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- Diagnosis & Treatment
- Cancer Types
- Chronic Myeloid Leukemia (CML)
Leukemia is an umbrella term for cancers of the blood and the blood-forming tissues of the body. Chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) is a slow-growing form of the disease that primarily impacts people over age 55.
Leukemia is an umbrella term for cancers of the blood and the blood-forming tissues of the body. Chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) is a slow-growing form of the disease that primarily impacts people over age 55.
Like all types of leukemia, CML starts with problems in the creation of blood cells.
Blood cell creation
The body produces millions of blood cells each day. Most develop in the bone marrow, the spongy interior of bones that contains immature stem cells.?
In a healthy person, these immature stem cells first become either lymphoid stem cells or myeloid stem cells.
Lymphoid stem cells develop into white blood cells, which are immune system cells. They start by becoming immature white blood cells known as lymphoblasts, then mature into lymphocytes. The two types of lymphocytes that are usually involved in leukemia are B cells and T cells. B cells produce the antibodies responsible for attacking bacteria and viruses that invade the body. T cells help alert other immune cells to the presence of infection or fight infection directly.
Myeloid stem cells also develop into white blood cells. The myeloid stem cells first become immature white blood cells known as myeloblasts. They then mature into monocytes and granulocytes, including neutrophils, all of which fight disease. Other myeloid stem cells develop into red blood cells, which carry oxygen throughout the body; and platelets, which help the blood clot.
Leukemia occurs when the DNA (the genetic instructions that control cell activity) of a bone marrow stem cell mutates at some point in its development. The cell becomes cancerous, begins multiplying rapidly and crowds out healthy cells in the blood and bone marrow. These diseased cells can also gather in specific parts of the body, including the liver, lymph nodes, spleen and skin.
How is leukemia classified?
While there are many types of leukemia, they are typically classified by the type of stem cell that has turned cancerous, either lymphoid or myeloid.
Many types are also classified as either chronic or acute. Acute leukemia?impacts immature cells, preventing them from developing and carrying out their function. These cells tend to multiply rapidly, making acute leukemia more aggressive.?
Chronic leukemia?involves mature or partially mature cells. These cells multiply more slowly and are less aggressive, making chronic leukemia less aggressive than acute leukemia.
About CML
CML develops from myeloid stem cells, which produce red blood cells, platelets and several white blood cell types that are together called granulocytes.
In patients with CML, too many myeloid cells become granulocytes. These cancerous cells are poor at fighting disease. They also crowd out healthy blood cells, which can make CML patients weak and prone to infection.
CML primarily impacts older patients, with about half of all cases occurring in people age 65 and older. It is very rare in pediatric patients.
Nearly all CML patients have a particular chromosome abnormality known as the Philadelphia chromosome.
Chromosomes are sections of DNA found in every cell; each person¡¯s DNA contains his or her unique genetic instructions. The Philadelphia chromosome forms when pieces of chromosomes 9 and 22 swap places in a blood cell.
As a result, the now-cancerous cell produces a protein (in the tyrosine kinase family of proteins) that encourages it to multiple rapidly. Leukemias with the Philadelphia chromosome can be treated with targeted therapies called tyrosine kinase inhibitors. These drugs interfere with the tyrosine kinase protein and therefore the multiplication of cancerous white blood cells.
Over the past few decades, targeted therapy drugs that stop tyrosine kinase from working have been introduced. These drugs, known as tyrosine kinase inhibitors, result in a much better outlook and longer survival times for CML patients. The disease¡¯s five-year survival rate is now more than 70%.
CML risk factors
A risk factor is anything that increases the chance of developing a disease. Knowing a disease¡¯s risk factors can be an important step towards catching it early. It's important to note that not everyone with risk factors will develop the disease.
Risk factors for CML include:
- Age: A majority of CML cases are in people age 65 or older.
- Sex: Men are more likely to get CML than women.
- Radiation exposure: After World War II, people in Japan who were exposed to radiation from nuclear bombs were more likely to develop CML. Radiation therapy from cancer treatment is not a risk factor for CML.
