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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)
Children with B cell
non-Hodgkin's lymphoma
who have not relapsed 1 year after diagnosis and treatment are generally cured. We report here the results of treatment in 114 children who all had a minimum follow-up of 20 months. The protocol LMB 0281 from the French Pediatric Oncology Society was used. This nine-drug intensive-pulsed chemotherapy was based on high-dose cyclophosphamide, high-dose methotrexate (HD MTX), and cytosine arabinoside (
ara
-C) in continuous infusion. CNS prophylaxis was with chemotherapy only. No local irradiation was performed. No debulking surgery was recommended. There were 72 patients with stage III lymphoma and 42 patients with stage IV lymphoma or B cell acute lymphocytic leukemia (B-ALL). Among those 42 patients, seven had CNS involvement alone, 21 had bone marrow alone, and 14 had both; 26 had greater than 25% blast cells in bone marrow, 14 of whom had blast cells in blood. The primary site of involvement was the abdomen in 90 patients, the Waldeyer Ring in nine, and various sites in eight; seven patients presented without tumor. Seventy-seven patients are alive with a median follow-up of 2 years and 8 months. Seven patients died due to initial treatment failure, 11 died from toxicity, and 19 died after relapse. Among the 93 patients without initial CNS involvement, only one isolated relapse in CNS occurred. Survival and disease-free survival rates reached 67% and 64%, respectively, for all patients, 75% and 73% for stage III patients and 54% and 48% for stage IV and B-ALL patients. Bone marrow involvement was not an adverse prognostic factor. Contrary initial CNS involvement indicated a bad prognosis with a disease-free survival rate of 19% compared with 76% without CNS disease. This study showed that CNS prophylaxis and local control of the primary tumor can be achieved by intensive chemotherapy alone, without radiotherapy or debulking surgery.
...
PMID:Improved survival rate in children with stage III and IV B cell non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and leukemia using multi-agent chemotherapy: results of a study of 114 children from the French Pediatric Oncology Society. 352 67
In experimental systems, hydroxyurea (HU) and cytarabine (
ara
-C) produce synergistic cytotoxicity to murine and human leukemia cells due to both cytokinetic and biochemical interactions that tend to enhance the effectiveness of
ara
-C. Therefore, we began a phase II trial of the combination of HU and
ara
-C to determine the efficacy and toxicity of this combination in treatment of patients with refractory
non-Hodgkin's lymphoma
. Chemotherapy began with HU 500 mg administered orally every six hours for four doses. Twelve hours following the fourth HU dose,
ara
-C 100 mg/m2/d was administered by continuous intravenous (IV) infusion for three days. Concomitantly with the three-day
ara
-C infusion, patients again received HU 500 mg orally every four hours. Cycles of therapy were repeated every 28 days. Twenty-five patients ranging in age from 26 to 70 years were enrolled in the study. Of 21 patients evaluable for response, nine (43%) obtained complete (CR) or partial remissions (PR). Most responding patients had either large-cell or cutaneous T cell lymphoma, and all but two had a performance status of 0 to 1 at entry in the study. The median survival for all responding patients was 13 months compared with 2.5 months for nonresponders. Patients obtaining a CR had a median survival of 27.5 months, and two of the four CRs remain alive and in remission at 10+ and 30+ months from achievement of CR status. The primary toxic effect of this regimen was bone marrow suppression. The median WBC nadir was 2,200 cells/microL, and the median platelet nadir was 80,000/microL. Other toxicities included mild nausea and vomiting and diffuse maculopapular rash. This biochemically rational approach to enhancing
ara
-C activity may have significant clinical utility and should be further explored in treatment of patients with large-cell and cutaneous T cell lymphomas.
...
