Cases reported "Acute Disease"

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1/82. Clonally unrelated BCR-ABL-negative acute myeloblastic leukemia masquerading as blast crisis after busulphan and interferon therapy for BCR-ABL-positive chronic myeloid leukemia.

    We report a patient with philadelphia (Ph)-positive, BCR-ABL rearrangement positive, chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) with a prolonged chronic phase of 24 years who was first prescribed alpha-2 interferon 22 years after initial diagnosis. This therapy was tolerated poorly on account of thrombocytopenia, but an eventual major cytogenetic response was followed soon afterwards by transformation to terminal acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Cytogenetic studies indicated that the transformed myeloblasts were karyotypically normal and Ph negative. Although polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analysis of total leukemic mRNA remained BCR-ABL positive, other molecular studies, including Southern blotting and fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) analyses, showed that myeloblasts were BCR-ABL rearrangement negative. PCR-based clonality studies using an X-chromosome-linked restriction fragment polymorphism within the phosphoglycerate kinase gene (PGK1) further showed that the Ph-negative blast cells had a different clonal origin from the Ph-positive clone of chronic phase. We suggest that cases of underlying Ph-negative leukemic transformation in Ph-positive CML warrant further study and should be considered for trial of intensive remission induction therapy as appropriate for acute leukemia.
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2/82. MYC amplification in two further cases of acute myeloid leukemia with trisomy 4 and double minute chromosomes.

    We report two cases of trisomy 4 with double minute chromosomes (dmin): one in a woman with acute myeloid leukemia (AML), French-American-British subtype M2, the other in a man with chronic myelomonocytic leukemia. In the former case, many cells without trisomy 4 but with dmin were present, a finding not observed in previously reported cases. In both cases, fluorescence in situ hybridization studies demonstrated the double minutes to be MYC amplicons. Ten cases of AML with trisomy 4 and dmin have now been described; in the five cases investigated, the dmin have been shown to be amplified MYC gene sequences.
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3/82. Isolated tetrasomy 8 in minimally differentiated acute myeloid leukemia (AML-M0).

    tetrasomy 8 as a sole anomaly in hematological disorders is relatively rare. To the best of our knowledge, only 19 such cases have been described in the literature to date. Of them, acute myeloid leukemia (AML) in 13 (M1, one; M2, three; M4, one; M5, eight), acute lymphoblastic leukemia(ALL) in one, myelodysplastic syndrome(MDS) in 3, polycythemia vera(PV) and myelofibrosis(MF), one case each. Their median survival was 20 weeks. Here, we report the first case of a 29-year-old man with minimally differentiated AML (AML-M0) displaying a tetrasomy 8 clone. immunophenotyping showed positivity with CD33, CD34 and intracellular MPO, but all lymphoid markers tested were negative. Conventional cytogenetics of bone marrow cells showed 84.9% of metaphases with tetrasomy 8 in addition to 15.1% with normal diploidy. However, fluorescence in situ hybridization(FISH) using a centromeric probe specific for chromosome 8 revealed trisomy 8 in 14.2% of interphase nuclei besides tetrasomy 8 in 82.4%. The patient died four weeks after diagnosis without therapy. In conclusion, these findings suggest that tetrasomy 8 is associated with a heterogeneous group of myeloid disorders and heralds a bad prognosis. It may be a consequence of clonal evolution of trisomy 8.
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4/82. Identification of amplified genes in a patient with acute myeloid leukemia and double minute chromosomes.

    A case of acute myeloid leukemia (M2) with double minute chromosomes and complex karyotypic abnormalities was analyzed cytogenetically and molecularly. comparative genomic hybridization (CGH) showed that the 8q24 region that contains the MYC oncogene was not amplified. Instead, amplification of chromosomal regions 11q23-->qter and 9p11-->pter was identified. Southern blot analysis confirmed the CGH findings and showed that the ETS1, FLI1, SRPR, NFRKB, and KCNJ5 genes located at 11q23-->24 were amplified, whereas the MLL at 11q23 was not amplified. Additionally, the IFN beta 1 and CDKN2A genes at 9p were amplified, but to a lesser degree. This is the first example of a case of acute myeloid leukemia with double minute chromosomes that has not involved amplification of either the MYC or the MLL genes.
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5/82. Identification of novel chromosomal rearrangements in acute myelogenous leukemia involving loci on chromosome 2p23, 15q22 and 17q21.

    Chromosomal translocations are frequently linked to multiple hematological malignancies. The study of the resulting abnormal gene products has led to fundamental advances in the understanding of cancer biology. This is the first report of t(2;15)(p23;q22) and t(2;17)(p23;q21) translocations in human malignancy. Patient 1, a 73-year-old male, was diagnosed with myeloblastic (FAB M1 sub-type) AML. cytogenetic analysis showed a 47,XY,t(2;15)(p23;q22), 13 karyotype. Fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) showed that the PML gene was transferred intact to the short arm of chromosome 2 while the ALK gene on chromosome 2p23 was passively transferred to the long arm of chromosome 15. Patient 2 was a 60-year-old male diagnosed with monocytic (FAB M4-type) AML. cytogenetic analysis showed 46,XY,t(2;17)(p23;q21) karyotype. FISH analysis showed that neither RARalpha nor ALK were disrupted by the translocation. None of the coding region of the three genes studied were translocated in these patients. This raises the possibilities that other neighboring genes could be involved or that noncoding regulatory sequences of the studied genes could be put in contact and deregulate expression of other genes. Alternatively, displacement of ALK, RARalpha and PML to novel positions could lead to loss of their normal regulation
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6/82. A new translocation, t(2;4;12)(p21;q12;p13), in CD7-positive acute myeloid leukemia: a variant form of t(4;12).

