[Rinshō ketsueki] The Japanese journal of clinical hematology
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A 79-year-old man was admitted because of consciousness disturbance on August 9, 2002. He had been diagnosed as having chronic myeloid leukemia in 1999, and since then, he had continued to take hydroxyurea (1500 mg/day) orally. On admission, his serum sodium concentration was as low as 119 mEq/L, while urinary sodium excretion was high. ⋯ Because of normal blood level of the antidiuretic hormone (ADH) concentration and sufficient urine volume, the syndrome of inappropriate ADH secretion (SIADH) was unlikely, and sodium-losing nephropathy was suspected. After discontinuation of hydroxyurea, the urinary sodium excretion decreased and the patient's consciousness became clear concomitantly with improvement in the serum Na level. This patient appears to be the first case of hyponatremia caused by hydroxyurea.
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Case Reports
[Treatment with a proteasome inhibitor, bortezomib, for thalidomide-resistant multiple myeloma].
A proteasome inhibitor with a new molecular target (PS-341: bortezomib) was recently developed, and its efficacy in the treatment of refractory multiple myeloma has been reported in the United States. Here, we present a 54-year-old Japanese male patient with refractory multiple myeloma resistant to thalidomide. In 1998, the patient was diagnosed as having multiple myeloma (IgG-kappa) and underwent chemotherapy, autologous hematopoietic cell transplantation and interferon therapy, but the disease recurred. ⋯ On 23 June 2003, bortezomib therapy with the following regime was therefore started: 2.2 mg (1.3 mg/m2) of bortezomib was injected intravenously on days 1, 4, 8 and 11, and after a one-week break, another cycle was performed. Starting on day 8 of the administration, the serum total protein, IgG, serum calcium and LDH levels decreased rapidly, and after day 45 of the administration, blood transfusion was no longer needed. Since this is the first report of the use of bortezomib in the treatment of refractory multiple myeloma in Japan, further monitoring of this patient will provide extremely valuable information for developing a therapy against this disease.
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The patient was a 47-year-old man who was diagnosed in 1989 as having chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML). He had been treated with interferon-alpha (IFN-alpha) and hydroxyurea. In August 1999, he was admitted to our hospital for examination of severe anemia and increased platelet count. ⋯ The patient remained erythroblastopenic and transfusion-dependent for more than 2 years. Association of CML and PRCA is rare. We discuss the mechanisms underlying PRCA occurring during the course of CML.