PMID:Sequential hydroxyurea-cytarabine chemotherapy for refractory non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. 381 8
Thirty-two patients with refractory
non-Hodgkin's lymphoma
were treated with high-dose cytosine arabinoside (
ara
-C) given at 2 g/m2 IV over three hours every 12 hours for 4-8 g/m2/course repeated at three to four week intervals. There were eight partial responses (29%) and two minor responses among 28 evaluable patients. The median response duration was 10 weeks (range, 6-33 weeks). The median survival was significantly prolonged in responders compared to nonresponders (28 versus 15 weeks; p = 0.03). Two additional patients treated with 12 g/m2/course died of sepsis and myelosuppression. The dose-limiting toxicity was myelosuppression, which was more pronounced in patients with prior extensive radiation therapy and bone marrow involvement. In vivo measurements of intracellular concentrations of
ara
-CTP, the active metabolite of
ara
-C, showed significantly higher values in bone marrows with lymphomatous involvement compared to normal bone marrows (210 versus 95 microM; p = 0.05), probably indicating a preferential formation and retention of
ara
-CTP in malignant cells compared to normal hemopoietic cells. In addition, higher
ara
-CTP levels were found in bone marrows that had higher percentages of cells in S phase.
...
PMID:High-dose cytosine arabinoside in non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. 636 30
The pharmacokinetics of high-dose cytosine arabinoside (
ara
-C) were studied in 18 patients with acute leukemia and high-grade
non-Hodgkin's lymphoma
. The plasma concentrations of
ara
-C increased in proportion to the dose over a range of 1-3 g/m2. The initial and terminal half-lives were not influenced by the dose or schedule of administration and no accumulation of
ara
-C occurred with repeated dosage in the same patients. These data suggest that cytidine deaminase is not saturated within this dose range. The cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) concentrations of
ara
-C also rose linearly with the increase in dose and varied from 347 ng/mL (1 g/m2) to 1,070 ng/mL (3 g/m2). The mean CSF concentrations of
ara
-C following high-dose infusions over three hours were 6%-22% of simultaneous plasma concentrations. Three hours after completion of the intravenous infusion the CSF concentrations were greater than the corresponding plasma concentrations owing to the long half-life of
ara
-C in CSF compared to that in plasma. These data demonstrate that therapy with intravenous high-dose
ara
-C given twice daily provides continuous levels in the CSF at concentrations that are likely to be of value in the treatment of central nervous system leukemia.
...
PMID:Effect of dose and schedule on pharmacokinetics of high-dose cytosine arabinoside in plasma and cerebrospinal fluid. 658 25
Twenty-eight patients with poor prognosis acute myeloid leukemia (AML) received therapy with two courses of fludarabine 30 mg/m2/day +
ara
-C 2 g/m2/day (days 1-5) and G-CSF 5 mg/kg/day (FLAG) (from day 0 to polymorphonuclear recovery). Eighteen patients were considered 'refractory' (eight primarily resistant, five relapsing within 6 months of initial remission, or at a second relapse; five relapsing after an autologous bone marrow transplantation procedure. Ten cases were defined 'secondary' AML (diagnosis of AML made after a preexisting diagnosis of: myelodysplastic syndrome: five cases; myelodysplastic syndrome after therapy for breast cancer: one case; previously untreated, and concomitant,
non-Hodgkin's lymphoma
: two cases; Hodgkin's disease treated with chemoradiotherapy: one case). Overall, 15 patients (58%) achieved a complete remission (CR). Two patients died of infection during induction, and 11 had resistant disease. Analyzing the data in relation to selected host and disease characteristics, the response varied widely. The highest CR rates (89%) were obtained in secondary AML; in particular, two cases of 'second-primary' (concomitant with low-grade
non-Hodgkin's lymphoma
) AML obtained CR for both diseases. Refractory AML differed widely for response: high CR rate (75%), although with short mean CR duration for primary resistance AML, and very poor response (11% CR) for relapsed (early, second, after ABMT) cases. Interestingly, a slow kinetic of leukemic growth in vivo before FLAG administration was significantly related to the response and outcome (p = 0.0002). Hematological and nonhematological toxicities were acceptable. In conclusion, the FLAG regimen has significant antileukemic activity and acceptable toxicity especially in secondary AML, both with and without coexisting lymphoid malignancy.
...
