/19 v 59/78, P = 0.03) and hepatomegaly (5/19 v 45/78, P = 0.02) and showed a higher degree of marrow blast infiltration (mean value 74 +/- 24% v 38 +/- 23%, P < 0.0001), lesser blood basophilia (2.2 +/- 2.5% v 8.2 +/- 7.8%, P < 0.0001), and higher serum albumin levels (P = 0.001) than those with non-lymphoid BC. 13 patients with 'lymphoid' BC (68.4%) showed a favourable response to chemotherapy regimens including vincristine and prednisone and, overall, 'lymphoid' BC patients survived significantly longer than the remainder (median survival 12 months v 4.7 months, P = 0.006). These results indicate that 'lymphoid' BC of CML has a distinct clinicohaematological profile and confirm the better prognosis of such patients.
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PMID:'Lymphoid' blast crisis of chronic myeloid leukaemia is associated with distinct clinicohaematological features. 945 Aug

An acute leukemia with an unusual immunophenotype developed in a 17-year-old girl. At the initial presentation, extramedullary involvement was not evident, but with advancing disease, massive splenomegaly and an osteolytic rib tumor developed. The disease was aggressive and refractory to intensive chemotherapeutic regimens for myeloid and lymphoid malignancies, and the patient died 3 months after the initial presentation. The leukemic cells were of irregular shape and variable size; they had deeply indented or bi-lobed nuclei and relatively fine, azurophilic granules in their cytoplasm. They were positive for acid phosphatase and beta-glucuronidase in granular staining, but they were negative for myeloperoxidase. The leukemic cells had a unique immunophenotype: it was positive for T-cell antigens (CD1a, CD2, cytoplasmic CD3, CD4), myeloid antigens (CD13 and CD33), NK-cell antigen (CD56), CD19 and CD30. DNA analysis revealed no gene rearrangement in the T-cell receptor beta, gamma and delta, or immunoglobulin heavy chain genes. The leukemic cells of our patient are thought to have arisen from the transformation of a putative precursor cell common to both the T- and NK-cell lineage in the bone marrow. The current literature on precursor NK-cell malignancy is reviewed, and its clinicopathological feature is discussed.
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PMID:Acute leukemia with the phenotype of a natural killer/T cell bipotential precursor. 1003 70


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