scholarly journals CASES OF SARCOMA AND OF HODGKIN'S DISEASE TREATED BY EXPOSURES TO X-RAYS—A PRELIMINARY REPORT.

JAMA ◽  
1902 ◽  
Vol XXXVIII (3) ◽  
pp. 166 ◽  
Author(s):  
WILLIAM ALLEN PUSEY
1973 ◽  
Vol 11 (15) ◽  
pp. 57-59

The extent of Hodgkin’s disease at the time of diagnosis is the most important single factor affecting prognosis and the choice of treatment.1 2 Thorough investigation is needed to determine the stage of the disease,3 and it is best to refer patients to a centre with special experience of the condition. The staging process requires haematological, biochemical and radiographic studies, including abdominal lymphography.4 Some patients may also need laparotomy with splenectomy and hepatic and node biopsy to localise any intra-abdominal spread, particularly into the liver which is ominous and an important determinant in the choice of therapy.5 6 Laparotomy is less usually performed in patients over 60. In children under 6 splenectomy should not be carried out because it makes them more susceptible to infection.7 In young women the ovaries may be sewn to the abdominal wall in the mid-line so that they can be shielded from x-rays directed at iliac lymph nodes.


1983 ◽  
Vol 18 (4) ◽  
pp. 418-419 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jessie L. Ternberg ◽  
Daniel M. Hays ◽  
Margaret P. Sullivan ◽  
Gerald S. Gilchrist ◽  
Richard N. Heller

Cancer ◽  
1979 ◽  
Vol 44 (1) ◽  
pp. 80-86 ◽  
Author(s):  
Derek Jenkin ◽  
Melvin Freedman ◽  
Peter McClure ◽  
Vera Peters Oc ◽  
Frederick Saunders ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
1972 ◽  
Vol 40 (5) ◽  
pp. 621-633 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stanley E. Order ◽  
Stanley E. Chism ◽  
Samuel Hellman

Abstract Following a previous preliminary report, this study was initiated to demonstate further evidence of tumor-associated antigens in Hodgkin’s disease and to determine if these antigens are found in other pathologic states. Tumor-associated antigens are now demonstrated by three techniques in 18 Hodgkin’s invoved spleens and are not found to be present in equal concentration in normal spleens. Using immunofluorescence techniques and absorbed tumor antisera, fluorescence is demonstrated in tumors but not in the normal region of the same tumor-bearing spleen or in normal spleens. Gel diffusion with absorbed tumor antisera revealed a common precipitin band in Hodgkin’s disease not present in normal spleens or spleens from other diseases. Studies with immunoelectrophoresis have demonstrated two antigens present in the tumors in the spleen. Eighteen out of 19 Hodgkin’s tumors from the spleen have such antigens identifiable by immunoelectrophoresis with concomitant negative normal splenic controls in each case. Five out of 18 spleens from other disease states shared one of the antigens. These data confirm the presence of common tumor-associated antigens in Hodgkin’s disease, and it is postulated that at least one antigen may be a host cell reactant substance.


Blood ◽  
1949 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 338-379 ◽  
Author(s):  
WILLIAM DAMESHEK ◽  
LOUIS WEISFUSE ◽  
TOBIAS STEIN

Abstract 1. Methyl bis (B chloroethyl) amine (HN2) was given by intravenous route for the treatment of 50 successive cases of Hodgkin’s disease, most of them severe and far advanced. Doses somewhat smaller than the usually recommended amount of 0.1 mg. per Kg. were used in courses of four to six injections. 2. Nausea and vomiting followed administration of the drug in 93.2 per cent of cases. Chills and fever occurred in 12.4 and 6.8 per cent of cases respectively. Dyspnea, cyanosis and diarrhea were rare. 3. In previously untreated cases, remissions were of much shorter duration than those obtained with Roentgen therapy. However, striking remissions were commonly obtained in x-ray resistant cases. Remissions lasted from 17 to 331 days and in individuals receiving multiple courses were roughly proportional to the total dosage administered. A moderate prolongation of the remission period was obtained when HN2 was combined with roentgen therapy. 4. Constitutional symptoms such as fever, night sweats, weakness and itching responded exceedingly well in most cases to HN2 therapy. Many previously incapacitated patients were completely rehabilitated for several weeks to several months after a single course of HN2 therapy. 5. Adenopathy and splenomegaly regressed in 70.2 and 71.7 per cent of cases respectively. Lymphoid masses previously resistant to x-ray therapy appeared to develop increased sensitivity to x-rays after a course of HN2 therapy. 6. Patients with extensive mediastinal involvement and obstructive symptoms responded only moderately well while those with lesser degrees of involvement showed a better response. 7. Paraplegia due to intraspinal involvement was partially relieved in half the cases while pain due to similar involvement was dramatically relieved in all cases. Pain due to pressure upon peripheral nerves was similarly relieved in all cases. 8. A slight but definite fall in the erythrocyte and hemoglobin levels occurred within five to six days after the institution of therapy. Reticulocytes were maximally depressed on the sixth to tenth days. Of the leukocytic elements, the granulocytes were predominately affected, with maximal cytopenic levels on the twenty-first to twenty-fifth day. The leukocytes gradually returned to normal by the thirty-sixth to fortieth day. Cases presenting an initial leukopenia tended to develop normal leukocyte counts after an initial drop to low levels. The platelet count was affected in only 20.5 per cent of cases. Terminal cases at times developed marked pancytopenia. 9. In one case severe hemorrhagic complications due chiefly to thrombocytopenia followed the administration of the tris form of nitrogen mustard and gradually subsided after a very stormy course. 10. Progressive but temporary marrow hypoplasia followed nitrogen mustard therapy in eleven cases studied with serial marrow punctures. Erythroblastic depression was noted within twenty-four hours and granulocytic depression within forty-eight to seventy-two hours. The megakaryocytes proved to be the most resistant of the marrow elements. The marrow picture usually returned to normal spontaneously within a period of six to eight weeks after the cessation of therapy. 11. Lymph node punctures revealed degeneration and pyknosis of lymphocytes within twenty-four hours after the institution of therapy with a subsequent gradual disappearance of polymorphonuclear neutrophiles, eosinophiles, plasma cells, reticulum cells and Dorothy Reed cells. Miliary foci of necrosis were demonstrated in a gland obtained at post mortem seven days after the institution of HN2 therapy. 12. Miliary foci of necrosis were demonstrated in the liver of 3 cases dying between nine and nineteen days after the institution of HN2 therapy. No such findings could be found in a case in which death occurred fifty-four days after the initiation of therapy. 13. The therapeutic results with HN2 in Hodgkin’s disease appeared to have little relationship to the histologic appearance of the involved tissue. The immediate response in so-called Hodgkin’s sarcoma was particularly striking, and in one case, a remission lasting about a year took place.


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