Lecture 47 - Clinical Aspects of Leukemia Flashcards

1
Q

Myeloid vs Lymhpoid

A

Myeloid - Megkaryocytes, Eryhtrocytes, Basophils, Neutrophils, Eosinophils

Lymphoid: B and T Lymphocytes

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2
Q

Acute vs Chronic

A

Acute — DNA damage leads to a maturation arrest;
Marrow is full of cells, but cytokines may be produced that lead to suppression of hematopeosis
Findings – Elevated immature WBCs + Hematopeoietic failure (anemia, thrombocytopenia, neutropenia)
patients become acutely ill
Medical Emergency

Chronic – No maturation arrest;
Elevated mature granulocytes;
Not acutely ill; not a medical emergency
Usually found incidentally in older patients

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3
Q

6 Acute Leukemia Emergencies

A
Hyperluekocytosis: WBC thrombi 
Infection 
Bleeding (thrombocytopenia) 
DIC
Hyperuricemia --  Can lead to renal failure/electrlyte disturbance 

Tumor Lysis

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4
Q

Treatment of:
Hyperleukocytosis
Infection

A

Hyperleukocytosis : Leukophoresis (mechanically draw out the WBCs), Hydroxyurea (cytostatic)

INfection: ABx

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5
Q

Treamtment of:
DIC,
BLeeding

A

Bleeding – Platelets

DIC – Cryopreceipiate (replace fibrinogen + coags); platelets

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6
Q

Treatment of Hyperuricemia, Tumor Lysis

A

Hyperuricemia: □ Treatment: Allopurinol (prevent uric acid formation), rasburicase (break down uric acid)

Tumor Lysis – hemodialysis, electrolytes

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7
Q

Leukemia Treatment Outcomes:

A

Complete remission – normal blood counts, normal morphology

Cytogenic Remission – Normal Blood counts, morphologiy and cytogenetics

Molecular remission – normal Blood counts, morphologiy and cytogenetics + negative molecular findings

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8
Q

Hematopeoitic Stem Cell Transplant

  • how is it done?
  • what are the different types of donors?
  • what is the two fold effect?
A

What is it: Eradicating (myeloablation) the patient’s bone marrow and replacing it with healthy donor

Donors:
Donors should be Allogeneic – usually HLA identical relatives, but can be unrelated donors

Autologous Transplant – usually for Lymphoma

Syngeneic – Identical twin donates; But this has higher relapse rate as don’t have Graft vs Leukemia response

Two fold effect;

1) Eradicating unhealthy; and replacing with non diseased marrow
2) Graft Vs Luekemia — the new healthy cells will perceive the old as foreign and mount an immune response

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9
Q

Acute Myeloid Leukemia:

  • what is it?
  • who gets it?
A

Accumulation of immature myeloid cells in the bone marrow and blood
Failure of normal hematopoiesis

Represents 80% of adult acute leukemia;

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10
Q
  • what are some causes of AML?

what are the effects on outcome

A

Causes: Biologically, Cytogenetically and Molecularly Diverse
1) t(8;21) — good outcomes; can be curative with chemo

2) Complex karotype – poorer prognosis

3) FLT3 Internal Tandem Duplication -
FLT3 – Growth Factor Receptor expressed on immature blasts in most AML cases
1/3 have Internal Tandem Duplication
Constituitive signaling of the Growth Factor Receptor
Therefore they respond to chemo, but it grows right back
High relapse rate

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11
Q

Treatment of AMLs

A

Goal: Induce Remission
Chemotherapy +/- targeted Therapy

			□ Once in Remission -- further treatment to prevent relapse to reduce the burden of luekemia cells and eradicte residual disease  More Chemo -- (consolidate, intensify vs transplant)
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12
Q

what is Acute Promyelocytic Leukemia?

  • cause
  • unique morphology
  • Presentation
  • treamtnet
A

(M3 Subtype of AML)
t(15;17) = PML/RAR
Large, Bi-lobed nuclei, Granules, Auer Rods
Present with DIC
Treatment: All-trans-retinoic Acid + Arsenic Trioxide

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13
Q

• Chronic Myelogenous Leukemia
- what is it?

  • cuase
    Treamtnet
    demonstration of Outcomes
A

High WBC, but lots of mature cells; may accelerate and transform to AML, ALL

cause: Biologically and Cytogenically Uniform –
Philadeplphia Chromosome: t(9;22) — BCR-ABL gene = fusion protien with tyrosine kinase activity

Treatment: Gleevec (Imatinib Mesylate) — BCRABL Inhibitor

Outcomes: need to demonstrate cytogenic and molecular remission

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14
Q

• Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia

  • what is it?
  • who gets it ?
  • Treamtnet?
A

Immature lymphoid cells – either B or T
Peripheral blood with lots of lymphoblasts

Represents 80% of acute leukemia in children

Treatment: Induce Remission (chemotherpay +/- imatinib as up to 1/3 of ALLs can be BCR/ABLs)
○ Delay and Prevent relapse

Maintenance Chemotherapy — ALL only
§ 6 mercaptopurine

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15
Q

Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia

  • what is it?
  • who gets it?
  • Treatments
A
  • What: neoplasm Mature Lymphocytes; very indolent; slow progression
    • Who: Older Patients
    • Treatments:
    ○ FCR – Combination chemotherapy + antibody
    ○ BR –
    ○ Newer:
    § Ibrutinib – bruton’s tyrosine kinase
    § Idelalisib
    ○ Transplant
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16
Q

• Non Leukemias: Myelodysplastic Syndromes

  • what is it?
  • risk stratification and associated treatments
A

What is it: Clonal Bone marrow disorder- – Ineffective hematopoiesis —
abnormal morphology of all lineages; cytopenias

Risk based on: Number of cytopenias, blast %, cytogenetics

Low risk: 
 If primarily Anemia -- 5q deletion 
		Use lenalidomide 
f Low Erythropoeisis ---
		Use EPO 
If Neutropenia/thrombocytopenia -- -
               Demethylating agents 

Higher risk: Poorer Prognosis
- Thnk Transplant in good candidate
Demethylating agents

17
Q

How do demethylating agents treat myelodysplastic syndromes?

A

§ Demethylation Cytosine Analogs – -inhbition of Methylation
□ Theory — too much methylation is causing maturation arrest
□ Inhibition of maturation lead to normal blood counts

18
Q
• Non Leukemias: 	Myeloproliferative Disorders 
- 
what are the different types?
what are there characteristic findings? 
Treatment for each
A

Polycytehemia Vera – Too many red cells;
Treatment: Get blood count under control:
(Phlebotomy, hydroxyurea, interferone, Jak2 Inhibitor)

Essential Thrombocythemia – too many platelets
Treatment: Get blood count under control
(hydroxyurea, intereferon)

Myelofibrosis – scarring of the bone marrow (most severe)
Treamtnet: Jak2 Inhibitors

19
Q

What is the name of the Jak2 Inhibitor?

A

Ruxolitinib