BL - Acute Leukemias Flashcards

1
Q

Demographics & prognosis of affected patients: AML vs ALL

A

AML: typically a disease of adults. Average age at diagnosis: 65. Heterogeneous prognosis, approximate remission rate of 60%.
ALL: 75% of cases in children < 6 years old. Good prognosis in children, worse prognosis in adults.

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2
Q

Risk factors for acute leukemias

A

Previous chemotherapy (DNA damaging/alkylating agents, topoisomerase inhibitors), tobacco smoke, ionizing radiation, benzene exposure, genetic syndromes (Down syndrome, Bloom syndrome, Fanconi anemia, AT).

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3
Q

B-ALL vs T-ALL

A

Compared to B-ALL, T-ALL…
occurs more frequently in adolescents, young adults (B-ALL is the typical ALL of childhood). More frequently presents with mediastinal mass. More likely to have markedly elevated WBC count. Favors males over females. T-ALL has worse prognosis than B-ALL.

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4
Q

3 cytogenetic abnormalities in B-ALL

A

1) B-ALL with t(9;22); BCR-ABL1. 25% of cases of adult ALL but only 2% of childhood cases. Worst prognosis of any subtype of ALL.
2) B-ALL with translocations of 11q23; MLL. Frequently seen in neonates and young infants. Poor prognosis.
3) B-ALL with t(12;21); ETV6-RUNX1. 25% of cases of childhood B-ALL. Very favorable prognosis.

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5
Q

2 findings that would allow diagnosis of AML

A

1) >20% myeloblasts in marrow (“packed marrow”) and/or peripheral blood
2) Presence of certain recurrent cytogenetic abnormalities (translocations)

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6
Q

Auer rods

A

Present in myeloblasts, help to differentiate myeloblasts from other types of blasts. Present in some cases of AML.

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7
Q

Markers to know in AML

A

Generic markers of immaturity: CD34

Common myeloid markers: CD117 (C-Kit), Myeloperoxidase

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8
Q

Markers to know in ALL

A

Generic markers of immaturity: CD34
Common lymphoblast marker: TdT
Markers of B-cell lineage: CD19, CD22
Markers of T-cell lineage: CD3, CD7

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9
Q

5 recurrent cytogenetic abnormalities in AML

A

1) AML with t(8;21); RUNX1-RUNX1T1 – younger patients, good prognosis
2) AML with inv(16) or t(16;16) – younger patients, good prognosis
3) AML with t(15;17); PML-RARA (aka APL) – good prognosis (treat with all-trans retinoic acid and arsenic salts instead of chemotherapies)
4) AML with t(1;22); RBM15-MKL1 – infants with Downs, good prognosis. Shows megakaryoblastic differentiation.
5) AML with abnormalities of 11q23; MLL – poor prognosis

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10
Q

Therapy-related AML (T-AML)

A

1) from alkylating agents or radiation: 2-8 year latency period. Complex karyotype with whole or partial deletions of 5 and 7. Usually progresses through MDS stage.
2) from topoisomerase inhibitors: 1-2 year latency period. Rearrangement of 11q23 (MLL). Does not usually progress through MDS stage.

**Both have very bad prognosis! Account for 10-20% of cases of AML.

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11
Q

2 reasons it’s important to recognize APL subtype at initial diagnosis

A

1) Patients can be treated with all-trans retinoic acid and arsenic salts instead of chemotherapies (which can be dangerous/fatal)
2) APL often presents with disseminated intravascular coagulation, which is a medical emergency

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12
Q

3 molecular markers used in AML, NOS

A
  • 1) FLT3 internal tandem duplication (ITD) – poor prognosis
    2) Nucleophosmin-1 (NPM1) mutation – if FLT3 ITD negative, good prognosis.
    3) CEBPA mutation – if FLT3 ITD negative, good prognosis.
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13
Q

Leukemic stem cell

A

Has the potential for self-renewal; basically provides an inexhaustible source of leukemic cells in an AML patient – these replace the normal bone marrow.

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14
Q

S/S of patients with acute leukemias

A

S/S due to decreased numbers of normal cells due to marrow infiltration by leukemic cells. Symptoms: fatigue, malaise, dyspnea, easy bruisability, weight loss, bone pain/abdominal pain, neurologic symptoms. Signs: anemia, pallor, thrombocytopenia, hemorrhage, ecchymoses, petechiae, fundal hemorrhage, fever & infection, adenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly, gum or skin infiltration, renal enlargement/insufficiency, cranial neuropathy
More rare S/S: high white blood cell counts causing hyperviscosity or thrombotic problems.

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15
Q

Markers of B-cell lineage

A

CD19, CD22

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16
Q

Markers of T-cell lineage

A

CD3, CD7

17
Q

Myeloid markers

A

CD117 (C-Kit), myeloperoxidase

18
Q

5 factors influencing prognosis in ALL

A

Age (school age fare better), B-lymphoblastic vs. T-lymphoblastic (B-ALL better prognosis), WBC count (lower better), diploid number (hyper better than hypo), response time to treatment (faster better), residual disease (less better)