Learn more about chronic myeloid leukemia:
- Chronic myeloid leukemia symptoms
- Chronic myeloid leukemia diagnosis
- Chronic myeloid leukemia treatment
Learn more about clinical trials for chronic myeloid leukemia.
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Common leukemia symptoms: What to look for
Some cancer symptoms are fairly straightforward. With breast cancer, it¡¯s often a lump. With skin cancer, it may be a mole that changes shape or a strange-looking sore that won¡¯t heal.
But because blood cancers like leukemia affect the entire body, their symptoms can often be mistaken for signs of other conditions. So, it¡¯s usually a number of symptoms taken together that lead to a formal leukemia diagnosis.
Common leukemia symptoms
Leukemia symptoms can vary, based on whether the leukemia is lymphocytic or myeloid, and whether the disease is considered ¡°chronic¡± (slow-growing) or ¡°acute¡± (sudden-onset).
However, some symptoms are common to most types of leukemia:
- Abnormal blood counts ¨C?could be a very high white cell count or a very low platelet count; this has to do with the functioning of your immune system/propensity for infections
- Bleeding/bruising ¨C?spontaneous bleeding either internally or externally (often from the nose or gums); bruising very easily
- Fatigue ¨C sometimes a low-level fatigue that¡¯s not relieved by sleep or rest; other times, a sudden-onset exhaustion; often cannot be distinguished from other causes of fatigue
- Fever ¨C may be constant low-level fevers or a sudden spike in temperature
- Infections ¨C?could be a sequence of infections or a single infection that¡¯s resistant to treatment
- Shortness of breath ¨C often due to low platelet count, which reduces the blood¡¯s oxygen-carrying capacity
- Breakdown of the skin ¨C?lesions/rashes that do not resolve, bleeding/bruising of the skin, infections
Acute leukemia symptoms can often appear suddenly
With acute leukemia, symptoms tend to develop very quickly. You may suddenly spike a fever that won¡¯t go away, develop an infection for no apparent reason, or start bleeding spontaneously from your nose or gums and not be able to stop it. You may also just wake up feeling wiped out one morning, or find yourself so exhausted that it¡¯s hard to function.
This is the way we tend to see most of our acute leukemia patients. Often, they show up at the hospital extremely ill and need to start treatment right away.
Sometimes, we¡¯re able to spot acute leukemia before it gets to that point, though, because the people who develop it are already patients at MD Anderson and under close observation. Patients who¡¯ve been treated with chemotherapy or high doses of radiation therapy for previous cancers, for instance, can sometimes develop secondary blood cancers as a result: acute myeloid leukemia or myelodysplastic syndrome being the most common.
So, if a blood test shows that a breast cancer survivor¡¯s platelets are low during a routine check-up, for example, then we know to start looking for that.
Chronic leukemia symptoms are more subtle
Chronic leukemia symptoms can also involve infections, bleeding and fatigue. But they tend to develop more slowly than with acute leukemia cases, so they¡¯re not as noticeable. Symptoms are often attributed to other things, too, such as stress, allergies or a virus.
Sometimes, patients with chronic leukemia finally seek a doctor¡¯s help because they can¡¯t shake an infection, they¡¯re feeling short of breath, or their low-level fatigue just won¡¯t go away. But these patients are also identified through routine bloodwork that¡¯s done for other reasons. You might discover you have leukemia at an annual physical, for instance, or because you need clearance for an upcoming orthopedic surgery or are simply changing insurance providers.
Again, the key is to listen to your body. Get to know what is normal and abnormal for you. And if something isn¡¯t quite right, get it checked out. It¡¯s important to listen to the clues your body may be giving you.
Why I¡¯m optimistic about leukemia treatment advances
Regardless of which type of leukemia you might have, there is much cause for hope.
One reason is that chronic leukemia is being caught more frequently now, both because doctors see more cases of it and know what to look for, and because cancer survivors are living longer than ever after their initial diagnoses and treatment. That means patients who develop leukemia as a result of receiving chemotherapy or radiation therapy for other cancers can be identified earlier, when the disease is often easier to treat.
