Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P02794 (ferritin)
17,525 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We successfully treated a 33-year-old woman with etoposide who developed systemic sclerosis (SSc)-associated refractory hemophagocytic syndrome (HPS). She had been diagnosed as SSc because she had had Raynaud's phenomenon, proximal scleroderma, telangiectasia, microstomia, thickening and shortening of lingual frenulum and positive antinuclear antibody since 1994. In September 1999, she showed high fever, anemia, thrombocytopenia, elevation of serum lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) and ferritin levels and hemophagocytosis in her bone marrow, which led to the diagnosis of HPS. Her symptoms were improved by 40 mg of daily oral prednisolone (PSL). While tapering PSL, she complained right coxalgia and magnetic resonance image (MRI) depicted avascular necrosis (AVN) of right femoral head. In May 2000, she again suffered from HPS when she was taking 19 mg of PSL daily. To avoid the development of another AVN of her bone, she was treated with monthly cyclophosphamide (CPA) pulse therapy (300-400 mg/day). Although her HPS transiently ameliorated with CPA, it flared up again with high fever, general fatigue, severe pancytopenia and extremely high serum LDH and ferritin levels after the 4th CPA pulse therapy. She was admitted again to our hospital and PSL was increased to 40 mg daily which did not improve HPS. We, therefore, treated her with intravenous etoposide (100 mg/day, three consecutive days) along with granulocyte-colony stimulating factor (G-CSF). She developed transient bone marrow suppression, but her laboratory data gradually normalized within two weeks and she became afebrile after 18 days of etoposide administration. This is the first case in the literature which suggests the efficacy of etoposide against refractory autoimmune-associated hemophagocytic syndrome.
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PMID:[Etoposide ameliorated refractory hemophagocytic syndrome in a patient with systemic sclerosis]. 1246 23

A 37-year-old woman with a personal history of appendicectomy, cholecystectomy, left oophorectomy secondary to an ovarian cyst complication, nephritic colic with repeated episodes of pyelonephritis, alcoholic hepatopathy, Raynaud's phenomenon and bilateral exophthalmos showed an increase in volume in the root of the upper limbs and in the base of the neck over a period of 4 years, painful to the touch and of a soft consistency. She presented with a pseudo-athletic appearance (Fig. 1) produced by an increase in the volume at the root of the upper limbs, upper back and the back of the neck (Fig. 2). The lesions produced a pulling sensation and were associated with paresthesia, hyperesthesia, and a moderate loss of strength in both arms. A biopsy taken from the upper third of the right arm showed a diffuse proliferation of the subcutaneous adipose tissue, which appeared normal, and extended between the collagen fibers, reaching in some cases into the most superficial zones of the reticular dermis (Fig. 3). Laboratory evaluation revealed a chronic anemia, leukopenia with moderate lymphopenia, increased erythrocyte sedimentation rate, elevation of enzymes of hepatic function, decrease in total proteins, and increase in ferritin, all in the context of hepatopathy. Antinuclear antibodies and the hormonal profile were normal. Abdominal and gynecologic echography revealed a right ovarian cyst of no clinical relevance. Cranial nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) revealed an increase in the periorbital fat responsible for bilateral exophthalmos.
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PMID:Benign symmetric lipomatosis (Launois-Bensaude syndrome). 1580 34