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✦   LIBER   ✦

A noninvasive technique for monitoring response to chemotherapy in human acute leukemia

✍ Scribed by Lynn Elizabeth Posey; John Rainey; Richard Vial; Donna Ryan; John H. Bickers; Lee Roy Morgan Jr.; Monroe S. Samuels; Edgar W. Hull


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1979
Tongue
English
Weight
551 KB
Volume
44
Category
Article
ISSN
0008-543X

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✦ Synopsis


To see whether urine enzyme activities could be used as an index in evaluating the disease status of leukemia patients, we examined the activities of four enzymes: arylsulfatases A(AS-A) and B(AS-B), alkaline phosphatase (AP), and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH). A P and LDH showed no consistent patterns. The activities of AS-A and AS-B correlated well with the patient's clinical status, increasing during progression of disease and decreasing toward normal activities during responses to therapy, as judged from bone marrow cellularity and differential.

Among 23 untreated patients with a histologic diagnosis of acute leukemia we found increased activities of the urine enzymes in these proportions: AS-A in 23 patients (loo%), AS-B in 22 (95.7%), AP in ' 7 (30.4%), and LDH in 10 (43.5%). Five patients in remission from acute leukemia had normal activities for all four enzymes. In one patient in remission for more than one year, a rise in urinary arylsulfatase activity preceded observable bone marrow relapse by 4 months. Unlike that of serum of urine lysozyme and serum copper, the determination of urine arylsulfatase activities appears to be a consistent, useful indicator of response to antileukemic therapy. In contrast to the determination of polyamines, the quantitation of arylsulfatase activity is achieved with greater ease and with instrumentation available in most clinical laboratories.

Cancer 44: [873][874][875][876][877][878][879][880] 1979.

IOCHEMICAL ASSAYS can be used to detect B the presence and extent of many disease processes and to monitor the patient's response to therapy. Such assays are not, however, available for leukemia, a disease that is highly variable clinically. Roentgenographic studies are helpful and widely used in following the progression or regression of "meas-From the Departments of


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