Another encouraging development is that the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved several drugs in the past five years, many of which are oral therapies targeting various genetic mutations in patients with acute myeloid leukemia.
These breakthroughs are the direct result of scientific advances made based on cutting-edge research. Many?¨C if not all?¨C of these drugs were developed through clinical trials led by doctors here at MD Anderson.
And a lot of leukemia patients being prescribed these medications today didn¡¯t even have an oral option available until just a few years ago. Now, these treatments can be administered at home. And that is definite progress.
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Understanding the types of leukemia
How many types of leukemia are there? What makes each one unique, and are they treated any differently??
We went to leukemia specialist for answers to these questions and more. Here¡¯s what he shared.?
How many different types of leukemia are there?
Quite a few. Leukemia is not just a single disease. It¡¯s actually a diverse group of blood-based cancers that originate in the bone marrow.??
All leukemias fall into one of two major categories: acute or chronic.??
- Acute leukemias are blood cancers that generally appear suddenly or over a very short period of time. The classic scenario is someone who was just fine at their annual physical, but is diagnosed with leukemia a few months later.?
- Chronic leukemias generally develop much more slowly, so they¡¯re usually found in one of two ways: either a young patient is being evaluated for something else, or an older patient is having problems with recurrent infections, bleeding or abnormal lab work.??
Examples of younger patients¡¯ situations might include an athlete getting lab work done before having knee surgery, or a person having blood tests done in order to obtain a new life insurance policy. Young patients with chronic leukemia often have no symptoms, so they tend to be diagnosed unexpectedly.?
Is leukemia broken down any further, beyond those two categories?
Yes. They¡¯re further subtyped by the kind of white blood cell involved: either myeloid or lymphocyctic. The four main types of leukemia are:?
- Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is most commonly diagnosed among people in their 60s and 70s. It only affects about 21,000 people a year, but it¡¯s among the most aggressive of all cancers. Still, there is much cause for hope. Because we can now subdivide these cancers in a way that we previously couldn¡¯t, using molecular markers, protein receptors and other attributes. This allows us to treat them using personalized targeted therapy. And there¡¯s been a ton of progress in this area over the last five years or so, with much of it led by our own along with ., and These cancers may also be treated with chemotherapy, stem cell transplants or immunotherapy. We have a large number of clinical trials available as well.
- Acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL) is most common among children, though adults can develop it, too. It¡¯s a fairly rare cancer, affecting fewer than 10,000 people a year. At MD Anderson, we¡¯ve developed highly curable regimens for this disease, under the guidance of and Some patients don¡¯t even need a stem cell transplant to get long-term results. The type of blood cell involved (T-cell or B-cell) determines the treatment, which could be a combination of chemotherapy, immunotherapy, or targeted therapy.??
- Chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) is extremely rare, with only several thousand diagnoses each year. All patients with CML will have the Philadelphia chromosome translocation, making their leukemia ¡°Philadelphia-positive.¡± Historically, this has been a very deadly disease, with median survival rates of only 5 to 7 years after diagnosis. But now, with tyrosine kinase inhibitors like imatinib, dasatinib, nilotinib, ponatinib, and bosutinib, we¡¯re seeing patients going into complete molecular remission over time. This is one area in which oral targeted therapy has really revolutionized the lives of many leukemia patients.?
- Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) is one of the most common leukemias among adults. Previously, CLL patients had to be treated with intravenous chemotherapies. Today, oral targeted therapy agents, including BTK inhibitors and venetoclax, have been showing a lot of promise. And the vast majority of patients with this disease can now take oral chemotherapy as a part of their treatment regimens, instead of just IV-based drugs. . and . have been pioneering this combination-therapy approach here.??
What is Philadelphia-positive leukemia?
Philadelphia-positive leukemia is characterized by the translocation of chromosomes 9 and 22. This happens when a part of chromosome 9 breaks off and attaches itself to chromosome 22, which results in the generation of abnormal cells.
