Dragica Tomin
University of Belgrade
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Featured researches published by Dragica Tomin.
Biomedicine & Pharmacotherapy | 2013
Darko Antic; Ivo Elezovic; Natasa Milic; Nada Suvajdzic; Ana Vidovic; Maja Perunicic; Irena Djunic; Mirjana Mitrovic; Dragica Tomin
Isolated myeloid sarcoma is an extramedullary tumor of immature myeloid cells defined by the absence of leukemia history, myelodisplastic syndrome, or myeloproliferative neoplasma with a negative bone marrow biopsy. Myeloid sarcoma is a very rare condition, and few cases have been reported. We reviewed data of 12 patients with isolated myeloid sarcoma managed at a single center to determine the possible prognostic factors affecting patient survival, such as age, sex, type, localization, and treatment options. Patients were mostly men (n=8), with a median age of 39 years. Patients were initially treated with chemotherapy (n=7) or surgery (n=5). In three patients, hematopoietic stem cell transplantation was performed. During the follow-up period, nine patients died. The median overall survival was 13 months, while event-free survival was 8 months. Regarding initial treatment strategy, no significant difference in overall survival was observed. Both chemotherapy and hematopoietic stem cell transplantation independently improved event-free survival. In addition, patients who received chemotherapy combined with hematopoietic stem cell transplantation had significantly longer event-free survival than those treated with chemotherapy alone. Age<40 years together with chemotherapy/hematopoietic stem cell transplantation significant affected event-free survival. Based on our results, the treatment of myeloid sarcoma requires a systemic rather than a localized approach with surgery or radiotherapy. While prospective evaluations are needed, chemotherapy with allogenic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation should be considered as the optimal therapy for isolated myeloid sarcoma.
Medical Oncology | 2007
Milica Colovic; Slavko Matić; Emrush Kryeziu; Dragica Tomin; Natasa Colovic; Henry Dushan Edward Atkinson
Primary non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma (NHL) of the thyroid gland is a rare disease with an incidence of 0.5 per 100,000 population. Stages IE and IIE thyroid NHL have been traditionally treated by surgical resection; however, modern treatment consists of chemotherapy and local radiotherapy, and surgery is often reserved for tissue diagnosis and relief of airway compression. We retrospectively reviewed the management and outcomes of nine consecutive patients with thyroid NHL, eight females and one male (median age 63 yr, range 34-71 yr) treated between 1994 and 1999. Five patients had disease stage IE and 4 stage IIE. Median follow-up was 72 mo. Pathohistology and immunohistochemistry identified two patients with mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT), three follicular center cell lymphoma (FCC), two patients large B-cell lymphoma (BLCL), one a marginal zone lymphoma (MZL), and one patient a peripheral T-cell lymphoma (PTCL). Total thyroidectomy was performed in three patients and subtotal thyroidectomy in four. One (MALT) patient underwent surgery alone; three patients surgery, radiotherapy, and chemotherapy (two FCC, one PTCL); three patients surgery and chemotherapy (one MALT, one FCC, one LBCL); and two chemotherapy alone (one LBCL, one MZL). Median survival was 79 mo (range 13–124 mo). The PTCL patient, a 34-yr-old man, died from disseminated disease at 13 mo despite secondary chemotherapy, and one LBCL patient with extensively invasive local disease died from stroke 17 mo after diagnosis. The remaining seven patients remain in remission with no local or systemic relapse at a mean of 86 mo. With appropriate therapy primary thyroid NHL has a favorable course; however, prognosis depends on the histology, local spread, and the stage of the disease at presentation, as well as the patient’s performance status. Surgery in combination with chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy is still warranted for intermediate and high-grade thyroid NHLs, with over 77% of patients achieving long-term remission. Peripheral T-cell lymphoma carries a poor prognosis.
Hematology | 2012
Irena Djunic; Marijana Virijevic; Aleksandra Novkovic; Vladislava Djurasinovic; Natasa Colovic; Ana Vidovic; Nada Suvajdzic-Vukovic; Dragica Tomin
Abstract The objective of this single-center study was to determine the pretreatment risk factors and influence of comorbidity on outcome in patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML). The research involved 145 patients with AML during a 58-month follow-up period. The results suggest that the most significant predictor of poor overall survival (OS) is an adverse karyotype (P = 0.007), while for poor rate of complete remission (CR) it is age ≥55 years, and for early death the most significant predictor is comorbidity, as scored by the Hematopoetic Cell Transplantation Comorbidity Index (HCT-CI), P = 0.001. When we divided the patients into two groups: aged ≥55 years and aged <55 years, these predictors differed. In the group aged ≥55 years the most significant predictor of OS (P = 0.013) and for early death (P = 0.003) was HCT-CI (P = 0.013), while in the younger group it was karyotype (P < 0.001). The most significant predictor of CR in the elderly was increased serum lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) level (P = 0.045). In the younger patients, the most significant predictor of CR was leukocytosis (P = 0.001) and for early death it was infection as the comorbidity (P = 0.007). We point out the importance of comorbidity for OS and early death, as well as the impact of infection in patients with AML.