PMID:FLAG (fludarabine + high-dose cytarabine + G-CSF): an effective and tolerable protocol for the treatment of 'poor risk' acute myeloid leukemias. 752 88
ACVP-16 chemotherapy combined with recombinant granulocyte-colony stimulating factor (rG-CSF) was carried out on patients with malignant lymphoma which were recurrent or resistant to chemotherapy including adriamycin. Twenty patients with
non-Hodgkin's lymphoma
, 11 men and 9 women, with a median age of 54 years, were entered in this study. Fourteen patients had diffuse large cell lymphoma, 4 diffuse medium, and 2 diffuse mixed. The previous treatments for these patients were COP-BLAM, IMV-triple P and COP-BLAM III. The ACVP-16 regimen included
ara
-C at 100 mg/m2 i.v. on day 1 to 5, CBDCA at 250 mg/m2 i.v. on day 1, and VP-16 at 70 mg/m2 i.v. on day 1 to 3. Subcutaneous administration of rG-CSF at 2 micrograms/kg was started on day 7. Since complete remission was achieved in 7 patients (35%) and partial remission in 8 (40%), the total response rate was 75%. The median survival duration after the initiation of this therapy was 11 months for those who achieved CR and 4 months for those who achieved PR and those who had no response. Leukopenia (< or = 1,000/microliters) and thrombocytopenia (< or = 50,000/microliters) were observed in 15 (75%) and 12 (60%), respectively. We conclude that the ACVP-16 regimen is useful for the treatment of refractory or relapsed
non-Hodgkin's lymphoma
. However, the patients who are treated with this regimen should be carefully managed in order to avoid severe infection, because leukopenia was observed even when rG-CSF was administered.
...
PMID:[Treatment with ACVP-16 for relapsed and refractory non-Hodgkin's lymphoma]. 768 61
Seventy-three patients with Stage III abdominal
non-Hodgkin's lymphoma
were prospectively treated following two sequential protocols (P): L278 P (group A, 33 patients) (1978-1983) and L384 P (group B, 40 patients), (1984-1991). No patient received radiotherapy. The L278 P included 7 drugs: cyclophosphamide, vincristine (VCR), adriamycin (ADR), prednisone, methotrexate (MTX), dexamethasone, and 6-mercaptopurine, given for remission induction, maintenance, and CNS prophylaxis. In the L384 P we introduced a consolidation phase consisting of intravenous MTX and citrovorum factor rescue, and IV cytosine arabinoside. VCR was also added to the monthly doses and the maintenance phase was reduced from 18 to 15 months. From January 1988 we changed ADR for epirubicin in the same doses. Prophylactic treatment of the CNS, in the L384 P, was intensified by increasing the number of doses of MTX IT in the remission, induction, and consolidation phases, and with the use of
ara
-C IT. Laparotomy in 50 patients allowed partial resection in 16, and second-look laparotomy was performed in 27 patients. Viable tumor was found in four patients. Three patients (G-A) died from metabolic complications and another 4 (2 G-A and 2 G-B) failed to attain CR and died. A total of 28 (85%) of 33 children of G-A and 38 (95%) of 40 children in G-B achieved CR. Five children died in remission (2 G-A, 3 G-B). Three patients (G-A) relapsed in the CNS and one (G-B) relapsed in the abdomen and died. Disease-free survival at 120 months was 70% in G-A and 84% in G-B.
...
PMID:Stage III abdominal non-Hodgkin's lymphoma in Costa Rican children: comparison of two consecutive trials of treatment. 827 9
High-dose chemotherapy followed by autologous peripheral blood progenitor cell transplantation (PBPCT) is increasingly applied in patients with relapsed, poor risk malignant lymphomas. Different strategies for progenitor cell mobilization using cytoreductive chemotherapy, hematopoietic growth factors, or both have been described. We studied the safety and efficacy of a modified DexaBEAM regimen (dexamethasone, BCNU [carmustine], etoposide,
ara
-C, melphalan) followed by granulocyte-colony stimulating factor (G-CSF) that was administered in order to minimize any residual disease and to obtain a sufficient amount of progenitor cells in the autografts. Until now, 16 patients at poor risk (8 with Hodgkin's disease, 8 with
non-Hodgkin's lymphoma
) entered the study. All the 12 patients with measurable disease at study entry responded to DexaBEAM. Median time of subsequent leukopenia (leukocytes < 1.000/microL) was 6 days (range 5-8 days). Peak numbers of CD34+ hematopoietic progenitor cells appeared in the peripheral blood after a median of 20 days (range 18-22 days) after onset of therapy. At that time, peripheral mononuclear cells were collected for autografting. Thereafter, the leukapheresis products were frozen until the day of transplantation, either unpurged in the case of Hodgkin's disease or purged with the ether lipid edelfosine in cases of
non-Hodgkin's lymphoma
. After high-dose chemotherapy with the CBV regimen (cyclophosphamide, BCNU, etoposide) the patients received their autografts, followed again by G-CSF treatment. A stable hematopoietic recovery was reached with granulocytes > 2.000/muL within 11 days (range 8-17 days), and platelets > 50.000/microL within 15 days (range 10-31 days), respectively, without significant differences between the purged and unpurged transplants. After a median follow-up of 28 months (range 1-40 months) 7 patients are alive without signs of recurrent disease, while 1 patient has died due to acute treatment related toxicity. Three patients had refractory disease, and 5 have relapsed of whom 4 have died. In summary, the DexaBEAM/G-CSF/CBV strategy appears to be safe and effective for salvage treatment in patients with poor risk malignant lymphomas.
