Acute Lymphoblastic Leukaemia Flashcards

1
Q

What is acute lymphoblastic leukaemia?

A

Acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) is the most common malignancy affecting children and accounts for 80% of childhood leukaemias. Malignant disorder of the lymphoid progenitor cells. Note there is a second peak at over 50 years.

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2
Q

What types of acute lymphoblastic leukaemia are there?

A

ALL is classified into B or T lymphoblastic leukaemia.
Common ALL (75%), CD10 present, pre-B phenotype
T-cell ALL (20%)
B-cell ALL (5%)

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3
Q

What are the risk factors for acute lymphoblastic leukaemia?

A

White > Black
Boys are affected slightly more commonly than girls
The peak incidence is at around 2-5 years of age
Genetic associations included Trisomy 21

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4
Q

How does acute lymphoblastic leukaemia present?

A

Pancytopenia as a result of bone marrow failure:
• Anaemia: lethargy and pallor (normochromic and normocytic)
• Neutropaenia: frequent or severe infections
• Thrombocytopenia: easy bruising, petechiae
Painless lumps in neck, axilla or groin

Other features
Bone pain (secondary to bone marrow infiltration)
Splenomegaly
Hepatomegaly
Fever is present in up to 50% of new cases (representing infection or constitutional symptom)
CNS and Testicular infiltration is common and will give the corresponding features

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5
Q

What factors would suggest a poor prognosis in ALL?

A
Age < 2 years or > 10 years
WBC > 20 x 109/l at diagnosis
T or B cell surface markers
Non-Caucasian
Male sex
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6
Q

How should suspected acute lymphoblastic leukaemia be investigated?

A

Bone marrow biopsy
CSF – pleocytosis, raised protein and reduced glucose
FBC
Cytogenetic analysis usually shows mutations
CXR – may be mediastinal mass

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7
Q

How is acute lymphoblastic leukaemia managed?

A

Induction therapy – 3 drug induction over 4 weeks
Consolidation phase – Cranial irradiation if known CNS involvement and further chemotherapy
Maintenance phase – 2.5 years of daily/weekly/3monthly drugs

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