Thrombosis Research | 2015
Mirjana Mitrovic; Nada Suvajdzic; Ivo Elezovic; Andrija Bogdanovic; Valentina Djordjevic; Predrag Miljic; Irena Djunic; Maja Gvozdenov; Natasa Colovic; Marijana Virijevic; Danijela Lekovic; Ana Vidovic; Dragica Tomin
INTRODUCTION Thrombotic events (TE) appear to be more common in acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) than in other acute leukemias, with reported prevalence ranging from 2 to 10-15%. MATERIALS AND METHODS We retrospectively analyzed the data on TE appearance in 63 APL patients. RESULTS TE occured in 13 (20.6%) cases, four arterial (6.3%) and nine venous (14.3%). TE were more frequently diagnosed after initiation of weekly D-dimer monitoring (7 TE during 20 months vs 6 during 76 months, P=0.032). Patients with and without venous thrombosis were significantly different regarding female/male ratio (P=0.046), PT (P=0.022), aPTT (P=0.044), ISTH DIC score (P=0.001), bcr3 (P=0.02) and FLT3-ITD (P=0.028) mutation. The most significant risk factor for venous TE occurrence in multivariate analysis was FLT3-ITD mutation (P=0.034). PAI-1 4G/4G polymorphism was five times more frequent in patients with venous TE than without it (P=0.05). Regarding risk factors for arterial TE we failed to identify any. CONCLUSIONS We have demonstrated that APL-related TE rate is higher than previously reported and that weekly D-dimer monitoring might help to identify patients with silent thrombosis. Moreover, our study suggests a possible relationship between venous TE occurrence and several laboratory findings (PT, aPTT, ISTH DIC score, bcr3 isoform, FLT3-ITD mutation and PAI 4G/4G). Prophylactic use of heparin might be considered in patients with ISTH DIC score<5, bcr3 isoform, FLT3-ITD mutation and PAI 4G/4G.
Platelets | 2011
Milica Colovic; Nada Suvajdzic; Natasa Colovic; Dragica Tomin; Ana Vidovic; V. Palibrk
Treatment options are limited in patients with chronic immune thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP) which has been unresponsive to corticosteroids and/or splenectomy. Mycophenolate mophetil (MMF) is effective in many autoimmune disorders including severe and refractory ITP through its targeting of T-cell and B-cell lymphocytes. We report on the efficacy of MMF (1.5–2 g/day) in 16 adults with severe steroid-resistant ITP. MMF was administered for at least 12 weeks (median 37 weeks, range 14–64 weeks). Patients comprised of 10 females and six males, with median pre-treatment platelet counts of 8 × 109/L, median age of 55 years, median ITP duration of 58 months and a median of four prior treatments (range 3–8); nine had been previously splenectomized. Eleven patients (69%) responded after 12 weeks of MMF: 6 (55%) achieving complete remission (CR) and five (45%) achieved partial remission (PR). MMF therapeutic responses were better in those patients who had had fewer prior treatments (p < 0.05), and were independent of patient age, sex, disease duration, and splenectomy status (p > 0.05). Five of the 11 responders (45%; 3CR/2PR) had sustained remissions; however, six responders (55%; 3CR/3PR) relapsed after median of 14 weeks (range 9–20). Three of the six relapsing patients responded to MMF reinstitution achieving stabile PRs; three were left untreated as none had further bleeding and their platelets remained at “safe” levels (median 30 × 109/L). The MMF treatment was well tolerated; one heavily pretreated patient developed a bronchopneumonia and a second had an episode of diarrhea. MMF used as a second-line agent can produce a sustained response in severe ITP which has been unresponsive to steroid and/or splenectomy without major toxicity.
