81 research outputs found

    Treatment of Acute Promyelocytic Leukemia with Single-Agent Arsenic Trioxide

    Get PDF
    It is well recognized that arsenic trioxide (ATO) is an efficacious agent for the treatment of acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL). Use of single agent ATO in the treatment of APL leads to remissions which are durable in the majority. ATO is probably the most effective single agent in the treatment of APL and there have been very few reports of primary resistance. It has been used both as a single agent and in combination with other conventional drugs to treat APL. Use of ATO is the accepted standard of care in the management of relapsed APL, where it is often used effectively as a bridge to a stem cell transplant. However, its role in newly diagnosed APL remains controversial. ATO probably has multiple mechanisms of action. Better understanding of its mechanisms of action/s is likely to lead to more rationale use of this agent or its derivatives either alone or in combination with other drugs. There is limited data on the kinetics of leukemia clearance and normal haematopoietic recovery after the administration of single agent ATO for the treatment of APL, preliminary data suggests that it is likely to be different from conventional therapy. There have been a number of concerns of the potential short and long term toxicity of this agent. Most such concerns arise from the toxicity profile noted in people exposed to long term arsenic exposure in the environment. With the therapeutic doses and schedules of administration of ATO in the treatment of malignancies the overall toxicity profile has been favorable. In a resource constrained environments the use of a single agent ATO based regimen is a realistic and acceptable option to treat almost all patients. In the developed world it has the potential in combination with other agents to improve the clinical outcome with reduction of dose intensity of chemotherapy and remains an option for patients who would not tolerate conventional therapy. In this review we focus on the use of single agent ATO for the treatment of APL and summarize our experience and review the literature

    Molecular basis of hereditary factor VII deficiency in India: five novel mutations including a double missense mutation (Ala191Glu; Trp364Cys) in 11 unrelated patients

    Get PDF
    We have studied the molecular basis of factor (F) VII deficiency in 11 unrelated Indian patients. Mutations were identified in all 11 and included 5 missense, 2 nonsense and a frame shift mutation. Five of these were novel. These mutations were considered to be causative of disease because of their nature, evolutionary conservation and molecular modeling. This is the first report of mutations in patients with FVII deficiency from southern India

    Single-agent arsenic trioxide in the treatment of newly diagnosed acute promyelocytic leukemia: durable remissions with minimal toxicity

    Get PDF
    Arsenic trioxide, as a single agent, has proven efficacy in inducing molecular remission in patients with acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL). There is limited long-term outcome data with single-agent As2O3 in the management of newly diagnosed cases of APL. Between January 1998 to December 2004, 72 newly diagnosed cases of APL were treated with a regimen of single-agent As2O3 at our center. Complete hematologic remission was achieved in 86.1%. At a median follow-up of 25 months (range: 8-92 months), the 3-year Kaplan-Meier estimate of EFS, DFS, and OS was 74.87% ± 5.6%, 87.21% ± 4.93%, and 86.11% ± 4.08%, respectively. Patients presenting with a white blood cell (WBC) count lower than 5 × 109/L and a platelet count higher than 20 × 109/L at diagnosis (n = 22 [30.6%]) have an excellent prognosis with this regimen (EFS, OS, and DFS of 100%). The toxicity profile, in the majority, was mild and reversible. After remission induction, this regimen was administered on an outpatient basis. Single-agent As2O3, as used in this series, in the management of newly diagnosed cases of APL, is associated with responses comparable with conventional chemotherapy regimens. Additionally, this regimen has minimal toxicity and can be administered on an outpatient basis after remission induction

    Dapsone, Danazol, and Intrapartum Splenectomy in Refractory ITP Complicating Pregnancy

    No full text
    Currently there is no consensus on the treatment of refractory idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP) complicating pregnancy. Our patient with chronic ITP complicating pregnancy, who was refractory to steroids, dapsone, and danazol, was treated successfully with intrapartum splenectomy

    Management of hemophilia in patients with inhibitors: the perspective from developing countries

    No full text
    Data are limited on inhibitors in people with hemophilia (PWH) in developing countries. There is a perception that the overall prevalence of inhibitors, ranging from 7 to 19% in different reports, may be lower in these countries as compared with that reported from developed countries. This is possible given the fact that most patients are treated after 2 years of age with plasma-derived clotting factor concentrates. Whether genetic or other environmental factors also contribute to this needs further evaluation. There is a need to develop laboratory infrastructure and establish quality control programs for laboratory tests for inhibitors in developing countries. Management options vary widely given the socioeconomic diversity among these countries. Significant individualization of approach to management is therefore required depending on the available resources, particularly with regard to the use of bypassing agents. The limited data on immune tolerance induction with some low-dose regimens deserve further evaluation. Even in resource-constrained environments, education and a policy of systematic screening of patients associated with judicious use of bypassing agents can significantly improve the care of PWH who develop inhibitors

