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  • 1
    In: Blood, American Society of Hematology, Vol. 106, No. 11 ( 2005-11-16), p. 852-852
    Abstract: Data on secondary acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (sALL) following ALL treatment are very rare. To our knowledge only 8 such cases have been described so far - 6 and 2 with late developing t(9;22) and t(4;11), respectively. Recently, the extensive examination of immunoglobulin (Ig) and T-cell receptor (TCR) gene rearrangements for the purposes of residual disease monitoring brought a new tool that can help in discrimination between real relapse and sALL clonally unrelated to the original disease. In our study we analysed 276 relapses of patients treated according to BFM-based protocols and examined in 3 centres (Prague, Berlin, Paris). We found 5 cases where the second malignancy is highly suspicious of being sALL rather than relapse. Our basal criteria for selection of the patients were (A) completely unrelated Ig/TCR rearrangements between presentation and relapse or (B) gain or loss of a leukaemo-specific fusion gene or (C) significant immunophenotypic switch. Basic patients characteristics are summarised in the table below. In two cases an MLL gene rearrangement appeared at the time of “relapse” with MLL/ENL and MAML2/MLL fusion genes, respectively. The MAML2 at 11q21 is a new fusion partner of the MLL gene not described previously. ALL is the most common childhood malignancy and thus it can be supposed that sALL after ALL treatment is more common than reported - sALLs without a significant lineage shift have been probably often automatically diagnosed as relapses. Based on the current knowledge on childhood ALL there are probably 3 types of disease recurrence: (1) genuine relapse from a resistant diagnostic (sub)clone, (2) secondary leukaemia arising from original pre-leukaemic clone (with some clonal markers maintained and some changed) and (3) pure sALL, clonally unrelated to the original leukaemia. In our study at least two patients (number 1 and 5) belong to the third category. This frequency (0,5–1%) is a minimal estimate as in some cases the differences could be subtler. In these “unquestionable” cases the adequate treatment strategy should be considered. Both “pure sALL” and “sALL from the same pre-leukaemic clone” cases should be also considered in discussions regarding an intensity of treatment strategies - some recurrences of ALL might, in fact, occur not because of low intensity of protocol but because of overtreatment. In our study we present a largest cohort of patients with possible sALL after ALL treatment analysed so far and, moreover, we describe a new fusion gene in ALL - MAML2/MLL. Patients characteristics Patient 1 2 3 4 5 P=presentation; S=sALL; CR=remission preceding sALL; Ig/TCR: In each patient different letters stand for different and unrelated rearrangements Age at dg. [years] 5,8 3,1 3,0 5,5 5,1 Gender m m m m f Immunophenotype (P/S) BCP/T BCP/BCP preT/T BCP/BCP BCP/T Fusion genes (P/S) TEL-AML1/neg. TEL-AML1/TEL-AML1 neg./neg. neg./MLL-ENL neg./MAML2-MLL Ig/TCR (P/S) ABCD/EFGH ABCD/EFG AB/C A/A ABC/DE CR [years] 2,2 2,5 1,7 1,7 2,7
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0006-4971 , 1528-0020
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    Language: English
    Publisher: American Society of Hematology
    Publication Date: 2005
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  • 2
    In: Blood, American Society of Hematology, Vol. 114, No. 22 ( 2009-11-20), p. 481-481
    Abstract: Abstract 481 Childhood leukemia frequently originates prenatally. Only a small percentage ( 〈 1%) of children with recurrent leukemia associated aberrations detected at birth suffer leukemia later on. In addition, no option to treat the preleukemic clone is availabel. Therefore, neither general screening at birth is useful nor preemptive treatment is possible. The high incidence (5 to 10%) of the transient leukemia (TL) in newborns with trisomy 21 and the high risk to develop a myeloid leukemia of Down Syndrome (ML-DS) within the first 4 years of life supported the hypothesis that the elimination of the preleukemic GATA1 positive clone might prevent leukemia. Prerequisites are the high sensitivity of TL-blasts to cytarabine, the recurrence of the same GATA1-mutated clone and the feasibility to monitor the preleukemic clone. Since 4/2007 69 children with TL were enrolled the study “Prevention of Myeloid Leukemia in Children with Down Syndrome and Transient Leukemia” (EudraCT 2006-002962-20) ; Germany n=50, The Netherlands n=16, Slovakia n=1, Czech Republic n=2). Inclusion criteria were met by 52 children (study patients), 17 children were observed only (protocol patients). Table 1 summarizes the patients' characteristics. The TL and ML-DS specific mutations of the transcriptions factor GATA1 have been detected in 60 children (87%), failure of detection were caused by low percentage of blasts ( 〈 2%) combined with late diagnosis (≥20 days after birth). The median follow-up within the study group was 1 year (0.2 to 2.3 years). Totally, 58 % of the children showed clinical symptoms associated to the TL, severe complications have been reported in 22 children (table 2). According to the study guidelines 20 out of these 22 children were treated with low dose cytarabine (1.5mg/kg body weight 1 week). Enrollment to the study including reference diagnostics and consulting, and a consequent treatment seems to improve the prognosis of this particular group. Compared to the historical group of children with similar characteristics (Klusmann et al. Blood 111(6):2991-8, 2008), the overall survival (2 years) significantly increased from 55±7% to 84±8%, p=0.03. MRD diagnostics by qRT-PCR and/or immunophenotyping was performed in 53 children (77%). Reasons for failure were early deaths (n=9; cardiac defects n=1, prematurity/MOV n=7, liver fibrosis n=1), refusal of monitoring by the parents (n=3), lack of material (n=4). If the MRD-level at week 8 and/or 10 exceeded 10-3 (qRT-PCR) or 10-2 (immunophenotyping), respectively, intervention with low-cytarabine was recommended. Currently, 39 children were already analyzed at week 12 (1st endpoint). In 7 children (13%) treatment recommendation according to high MRD levels were given. With exception of transient myelosuppression (CTC Grade II) no severe side effects occurred. All children but two became MRD negative at week 12. To date one child with persistent detectable MRD levels suffered ML-DS (1 year after TL). In summary, participating in the study and treatment of children with TL causing severe clinical symptoms seems to improve the prognosis. Although the recruitment into the study is faster than expected and the results to date are promising, the follow-up is much too short to draw definitive conclusion. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0006-4971 , 1528-0020
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Language: English
    Publisher: American Society of Hematology
    Publication Date: 2009
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 1468538-3
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 80069-7
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  • 3
    In: Foods, MDPI AG, Vol. 11, No. 19 ( 2022-09-21), p. 2945-
    Abstract: Essential oils (EOs) from aromatic plants seem to have the potential to control several fungal pathogens and food contaminants. Botrytis cinerea is the main strawberry fruit contaminant causing high losses during storage. Here, thirteen EOs applied in the vapor phase were evaluated for their potential to inhibit the growth of three different strains of B. cinerea isolated from strawberry fruits. Eight EOs (lemongrass, litsea, lavender, peppermint, mint, petitgrain, sage, and thyme) were able to completely inhibit the growth of B. cinerea for 7 days when applied at a concentration of 625 μL·L−1. Four EOs with the lowest minimal inhibition concentrations (thyme, peppermint, lemongrass, and litsea) have been tested on strawberry fruits intentionally inoculated by B. cinerea. All four EOs showed high inhibition at a concentration of 250 or 500 μL·L−1, but only peppermint EO was able to completely inhibit B. cinerea lesion development at a concentration of 125 μL·L−1. The sensory evaluation of strawberries treated by EOs at a concentration 125 μL·L−1 resulted in a statistically significant decrease in taste, aftertaste, aroma, and overall quality. Lemongrass and litsea EOs scored better than thyme and peppermint ones, thus forming two viable methods for B. cinerea suppression and the extension of packed strawberries’ shelf life.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 2304-8158
    Language: English
    Publisher: MDPI AG
    Publication Date: 2022
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 2704223-6
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