Philadelphia-positive was one of the first types of leukemia to prove amenable to oral chemotherapy, and the leukemia team here at MD Anderson was the first to combine that approach with immunotherapy, which has led to some very high cure rates.?Interestingly, the Philadelphia chromosome occurs in 100% of CML cases, but it¡¯s also present to a lesser extent in AML and ALL.?
What are the other types of leukemia that people should know about?
- Myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS): This used to be called ¡°pre-leukemia,¡± because it could sometimes lead to leukemia. But today, doctors understand it as a unique blood cancer in and of itself. It happens when the bone marrow produces too many immature blood cells, causing a shortage of platelets, a condition known as thrombocytopenia. MDS can be life-threatening and requires its own separate approach. is leading our investigation in this field.
- Myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPN): This used to be called myeloproliferative disorder (MPD), but various discoveries led to a better understanding of it as a family of blood cancers in and of itself, so it was renamed. MPN is usually treated with oral chemotherapy, but our is the worldwide leader in this field, and several of his clinical trials are exploring combination treatments.?
- Aplastic anemia: This is a stem cell disorder caused by bone marrow failure. It is typically treated with a combination of chemo and immunotherapy. Our leader in this area, Dr. Kadia, has been conducting clinical trials that address the unique aspects of this disease.
- Blastic plasmacytoid dendritic cell neoplasm (BPDCN): This was originally thought to be a type of lymphoma, but now it¡¯s considered its own subtype of leukemia/dendritic cell cancer. BPDCN results from an overexpression of the CD123 protein. It usually appears as a skin disorder, which is quite uncommon, but our group developed the first ¡ª and so far, only ¡ª drug to be approved by the Food and Drug Administration?(FDA) to treat it: tagraxofusp-erzs.
- Hairy cell leukemia: This is a rare form of chronic leukemia that only affects about 1,000 people a year. We¡¯ve had a lot of success in treating it with a combination of rituximab and cladribine that was pioneered here under Dr. Ravandi.
- Chronic Myelomonocytic Leukemia (CMML): This has now been recognized as it is own subtype in the MDS/MPN area, and is an emerging field of scientific breakthroughs through clinical trials, led here by
What¡¯s the one thing you want people to know about leukemia treatment right now?
Some of these leukemia types are either rare or ultra-rare, but each one has developed its own field of study due to various discoveries. Many patients can live for decades now with some of these subtypes, thanks to our personalized approach to treatment. And our common goal among all of these diseases is to maximize patients¡¯ response to treatment while also improving their quality of life.?
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Why choose MD Anderson for your leukemia treatment?
Choosing the right cancer center may be the most important decision you can make as a leukemia patient. At MD Anderson¡¯s Leukemia Center and Stem Cell Transplantation and Cellular Therapy Center, you¡¯ll get treatment from one of nation¡¯s the largest, most experienced leukemia teams at a top-ranked cancer center.
Using a comprehensive team approach, we work together to give you customized care that includes the most advanced diagnostic methods and treatments. These include clinical trials of new drugs and drug combinations. We offer clinical trials for all situations ¨C from patients receiving their first treatment, to patients who have exhausted all standard treatment options.
As a leading center for leukemia care, we offer access to innovative new therapies and clinical trials that may help increase your chances for successful treatment. Many of these were developed by our own researchers.
Treatment designed specifically for you
Successful leukemia treatment begins with?accurate?and precise diagnosis. Many of our leukemia patients have been misdiagnosed before they come to?MD Anderson. We have the expertise and experience gained from being one of the most active programs in the world, and our specialized pathologists are highly skilled in diagnosing leukemia.
Our approach to leukemia is customized especially for you. We carefully evaluate your risk factors and the specific characteristics of your leukemia to determine if immediate treatment is necessary. If it is, we recommend the most effective therapies while aiming to limit treatment side effects.
Whether you are treated as an inpatient or outpatient, our comprehensive program offers all the services needed to care for leukemia and respond to its impact on your?body. We aim to accomplish as much care as possible on an outpatient basis. If hospitalization is needed, our expert staff is specially trained to care for patients at every phase of the treatment journey.
MD Anderson is my hope. I know that without it, I wouldn¡¯t be alive today.
Kenneth Woo
Survivor
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