    Fludarabine-based reduced intensity conditioning regimens for allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation in patients with aplastic anemia and fungal infections

    No full text
    Eighteen patients (12 men and 6 women) with aplastic anemia and active fungal infections (10 proven/probable; 8 possible) underwent stem cell transplantation using fludarabine combined with cyclophosphamide or total body irradiation. Peripheral blood stem cells (PBSC) were the main graft source and a combination of cyclosporine with either methotrexate or methylprednisolone was used for graft versus host disease prophylaxis. Fourteen patients (77.8%) achieved neutrophil engraftment after a median time of 11 d, while four died of fungal sepsis. Resolution of fungal infection occurred in 60% of patients with proven/probable infections and in 100% with possible fungal infections. At a median follow up of 30 months, 11 patients (61.1%) were alive and well. Fludarabine-based conditioning regimens with PBSC transplantation can be used successfully in patients with aplastic anemia and fungal infections

    HIV-associated lymphoma: A 5-year clinicopathologic study from India

    No full text
    Context: Relative risk of non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) in people living with HIV is 60–200 times that of normal population. This is the largest series from India on lymphomas arising in HIV-infected individuals including workup for Epstein–Barr virus (EBV) and human herpesvirus-8 (HHV-8). Aims: This study aims to ascertain the distribution and detailed clinicopathologic features of lymphoma arising in HIV-infected persons in India. Settings and Design: The study was done during the period of 2007–2011 in the pathology department of a tertiary care center in South India. Subjects and Methods: All cases diagnosed as lymphoma in the department of pathology during the study period were identified, and patients with HIV positive by serology were included in the study. Clinical details were obtained from electronic records, slides were reviewed and tissue blocks retrieved, and immunohistochemistry for HHV-8 and in situ hybridization for EBV-encoded RNA was done. Statistical Analysis Used: Descriptive statistics were done using SPSS software. Kaplan–Meier curves were used to do survival analysis. Results: Of 3346 patients diagnosed with lymphoma, 73 (2%) were diagnosed to be positive for HIV. About 87.6% of the cases were NHL, of which diffuse large B-cell lymphoma was the most common and plasmablastic lymphoma was the second common subtype. Survival was uniformly poor in 36% of the cases where follow-up was available. Conclusions: The striking differences from world literature included higher frequency of plasmablastic lymphomas, lack of primary central nervous system lymphomas, and low association with HHV8

    Infections in children undergoing allogeneic bone marrow transplantation in India

    No full text
    We studied the clinical profile of infections among 221 pediatric patients who underwent 230 allogeneic transplants between 1986 and June 2004. All patients developed febrile neutropenia. There were 283 documented infections, which included bacterial (36.9%), viral (45.7%), fungal (11.1%) and other infections (6.3%) including tuberculosis. Bacterial and fungal infections were more common in the first 30 days following BMT, while viral infections were more common >30 days after BMT. Bacterial pathogens were predominantly gram-negative organisms (72.7%), when compared with gram-positive organisms (27.3%). Common gram-negative organisms included NFGNB, Pseudomonas, Escherichia coli and Klebsiella while coagulase negative Staphylococci was the main gram-positive organism. Bacteremia (61.2%) was the main source positive cultures and was mainly because of gram-negative organisms (81%), predominantly NFGNB and Pseudomonas. Exactly 103/221(43.7%) transplants had 128 documented viral infections commonly because of Cytomegalovirus, Herpes group of viruses and transfusion related hepatitis. Thirty of 221 (13.5%) of transplants had 30 documented fungal infections with the majority being because of aspergillus (90%). Tuberculosis was seen in 1.7% of transplants while catheter infections were seen in 21 patients (9.1%). Infection related mortality was seen in 12% predominantly because of CMV or fungal infections. A sub group analysis (pre-1998 vs. post-1998) revealed higher incidences of gram-negative infections, bacteremia and bacterial infection related mortality in the pre-1998 era when compared with the recent times. The profile and mortality of infections in this series from India is not significantly different from reports from the West

    Sorafenib induced Hand Foot Skin Rash in FLT3 ITD mutated Acute Myeloid leukemia- A case report and review of literature

    No full text
    Sorafenib is a novel small molecule multiple kinase inhibitor which has been used for metastatic renal cancer, hepatocellular cancer. Sorafenib induced skin rash has been discussed as a side effect in trials in both FLT3 wild type and mutated acute myeloid leukemia (AML) as monotherapy or as combination with other chemotherapeutic agents . We describe a patient with FLT 3 ITD mutated AML who was started on adjunctive Sorafenib therapy. Skin reactions manifested as NCI Grade III palmoplantar erythrodysesthesia (PPE), requiring drug discontinuation. Several pathogenic mechanisms have been implicated in Sorafenib induced skin reactions, but none has been conclusively proven. While treatment options are varied for early stage skin reactions, drug discontinuation remains the only possible therapy presently for severe grade skin reaction
    • …
    corecore