International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics | 2009
Irena Djunic; Ivo Elezovic; Aleksandar Ljubic; Olivera Markovic; Dragica Tomin; Jasminka Tadic
analysis of pelvic arteries following bilateral internal iliac artery ligation for severe postpartum hemorrhage. Int J Gynecol Obstet 2009;104(1):22–4. [3] Papathanasiou K, Tolikas A, Dovas D, Fragkedakis N, Koutsos J, Giannoylis C, et al. Ligation of internal iliac artery for severe obstetric and pelvic haemorrhage: 10 year experience with 11 cases in a university hospital. J Obstet Gynaecol 2008;28(2): 183–4. [4] Polner K, Gosi G, Vas SI, Kalina I, Acsády G. Management of abdominal aortic and iliac artery aneurysms by stent-graft implantation in a patient on CAPD. Clin Nephrol 2009;71(3):359–62.
Hematology | 2008
Ana Vidovic; Gradimir Jankovic; Milica Colovic; Dragica Tomin; Maja Perunicic; Jelena Bila; Olivera Markovic; Bosković D
Abstract The chronic phase (CP) of chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) is characterized by the expression of chimeric BCR/ABL gene, extended survival, and profligate growth of maturing granulocyte stemline. The accelerated phase (AP) and blast crisis (BC) of CML are usually manifested by additionally acquired oncogene aberrations, resistance to therapy, advancing anaplasia, progressive organomegaly, and increased blast count. Abnormal expression of some proto-oncogenes may accompany or even precede AP or BC of CML. Our objective was to follow-up oncogene expression over time covering different clinical phases of CML. A total of 85 patients [44 females and 41 males; median age 51 years; range 16–75 years] were studied. At the start of the study, 29 patients were in CP, 25 in an AP, and 31 in BC. Temporal variation in expression (percentage positivity per 1000 analyzed cells) of c-kit, c-myc, H-Ras, cyclin A1, p53, bcl-2 and VEGF oncogenic proteins in CP, AP, and BC of CML was studied by immunohistochemical procedures. This was then correlated with parameters of clinical disease (organomegaly, duration of CP, AP, and BC) and laboratory (Hb, WBC and platelet counts, and the percentage of blasts) data. The level of c-kit expression differed significantly over the course of disease (x2, p = 0·025). Antiapoptotic bcl-2 protein increased significantly with the progression of CML (x2, p = 0·005). The expression of c-myc was most pronounced in the AP (Anova, p = 0·033) and then tended to decline. There was no significant difference in the level of expression of H-Ras, cyclin A1 and p53 over the course of disease. The expression of VEGF protein was most pronounced in the AP (Anova, p = 0·033) and it was inversely correlated with degree of splenomegaly (Pearson, r = −0·400, p = 0·011) and overall survival (log rank, p = 0,042). Conclusion: The changes in oncogene expression, assessed by immunohistochemical approach over the course of CML may have clinical relevance in deciding on and timing of therapy. Temporal distribution of changes in oncoprotein expression in CML requires further study at the molecular level.
Radiology and Oncology | 2016
Marijana Virijevic; Teodora Karan-Djurasevic; Irena Marjanovic; Natasa Tosic; Mirjana Mitrovic; Irena Djunic; Natasa Colovic; Ana Vidovic; Nada Suvajdzic-Vukovic; Dragica Tomin; Sonja Pavlovic
Abstract Background Mutations in the isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 and 2 (IDH1 and IDH2) genes are frequent molecular lesions in acute myeloid leukaemia with normal karyotype (AML-NK). The effects of IDH mutations on clinical features and treatment outcome in AML-NK have been widely investigated, but only a few studies monitored these mutations during follow-up. Patients and methods In our study samples from 110 adult de novo AML-NK were studied for the presence of IDH1 and IDH2 mutations, their associations with other prognostic markers and disease outcome. We also analyzed the stability of these mutations during the course of the disease in complete remission (CR) and relapse. Results IDH mutations were found in 25 (23%) patients. IDH+ patients tend to have lower CR rate compared to IDH-patients (44% vs 62.2%, p = 0.152), and had slightly lower disease free survival (12 months vs 17 months; p = 0.091). On the other hand, the presence of IDH mutations had significant impact on overall survival (2 vs 7 months; p = 0.039). The stability of IDH mutations were studied sequentially in 19 IDH+ patients. All of them lost the mutation in CR, and the same IDH mutations were detected in relapsed samples. Conclusions Our study shows that the presence of IDH mutations confer an adverse effect in AML-NK patients, which in combination with other molecular markers can lead to an improved risk stratification and better treatment. Also, IDH mutations are very stable during the course of the disease and can be potentially used as markers for minimal residual disease detection.
