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Query: UNIPROT:Q06643 (
non-Hodgkin's lymphoma
)
11,307
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Results of treatment of 18 patients fulfilling the criteria for
TTP
are presented. Thrombocytopenia was present in all patients (100%). Sixteen of the 18 patients (88.8%) had mental status changes, and seven of the 18 patients (38.8%) had renal impairment. One patient had a secondary type of
TTP
, caused by
non-Hodgkin's lymphoma
of the large intestine (that was diagnosed later) and was excluded from the study. Immunosuppresive therapy with steroids, plasma exchange and replacement of removed volume with fresh frozen plasma in a dosage of 25 ml/kg body weight resulted in a statistically significant increase of platelet count (P = 0.00222), and a significant improvement in consciousness defined by increased GCS after 2 weeks (P = 0.00222). In two patients renal function recovered, and in one of them hemodialysis was no longer needed. This improvement in a small group of patients had no statistical significance.
TTP
recurred in seven patients. High doses of steroids caused serious side effects in two patients: in one patient, steroid diabetes, and in the other one, intestinal perforation.
...
PMID:Possibilities and limits of treatment in patients with thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura. 1119 78
We examined the outcome of patients who developed breast cancer after curative chemotherapy (CHOP) for aggressive
non-Hodgkin's lymphoma
(
NHL
) in comparison to the outcome of a retrospectively selected matched-pair group of patients with de novo breast cancer, and evaluated the role of drug resistance-related protein (MDR, MRP, LRP) expression in breast cancer tissue. Twenty-two patients presented with breast cancer (BC) in complete remission after CHOP for
NHL
. The median age was 62 (49-70) years, each had high/intermediate grade B-cell
NHL
treated with 6 courses of CHOP, and were in complete remission. These patients were compared to a matched-pair group of de novo BC patients selected from our database over the same time period. Breast cancer tissue was stained by immunohistochemistry for drug resistance proteins LRP, MRP, and MDR. Breast cancer developed after a median of 26 (9-49) months of
NHL
diagnosis; breast tumor grades 1-2 were seen in 12, and grade 3 in 10 patients; 15 were negative and 7 weakly positive for estrogen and progesterone receptors. Twelve patients were stage IIIA/B, and 10 stage IV and were treated with conventional chemotherapy regimens. All progressed early in liver (n=13), brain (n=9), lung (n=6), bone (n=8), lymph nodes (n=7) and soft tissue (n=5), and received second-line chemotherapy with mitomycin-C + vinblastine or taxanes. The overall survival was 11.8 (6-26) months (p<0.01). Time from
NHL
to breast cancer development was 19 (14-27) months in patients with positive drug resistance proteins (group A), and 37 (26-56) months in patients with 1 or 2 positive resistance proteins (group B) (p<0.001). In patients with stage IIIA/B disease, there was no difference between the examined and control matched-pair group in median
TTP
, but there was in overall survival (OS) (23 vs 36 months, p=0.029). In advanced disease, there were more responders in the control vs the examined group (p=0.07). Patients in the control matched-pair group had more prolonged OS when compared to group A patients who developed BC in <24 months from
NHL
to BC (p=0.017). We conclude that breast cancer developing shortly after a complete response in
NHL
, is an aggressive disease variant with minimal potential for response to conventional chemotherapy. Analysis of drug resistance mechanisms concerning MDR, MRP and LRP indicates that most of these patients have BC that overexpress these proteins leading to the suggestion that these mechanisms might be a part of the aggressive disease phenotype and partially explain the poor outcome.
...
PMID:Breast cancer after curative chemotherapy in non-Hodgkin's lymphoma: examination of the role of drug resistance and retrospective comparison to the outcome of de novo breast cancer. 1501 Aug 92