Two men with advanced but previously untreated B cell hairy-cell leukemia were treated with low doses of pentostatin (2'-deoxycoformycin) in intermittent courses. There was prompt clearance of hairy cells from the blood, regression of splenomegaly and lymphadenopathy, and correction of anemia, thrombocytopenia, and granulocytopenia. Side effects were tolerable and myelosuppression was not observed. Both patients achieved complete remission documented by bone marrow aspiration and biopsy and radionuclide scans of liver and spleen. They remain in complete remission nine and six months, respectively, after their last treatment. Pentostatin (Warner-Lambert, Ann Arbor, Mich) is highly active in hairy-cell leukemia and merits more extensive evaluation in this disease. A woman with hairy-cell leukemia has begun treatment with pentostatin, and at ten weeks there is disappearance of gross splenomegaly and clearance of hairy cells from the blood. Bone marrow studies have not yet been repeated.
Clinical, laboratory, and pathologic observations in six patients with sensory motor peripheral neuropathy associated with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) are presented. Blood and urine testing failed to reveal other causes for peripheral neuropathy. Distinctive CSF findings included elevated human immunodeficiency virus-specific indices. Peripheral nerve pathology confirmed the results of electrodiagnostic studies and revealed axonal loss and demyelination. Epineurial and endoneurial mononuclear infiltrates were present in three patients, and in one with early neuropathy, retroviral-like particles were present in peripheral nerve axoplasm. The findings indicate that in some patients with AIDS, neuropathy may be the direct result of a viral insult, although the causes are likely multifactorial.
Diagnosed from 1970 through 1975, the annual incidence rate for angiosarcoma of the liver among residents of New York State (excluding New York City) was 0.25 per million. A case-control study indicated that direct exposure to arsenic, vinyl chloride (VC), and thorium dioxide was a significantly important factor in the etiology of this disorder (P less than 0.02). Direct exposure to these chemicals could not be demonstrated for 19 (73%) of the 26 study patients. The fact that 5 of these patients lived nearer to VC fabrication or polymerization plants than did their matched controls lent some support to the hypothesis that indirect modes of exposure, not specifically related to occupation, might be important in the etiology of this disorder.
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