20 research outputs found

    F-Square Geometries for n = 3, 4, 5, and 6

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    19 pages, 1 article*F-Square Geometries for n = 3, 4, 5, and 6* (Federer, W. T.; Lee, F. C.; Mandeli, J. P.) 19 page

    Molecular cloning and characterization of new tomato and Sida-infecting geminiviruses

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    Acute leukemia following a previous malignancy: do acute lymphoid leukemia and acute myeloid leukemia have a common risk factors ?

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    Introduction: Within the framework of the GIMEMA Study Group, the characteristics of acute lymphoid leukemia and acute myeloid leukemia occurring in patients who have su\u80ered a previous malignancy were studied. Assessment was also made of the clinical course, laboratory features and overall outcome of these conditions. Materials and methods: A four-year, multi-center retrospective study was conducted to evaluate the e\u80ect of treatment for previous hematological malignancy on the development of secondary leukemia. The study collected in the GIMEMA Archive of Adult Acute Leukemia 3934 new cases of acute leukemia (2964 AML, 901 ALL, 60 acute biphenotypic leukemia). Among these cases, data were evaluated from patients with a personal history of a previous malignancy, and included inquiring into demographic data, history of neoplastic diseases in the 1st degree relatives, type and treatment of the previous malignancy, latency until the development of a secondary acute leukemia diagnosis, laboratory features, treatment and outcome at the onset of secondary acute leukemia. Results: Approximately 200 (5.1%) patients presented a previous malignancy. Twenty-one were a\u80ected by ALL and 179 by AML. The proportion of patients with secondary AML was higher than that of patients with secondary ALL (179/2964 vs 21/901, O.R. 2.69 ± 95% C.I. 1.66 ± 4.39, P50.001). The median latency, from the onset of the previous malignancy to the development of secondary ALL was 27 months and to the development of secondary AML was 52 months (P50.05). Furthermore, of patients who previously received chemotherapy more developed a second AML (66/127 sAML vs 5/21 sALL; O.R. 3.46 ± 95% C.I. 1.10 ± 11.56, P50.01). Conclusion: In most cases, chemotherapy treatment for a previous malignancy can play a role in the development of secondary AML. In almost all cases of secondary ALL, the role of previous drugs does not appear to be relevant. On the basis of our analysis, performed systematically for the ®rst time on a large adult series of acute leukemia, we conclude that in these patients a biological predisposition to cancer may be suspected

    Autologous bone marrow or peripheral blood stem cell transplantation for patientys with chronic myelogenous leukemia in chronic phase. Bone Marrow Transpl,1990.

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    The progressive and fatal course of chronic myelogenous leukemia has not been affected significantly by chemotherapeutic agents that control the benign phase of the disease. Combination chemotherapy and aggressive treatments may offer some advantages: however, these approaches do not appear to produce stable suppression of Ph1 chromosome or to prolong chronic phase and survival of these patients. Only allogeneic bone marrow transplantation has been demonstrated to be capable of inducing a stable, complete suppression of Ph1+ cells. Recently alpha Interferons (IFN) have been shown to control myeloid proliferation in patients with CML and to determine a progressive and persistent decline of Ph1+ bone marrow cells in some cases. The hypothesis that in most newly diagnosed patients with CML various amount of Ph1 negative cells must still be present, albeit in suppressed state in the bone marrow (BM) or in the peripheral blood (PB), have led some Authors to treat patients with high-dose chemotherapy followed by reinfusion of stem cells collected at diagnosis or after a response to cytoreductive treatments. We report 34 patients with CML treated in chronic phase with Busulohan and Melphalan conditioning regimen followed by reinfusion of BM or PB stem cells

    Prevention of Doxorubicin Cardiopathic Changes by a Benzyl Styryl Sulfone in Mice

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    Cardiac toxicity is a major limitation in the use of doxorubicin (and related anthracyclins). ON 1910.Na (Estybon, Rogersitib, or 1910), a substituted benzyl styryl sulfone, is equally active as doxorubicin against MCF-7 human mammary carcinoma xenografted into nude mice. 1910 augments the antitumor activity of doxorubicin when given simultaneously. Furthermore, when given in combination, 1910 protects against cardiac weight loss and against morphological damage to cardiac tissues. Doxorubicin induces inactivation of glucose response protein 78 (GRP78), a principal chaperone that serves as the master regulator of the unfolded protein response (UPR). Inactivated GRP78 leads to an increase in misfolded proteins, endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress, activation of UPR sensors, and increased CHOP expression. 1910 prevents the inactivation of GRP78 by doxorubicin, and the combination, while more active against the tumor, protects against cardiac weight loss
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