    We describe a 41-year-old man with CD7-positive acute myeloid leukemia (AML-M0) with trilineage-myelodysplasia. Chromosome analysis of the bone marrow cells showed 46.XY.t(2;4;12) (p21;q12;p13). Cytological and clinical features of our case were quite similar to those of AML with t(4;12)(q11-12;p13). The karyotypic interpretation was confirmed by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) by using the whole-chromosome painting probes specific for chromosomes 2, 4, and 12. FISH analysis with the use of the YAC 936e2 probe, which covers the TEL gene, did not show the split signal, suggesting that a gene other than TEL was involved in the leukemogenesis of the present case. Our case with AML with t(2;4;12)(p21;q12;p13) appears to be the first case of a variant type of AML with t(4;12) (q11-12;p13).
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7/82. intestinal pseudo-obstruction and acute pandysautonomia associated with Epstein-Barr virus infection.

    We report the association of neurological and intestinal disorders with the reactivation of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) in a child. This previously healthy 13-yr-old boy presented with pharyngitis and acute abdominal ileus. laparotomy excluded a mechanical obstruction. Postoperatively, he suffered from prolonged intestinal obstruction, pandysautonomia, and encephalomyelitis. Histological examination of the appendix and a rectal biopsy taken 3 months after the onset showed an absence of ganglion cells (appendix) and hypoganglionosis (rectum), with a mononucleate inflammatory infiltrate in close contact with the myenteric neural plexuses. EBV-PCR was positive in the blood and cerebrospinal fluid, and in situ hybridization with the Epstein-Barr virus encoded rna probe showed positive cells throughout the appendix wall including the myenteric area, in a mesenteric lymph node, and in the gastric biopsies. EBV spontaneous lymphocytic proliferation was noted in the blood. The serology for EBV showed previous infection but anti-early antigen antibodies were present. No immunodeficiency was found. Neurological and GI recovery occurred after 6 months of parenteral nutrition and bethanechol. The omnipresence of EBV associated with the neurointestinal symptoms suggest that the virus was the causal agent. This is the first documented case of acquired hypoganglionnosis due to EBV reactivation.
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8/82. Novel molecular defects of the delta-aminolevulinate dehydratase gene in a patient with inherited acute hepatic porphyria.

    Cloning and expression of the defective gene for delta-aminolevulinate dehydratase (ALAD) from the second of 2 German patients with ALAD deficiency porphyria (ADP), who had been originally reported by Doss et al. in 1979, were performed. Cloning of cDNAs for the defective ALAD were performed using Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-transformed lymphoblastoid cells of the proband, and nucleotide sequences of cloned cDNA were determined. Two separate mutations of ALAD cDNA were identified in each ALAD allele. One was G457A, termed "H1," resulting in V153M substitution, while the other was a deletion of 2 sequential bases at T(818) and C(819), termed "H2," resulting in a frame shift with a premature stop codon at the amino acid position of 294. Using allele-specific oligonucleotide hybridization, the mother of the proband was shown to have an H1 defect, while using genomic dna analysis, the father was shown to have an H2 defect. Expression of H1 cDNA in Chinese hamster ovary cells produced an ALAD protein with only a partial activity (10.65% /- 1.80% of the normal), while H2 cDNA encoded no significant protein. These data thus demonstrate that the proband was associated with 2 novel molecular defects of the ALAD gene, 1 in each allele, and account for the extremely low ALAD activity in his erythrocytes ( approximately 1% of normal).
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9/82. Jumping translocations of 11q in acute myeloid leukemia and 1q in follicular lymphoma.

    Jumping translocation is a rare cytogenetic aberration in leukemia and lymphoma, and its etiologic mechanisms are not clearly known. We report two cases with jumping translocations. One had follicular lymphoma and jumping translocations of 1q onto the telomeric regions of 5p, 9p, and 15q in three cell lines, co-existing with the specific translocation t(14;18)(q32;q21). The second case had acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and jumping translocations of 11q as the sole aberration, onto multiple derivative chromosomes in each of the abnormal cells. A total of 17 telomeric regions were seen as the recipients of 11q in this case, and 9q was always involved as one of the recipients in all abnormal cells. fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) confirmed the identification of 11q material in the derivative chromosomes. While 1q has been the most common donor of acquired jumping translocations, this is the first report on jumping translocations of 11q. Different from all previously reported jumping translocations which involve only one recipient in each cell line and lead to a mosaic trisomy, multiple recipients in most of the abnormal cells in this case had led to a tetrasomy, or a pentasomy of 11q. The pattern of chromosome involvement as the recipients of 11q appears to show a continuing evolutionary process of jumping, stabilization, and spreading of the donor material into other chromosomes. Somatic recombinations between the interstitial telomeric or subtelomeric sequences of a derivative chromosome and the telomeric sequences of normal chromosomes are believed to be the underlying mechanism of jumping translocations and their clonal evolution.
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10/82. A novel t(11;12)(q23-24;q24) in a case of minimally-differentiated acute myeloid leukemia (AML-M0).

    Acute myeloid leukemia with minimal signs of myeloid differentiation (AML-M0) is a recent addition to the FAB group classification. Chromosome data is scarce, but existing reports describe a high incidence of complex karyotypes and myelodysplastic syndrome-like chromosome alterations, while single chromosome translocations have rarely been reported. We describe the case of a 60-year-old woman diagnosed with AML-M0 with a novel translocation t(11;12)(q23-24;q24) as the sole karyotypic marker. fluorescence in situ hybridization analysis to assess MLL gene splitting did not show rearrangement of this oncogene.
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