Conflicting data are available about iron metabolism in thalassemia minors. As iron deficiency prevails largely in India, a study of 150 people was conducted to assess the iron level of b thalassemia minor. The study population comprises of 59 males and 91 female who either attended outdoor services and with diagnosed thalassemia minor by hemoglobin high performance liquid chromatography or were the parents (diagnosed thalassemia minor) of b Thalassemia patients visiting daycare services for transfusion. 29.67% females and 3.38% males are found to be iron deficient. Thus we can conclude that iron deficiency is one of the common co-existing conditions in b thalassemia minors.Keywords Iron deficiency anaemia Á b thalassemia minor Á Serum ferritin Á HPLC
In the past decade, mucormycosis has emerged as an important lethal infection in diabetics and other immunocompromised hosts. Rhinosinusitis, pansinusitis, rhino-orbital and rhinocerebral are the common classical manifestations of mucormycosis. However, primary gastrointestinal (GI) mucormycosis is an uncommon disease associated with a high mortality rate. Stomach is the most common site involved in GI mucormycosis. Reported cases of GI mucormycosis in an immunocompetent host are very few in the literature. Here we present a case of a young male with fungal sepsis secondary to GI mucormycosis in an immunocompetent person.
Mean number of collection days was similar in LEN pos vs. LEN neg group (2.11 vs. 2, P = .47). Median collected CD34 was 8.6 vs. 11.3 in LEN pos and LEN neg group with no significant difference (P = .12). Mean time to neutrophil engraftment was not different between LEN pos vs. LEN neg (10. 58 vs. 10.55, days P = .45). Mean time to platelet engraftment was also similar (19.3 vs. 21.7 days, P = .19). There was one platelet engraftment failure in LEN neg group. There was a significant correlation between collected TNC and BFU-E as well as TNC and CFU-GM, however there was no significant difference between LEN pos and LEN neg group. The overall rate of day 1 collection failure was 14.2% with no statistically significant difference between LEN pos and LEN neg groups (Median: 13.5% vs. 14.6%; P = .39). There was no detected difference in progression-free survival. Conclusion: In this cohort of heavily pretreated pts, use of LEN prior to PBSC collection did not affect stem cell collection, graft quality or engraftment. High usage of Plerixafor may have overcome the deleterious effect of LEN. The impact of LEN on stem cell collection and transplantation should be evaluated in prospective clinical trials (Figures 1-3).
Acquired Aplastic anemia (AA) is a bone marrow failure syndrome characterized by pancytopenia and marrow hypoplasia, and is mediated by immune destruction of hematopoietic stem cells. Mutations in several genes including telomerase, a ribonucleoprotein enzyme complex, consisting of a reverse transcriptase enzyme (TERT), an RNA template (TERC), and several stabilizing proteins, and the associated shelterin complexes have been found in both congenital and idiopathic AA. In particular, several TERT and TERC mutations reduce telomerase activity in vitro and accelerate telomere attrition in vivo. Shortened telomeres have been observed in a third of idiopathic AA patients, but only 10% of these patients have mutations in genes of the telomerase complex. We have recently demonstrated that in addition to keeping telomeres from shortening, telomerase directly regulates transcriptional programs of developmentally relevant genes (Ghosh et al, Nat Cell Biol, 2012, 14, 1270). We postulate that changes in expression of telomerase associated genes, specifically TERT, contribute to the etiology of aplastic anemia. In an effort to better understand the molecular and clinical correlates of this disease, 24 idiopathic AA patient samples were collected at a tertiary medical center in Bangalore, India. Following informed consent, we performed RT-PCR analysis on harvested RNA from each patient and measured levels of TERT expression compared to that of normal controls (n=6). An 8 fold reduction in TERT expression was observed in 17/24 patients, while 7/24 patients maintained normal TERT expression. In general, TERT-low patients were younger in age (mean age 29y) compared with the TERT-normal patients (mean age 40y). TERT-low patients were more likely to have severe aplastic anemia (SAA) leading to higher mortality and poorer response to therapy, with 6/17 patients dying and 4/17 not responding to ATG therapy. Targeted panel sequencing of the 24 samples on an Illumina platform revealed that while TERT-normal patients had no mutations in genes associated with the telomerase/shelterin complex, TERT-low patients carried predicted pathogenic variants in TERT, TEP1, TINF2, NBN, TPP1, HSP90A and POT1 genes, all associated with the telomerase complex. Somatic gene variants were also identified in other AA associated genes, PRF1 and CDAN1, in the TERT-low cohort. In addition, novel predicted pathogenic mutations associated with the shelterin complex were found in two TERT-low patients in the TNKS gene. We also detected mutations in TET2, BCORL1, FLT-3, MLP and BRAF genes in TERT-low patients. Mutations in these genes are associated with clonal evolution, disease progression and poor prognosis. Our observations were further illustrated in a single patient where normal TERT expression was noted at initial clinical presentation. ATG therapy led to CR, but the patient returned within a year and succumbed to E.coli related sepsis. At that stage he had low TERT expression, suggesting that TERT expression can change as the disease progresses. Taken together, our data support the hypothesis that loss of TERT expression correlates with disease severity and poor prognosis. Our observations further suggest that preliminary and periodic evaluation of TERT expression levels in AA patients is likely to serve as a predictor of disease severity and influence the choice of therapy. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.
We performed a prospective multi-centre observational study to understand the incidence of IFI in patients with AML in India with use of anti-fungal prophylaxis. All patients with AML receiving either induction chemotherapy or salvage chemotherapy between November 2014 and February 2016 were included in this prospective observational study from 10 Indian centres. IFI was defined as per the revised EORTC-MSG criteria. Data on type of chemotherapy used, type of anti-fungal prophylaxis used, time to neutrophil recovery, incidence of IFI and survival were collected. Two hundred patients (118 male and 82 females) with a median age of 35 years (range: 2-66) were recruited. One hundred and eighty-six (93%) had newly diagnosed acute myeloid leukemia (AML) while 14 (7%) had relapsed disease. IFI occurred in 53 patients (26.5%) with proven or probable IFI occurring in 17 (8.5%). Use of posaconazole prophylaxis (p = 0.027) was the only factor found to be associated with a reduced incidence of IFI. The overall survival (OS) at 6 weeks and 3 months respectively was similar among patients who had IFI (83.0 ± 5.2%; 81.0 ± 5.4%) as compared to those without IFI (84.4 ? 3.0%; 81.4 ± 3.2%). This prospective study reveals a high incidence of IFI in patients undergoing chemotherapy for AML in India. The use of posaconazole prophylaxis was associated with a significantly lower incidence of IFI. Optimal strategies to prevent IFI need to be studied.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.