Leucemia Mieloide Crónica

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Chronic Myeloid Leukemia
By Jorge E. Cortes, MD1, Richard T. Silver, MD2, Hagop Kantarjian, MD1 |10 de noviembre de 2011
1 Department of Leukemia, M. D. Anderson Cancer Center2 Department of Medicine, Weill Cornell Medical College

Chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) is a clonal myeloproliferative disorder resulting from the neoplastic transformation of the primitive hematopoietic stem cell. Thedisease is monoclonal in origin, affecting myeloid, monocytic, erythroid, megakaryocytic, B-cell, and, sometimes, T-cell lineages. Bone marrow stromal cells are not involved.
CML accounts for 15% of all leukemias in adults. Approximately 5,150 new cases of CML will be diagnosed in 2011, with an estimated 270 deaths. The incidence is 1.1 per 100,000 population. With imatinib(Drug information onimatinib) (Gleevec) therapy, the annual mortality has been reduced significantly (less than 2% to 3% per year, and less after the first 2 to 3 years).
EPIDEMIOLOGY
Gender
The male-to-female ratio is 1.1:1 to 1.4:1.
Age
According to SEER and MRC data, the median age of patients with CML is 66 years. However, most patients who are admitted to medical therapy studies are 50 to 60 years old(median: approximately 53 years). Patients in bone marrow transplantation (BMT) studies are even younger (median age: approximately 40 years). Age differences must be considered in all studies, because this variable may affect results.
Etiology and risk factors
The cause of CML is unclear. Some associations with genetic and environmental factors have been reported, but, in most cases, no causativefactors can be identified.
Genetic factors
There is little evidence linking genetic factors to CML. Offspring of parents with CML do not have a higher incidence of CML than does the general population.
Environmental factors
Nuclear and radiation exposures, including therapeutic radiation, have been associated with the development of CML. Exposure to chemicals has not been consistentlyassociated with greater risk.
Signs and symptoms
CML usually runs a biphasic or triphasic course. This process includes an initial chronic phase and a terminal blastic phase, which is preceded by an accelerated phase in 60% to 80% of patients.

Chronic phase
If untreated or treated with drugs that do not significantly affect the Philadelphia-chromosome cells in the marrow, chronic-phase CML isassociated with a median survival of 4 to 5.0 years. During the chronic phase, CML is asymptomatic in 25% to 60% of all cases; in such instances, the disease is discovered on a routine blood examination.
In symptomatic patients, the most common presenting signs and symptoms are fatigue, left upper quadrant pain or mass, weight loss, and palpable splenomegaly in 30% to 70% of patients. The liveris enlarged in 10% to 20% of cases. Occasionally, patients with very high white blood cell (WBC) counts may have manifestations of hyperviscosity, including priapism, tinnitus, stupor, visual changes from retinal hemorrhage, and cerebrovascular accidents.
Patients in chronic-phase CML do not have an increased risk for infection
Accelerated phase
This is an ill-defined transitional phase. Thecriteria used in all the studies with interferon and tyrosine kinase inhibitors include the presence of any one of the following factors: blasts > 15%, blasts plus promyelocytes > 30%, basophils > 20%, platelets < 100 × 109/L unrelated to therapy or cytogenetic clonal evolution. Other classifications include more subjective criteria (Table 1) and have not been clinically validated. Theclassification used may affect the expected outcome for a group of patients defined as accelerated phase. With imatinib therapy, the estimated 4-year survival rate exceeds 50%. The accelerated phase is more frequently symptomatic, including the development of fever, night sweats, weight loss, and progressive splenomegaly.
Blastic phase
The blastic phase morphologically resembles acute leukemia. Its...
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