Cancer 14: Cancer as a disease - Leukaemia Flashcards
What is leukaemia?
- Leukaemia is cancer of the blood. It is a disease of the bone marrow. Not all patients have abnormal cells in the blood
- 5% of all cancers are cancers of the blood
In the UK approximately 60 people every day are diagnosed with a cancer of the blood. Blood cancers are the most common cancers in men and women aged 15‒24
They are the main cause of cancer death in people aged 1‒34 years
What causes leukaemia?
- Series of mutations in a single lymphoid or myeloid stem cell
These mutations lead the progeny of that cell to show abnormalities in proliferation, differentiation or cell survival leading to steady expansion of the leukaemic clone.
Random error - chance events - that occur through life.
Where can mutations occur along the development of white cells?
Acute myeloid leukaemia - muation in myeloid stem cell
Ect.
See slide 14
You get an emergence of a leukaemic clone
What is different about leukaemia?
Leukaemia is different from other cancers as most cancers exist as a solid tumour.
However, it is uncommon for patients with leukaemia to have tumours
More often they have leukaemic cells replacing normal bone marrow cells and circulating freely in the blood stream
Leukaemia is different from other cancer because haemopoietic and lymphoid cells behave differently from other body cells.
Normal haemopoietic stem cells can circulate in the blood and both the stem cells and the cells derived from them can enter tissues
Normal lymphoid stem cells recirculate between tissues and blood
The concepts of invasion and metastasis cannot be applied to cells that normally travel around the body and enter tissues
We have to have other ways of distinguishing a ‘benign’ condition from a ‘malignant’ condition and haematologists usually use different words for these concepts
Describe leukaemias that behave in a benign manner
Chronic—that means the disease goes on for a long time
Describe leukaemias that behave in malignant manner
acute—that means that, if not treated, the disease is very aggressive and the patient dies quite rapidly
How is leukaemia classified?
It follows from what has been said that leukaemia can be acute or chronic
Depending on the cell of origin, it can also be lymphoid or myeloid
Lymphoid can be B or T lineage
Myeloid can be any combination of granulocytic, monocytic, erythroid or megakaryocytic
Acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL)
Acute myeloid leukaemia (AML)
Chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL)
Chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML)
Note: lymphoblastic
lymphocytic
What are the different types of mutation in leukamia?
Mutation in a known proto-oncogene
Creation of a novel gene, e.g. a chimaeric or fusion gene
Dysregulation of a gene when translocation brings it under the influence of the promoter or enhancer of another gene
Loss of function of a tumour-suppressor gene can also contribute to leukaemogenesis—this can result from deletion or mutation of the gene
If there is a tendency to increased chromosomal breaks, the likelihood of leukaemia is increased
In addition, if the cell cannot repair DNA normally, an error may persist whereas in a normal person the defect would be repaired
What inherited conditions predispose leukaemia?
Down’s syndrome
Chromosomal fragility syndromes
Defects in DNA repair
Inherited defects of tumour-suppressor genes
What are some identifiable causes of leukaemogenic mutations?
Irradiation
Anti-cancer drugs
Cigarette smoking
Chemicals—benzene
What is the difference between acute and chronic myeloid leukaemia?
In AML, cells continue to proliferate but they no longer mature so there is::
- A build up of the most immature cells — myeloblasts or ‘blast cells’—in the bone marrow with spread into the blood
- A failure of production of normal functioning end cells such as neutrophils, monocytes, erythrocytes, platelets (for 2 reasons)
- In AML, the responsible mutations usually affect transcription factors so that the transcription of multiple genes is affected
Often the product of an oncogene prevents the normal function of the protein encoded by its normal homologue
Cell behaviour is profoundly disturbed
In CML, the responsible mutations usually affect a gene encoding a protein in the signalling pathway between a cell surface receptor and the nucleus
The protein encoded may be either a membrane receptor or a cytoplasmic protein
- In CML, cell kinetics and function are not as seriously affected as in AML
- However, the cell becomes independent of external signals, there are alterations in the interaction with stroma and there is reduced apoptosis so that cells survive longer and the leukaemic clone expands progressively.
Whereas in AML there is a failure of production of end cells, in CML there is increased production of end cells
What are the differences between acute and chronic lymphoid leukaemias?
- Acute lymphoblastic leukaemia has an increase in very immature cells— lymphoblasts—with a failure of these to develop into mature T and B cells
- In chronic lymphoid leukaemias, the leukaemic cells are mature, although abnormal, T cells or B cells
How does leukaemia cause the disease characteristics?
Accumulation of abnormal cells leading to:
- Leucocytosis, bone pain (if leukaemia is acute), hepatomegaly, splenomegaly lymphadenopathy (if lymphoid), thymic enlargement (if T lymphoid), skin infiltration
Metabolic effects of leukaemic cell proliferation— hyperuricaemia and renal failure, weight loss, low grade fever, sweating
Crowding out of normal cells leading to
anaemia, neutropenia, thrombocytopenia
Loss of normal immune function as a result of loss of normal T cell and B cell function—a feature of chronic lymphoid leukaemia
What are the clinical features of acute lymphoblastic leukaemia?
Resulting from accumulation of abnormal cells:
- Bone pain
- Hepatomegaly
- Splenomegaly
- Lymphadenopathy
- Thymic enlargement
- Testicular enlargement
Resulting from crowding out of normal cells:
- Fatigue, lethargy, pallor, breathlessness (caused by anaemia)
- Fever and other features of infection (caused by neutropenia)
- Bruising, petechiae, bleeding (caused by thrombocytopenia)
What are the haematological features of acute lymphoblastic leukaemia?
- Leucocytosis with lymphoblasts in the blood
- Anaemia (normocytic, normochromic)
- Neutropenia
- Thrombocytopenia
- Replacement of normal bone marrow cells by lymphoblasts