Journal of Medical Case Reports | 2013
Ana Vidovic; Valentina Arsic-Arsenijevic; Dragica Tomin; Irena Djunic; Radoslav Jakovic; Zlatibor Loncar; Aleksandra Barac
IntroductionInvasive mucormycosis (zygomycosis) is the third most frequent fungal infection in patients with hematologic malignancies. It often results in a fatal outcome mainly due to the difficulty of early diagnosis and its resistance to antimycotics.Case presentationA 52-year-old Caucasian man was diagnosed with acute myeloblastic leukemia. Following the induction chemotherapy he developed febrile neutropenia. Meropenem (3×1000mg/day) was introduced empirically. A chest computed tomography showed soft-tissue consolidation change in his right upper lobe. A bronchoscopy was performed and the histology indicated invasive pulmonary aspergillosis based on fungal hypha detection. Also, high risk patients are routinely screened for invasive fungal infections using commercially available serological enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay tests: galactomannan and mannan (Bio-Rad, France), as well as anti-Aspergillus immunoglobulin G and/or immunoglobulin M and anti-Candida immunoglobulin G and/or immunoglobulin M antibodies (Virion-Serion, Germany). Galactomannan showed low positivity and voriconazole therapy (2×400mg/first day; 2×300mg/following days) was implemented. The patient became afebrile and a partial remission of disease was established. After 2 months, the patient developed a fever and a chest multi-slice computed tomography showed soft-tissue mass compressing his upper right bronchus. Voriconazole (2×400mg/first day; 2×300mg/following days) was reintroduced and bronchoscopy was repeated. Histologic examination of the new specimen was done, as well as a revision of the earlier samples in the reference laboratory and the diagnosis was switched to invasive pulmonary mucormycosis. The treatment was changed to amphotericin B colloidal dispersion (1×400mg/day). The complete remission of acute myeloblastic leukemia was verified after 2 months. During his immunerestitution, a high positivity of the anti-Aspergillus immunoglobulin M antibodies was found in a single serum sample and pulmonary radiography was unchanged. A lobectomy of his right upper pulmonary lobe was done and the mycology culture of the lung tissue sample revealed Rhizopus oryzae. He remained in complete remission for more than 1 year.ConclusionsInvasive mucormycosis was successfully treated with amphotericin B, surgery and secondary itraconazole prophylaxis. As a rare disease invasive mucormycosis is not well understood by the medical community and therefore an improvement of education about prevention, diagnosis and treatment of invasive mucormycosis is necessary.
Biomedicine & Pharmacotherapy | 2012
Natasa Colovic; Dragica Tomin; Ana Vidovic; Nada Suvajdzic; G. Jankovic; V. Palibrk; Irena Djunic; V. Djurasinovic; M. Virijevic
AIM Primary resistant acute myeloid leukemia has a very poor prognosis. We assessed pretreatment parameters for their significance as prognostic factors in the overall survival (OS) of 53 acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients who had failed to achieve complete remission (CR) after first-line standard-dose remission-induction therapy. RESULTS During the period January 2005-December 2009, 53 with acute myeloid leukemia received two cycles of the 3+7 protocol as a first-line standard-dose remission-induction therapy (ARA-C, days 1-7 and daunorubicin, days 1-3). The HiDAC (5 patients), MiDAC (7 patients), and FLAG-IDA protocols (3 patients) were given as salvage therapy. None of these patients achieved CR. There were 27 (51%) males and 26 (49%) females (median age, 55 years, range 28-76). The median white blood cell count was 53 (range 0.9 -350)×10(9)/L, platelets 44 (range 3-856×10(9)/l) and bone marrow blasts 67%. HCT-IC comorbidity scores were 3 in two (3.8%) patients, 2 in 11 (20.8%), 1 in 12 (22.6%) and 0 in 16 (30.2%) patients. Median OS was 3.9 months (range 1 -20 months). The hepatomegaly, white blood cell count, ECOG PS, serum level of lactate dehydrogenase, dysplastic changes, coexpression of CD64, CD15, CD11b, comorbidities and disease cytogenetics influenced survival. CONCLUSION This single-center study evaluated the significance of pretreatment factors, and found that patient age, comorbidities, ECOG performance status, leukocytosis, hepatomegaly, LDH, and the disease cytogenetics were factors which influenced the outcomes of primary resistant patients with acute myeloid leukemia. An understanding of these factors may help to predict OS in cases where CR has not been achieved and may help when making further treatment decisions.