...
PMID:Peripheral blood progenitor cell mobilization with Dexa-Beam/G-CSF, ether lipid purging, and autologous transplantation after high-dose CBV treatment: a safe and effective regimen in patients with poor risk malignant lymphomas. 903 Nov 11
The aim of this study was to investigate the combination of fludarabine phosphate, dexamethasone, cytosine arabinoside and cis-platinum (FLUDAP) in the treatment of patients with relapsed/refractory aggressive
non-Hodgkin's lymphoma
(
NHL
). This regimen comprises: dexamethasone 100 mg/d continuous infusion (cont. inf.) d1-3; cytosine arabinoside (
ara
-C) 1 g/m2/d cont. inf. d 2,3; fludarabine phosphate 30 mg/m2 short inf. 4hr prior to each 24hr
ara
-C inf.; cis-platinum 50 mg/m2 4hr inf. at the start of each 24hr
ara
-C inf. G-CSF (lenograstim, Granocyte) is given at 263 microg s.c. daily from day 7 until the neutrophil count reaches 1.0x10(9)/l. The regimen repeats at 21 day intervals. A total of 33 patients were registered (median age 47 years; 24 males, 9 females); the majority (73%) were refractory to their previous treatment and most had advanced disease by Ann Arbor stage. Thirteen (39%) of the 33 enrolled patients (52% of the 25 fully evaluable patients who received at least 2 courses of FLUDAP) responded to treatment. A maximum response of complete remission was achieved in 5 patients, good partial remission in 3, and partial remission in 5. Twelve patients went on to successful stem cell supported intensification therapy. Median survival times were higher in the responding patients, and in those patients transplanted post-FLUDAP. The toxicity associated with the FLUDAP regimen was generally predictable; frequently reported severe events included haematological toxicity and infection. In conclusion, the FLUDAP regimen shows promise as a salvage regimen and increases the available therapeutic options in the treatment of recurrent/refractory aggressive
NHL
.
...
PMID:FLUDAP: salvage chemotherapy for relapsed/refractory aggressive non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. 1075 82
A group of 28 consecutive patients (mean age 59 years) with primary central nervous system lymphoma (PCNSL) was treated with different regimens, including steroids only, radiotherapy (RT), chemotherapy or combinations of all. Lymphoma was classified as high grade malignant B-cell
non-Hodgkin's lymphoma
of the diffuse large cell type in each of these cases. RT alone led to tumour remission in more than 70 per cent, survival could be prolonged with additional chemotherapy. Thirteen patients were treated with chemotherapy alone; nine of them received a novel combined intraventricular and systemic polychemotherapy protocol based on high dose methotrexate (MTX) and high dose cytarabine (
ara
-C). The response rate was 90 per cent with 80 per cent complete responses. Neurotoxicity, i.e. white matter lesions associated with severe cognitive dysfunction affected both patients surviving RT more than a year and patients treated with combination RT/chemotherapy. Confluent white matter hyperintense lesions were detectable on MRI in three out of 13 patients treated with chemotherapy alone, however, cognitive dysfunction has not been detected in these patients.
...
PMID:Primary central nervous system lymphoma: a clinicopathological study of 28 cases. 1079 27
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