Intro to Leukemias and Myelomas Flashcards
Leukemia definition
Malignancy of hematopoietic cells arising in the bone marrow
The bone marrow is almost entirely replaced
Can be acute or chronic
What is the difference between acute and chronic leukemia
Acute: all the cells are blasts
Chronic: the cells are more mature (might be some blasts, but a mix of other cells too)
When you see high WBCs, what is the first question you ask?
What is the WBC differential? # of blasts, neutrophils, and lymphocytes
Acute myeloid leukemia (what is it, what pop is it more common in, how is it subclassified)
A myeloid malignancy arising in the bone marrow
All malignant cells are blasts
More common in adults over children
Subclassified by the mutations present
Pathogenesis of acute leukemia
Begins with (usually idiopathic) mutations in a hematopoietic stem cell
Mutations lead to maturation arrest, immortality, and relentless cell division
Malignant blasts fill the marrow space and spill out into the peripheral blood
Leads to suppression of normal hematopoiesis, which causes cytopenias or pancytopenia
Pancytopenia means you have what 3 problems
Anemic
Neutropenic
Thrombocytopenic
If you see __ on a PBS, they definitely have AML
Auer rods
Red needle-like inclusion within the cytoplasm of some AML blasts
If someone with AML is pancytopenic, what kind of symptoms can we expect to see from
- Anemia
- Neutropenia
- Thrombocytopenia
- Fatigue, pallor, SOB on exertion, palpitations, dizziness
- Infections or fever
- Bleeding with cuts, gum/nosebleeds, bruising, petechiae
Clinical presentation of AML
Symptoms of pancytopenia Constitutional symptoms (fever, night sweats, weight loss) Some cases can trigger abnormal coagulation (DIC)
Diagnosis of AML
Requires a bone marrow aspirate and biopsy
Special tests on the blasts to subclassify (flow cytometry, genetic tests)
Is AML or ALL worse prognosis?
AML
Especially is worst the older the patient is or the more complex the genetic mutations are
Acute lymphoid leukemia
A lymphoid malignancy arising in the bone marrow
All the malignant cells are blasts
More common in children (the most common malignant in children)
Begins with transforming mutations in a hematopoietic stem cells, making it malignant and trapping it in the blast stage
The transformed cell is lymphoid
ALL diagnosis
Bone marrow aspirate and biopsy
Specialized tests (flow cytometry) can differentiate between B and T cell ALL
Genetic testing can identify specific mutations
ALL clinical presentation
Symptoms of pancytopenia
Constitutional symptoms
May have palpable lymph nodes
CNS involvement is common (headaches, numbness - from cells in the CSF)
Prognosis is good in children, not as good in adults
Chronic Myeloid Leukemia
Myeolid malignancy arising in the bone marrow
NOT all the malignant cells are blasts
Its a leukemia, and the most common myeloproliferative neoplasm
Malignant cells retain the capacity to mature past the blast cell stage
Chiefly a disease of adults
Basically every case has the Philadelphia chromosome (9;22)