Acute Myelocytic Leukemia Health Article

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Clinical staging, treatments, and prognosis

Unlike several other cancers, AML is not staged. However, a classification system is used to separate different forms of AML. One of the most important classification systems, devised by a team of physicians, is known as the French-American-British (FAB) Classification System.

The goal of AML treatment is to achieve a complete remission (CR). What is a complete remission? It is a measure that indicates that the patient's disease has gotten markedly better in several ways. In general, it might be said that CR is achieved once the body has regained its ability to produce blood cells normally. At this point, the number of blood cells of various types should return to normal ranges, while none of the immature cells called leukemic blast cells should be present in the blood or the marrow.

Chemotherapy is the use of drugs to kill cancer cells. It is usually the treatment of choice and is used to relieve symptoms and achieve long-term remission of the disease. Generally, combination chemotherapy, in which multiple drugs are used, is more efficient than using a single drug for the treatment. Some drugs may be administered intravenously through a vein in the arm; others may be given by mouth in the form of pills. If the cancer cells have invaded the brain, then chemotherapeutic drugs may be put into the fluid that surrounds the brain and spinal cord. This is known as intrathecal chemotherapy. Chemotherapy should start soon after diagnosis.

Patients who are anemic or who have low platelet counts should receive transfusions. These transfusions should be sufficient to restore counts of various components of the blood to adequate levels.

There are two phases of treatment for leukemia. The first phase is called induction therapy. During this phase, the main aim of treatment is to reduce the number of leukemic cells as much as possible and induce a remission in the patient. A variety of chemotherapy agents may be used during the induction therapy portion of AML treatment. The chemotherapy agent Ara-C (cytarabine) is in 2001 often used in combination with either daunorubicin or idarubicin (Idamycin). Other doctors add etoposide to this combination of chemotherapy agents. For older patients, Ara-C and mitoxantrone may be used. Some patients benefit from receiving high doses of chemotherapy drugs. As of 2001, patients who do not achieve CR, as well as those who achieve CR but then relapse, may be given mitoxantrone plus etoposide.

The second phase of treatment is initiated once CR is achieved. This is called post-remission or consolidation therapy. The goal of therapy now becomes killing any remaining cells and maintaining the remission for as long as possible. There are various ways of attempting to reach this goal. One involves additional chemotherapy. Another involves bone marrow transplantation (BMT), also called stem cell transplant (SCT). Transplantation therapy has been studied very thoroughly. It involves taking blood-making cells, whether from the patient or from another person, and infusing them into the patient following removal of the diseased marrow, with either high doses of chemotherapy or total body irradiation. These procedures are potentially very effective because of the remarkable ability of these cells to create a sustained replacement of the patient's blood cells. Other strategies may also be applied. Approaches used for patients younger than 60 years of age may differ from those used for patients of older ages.

Because leukemia cells can spread to all the organs via the blood stream and the lymph vessels, surgery is not considered an option for treating leukemias.

Children with AML also receive induction therapy. Often two or three medicines are used in conjunction with one another. After remission is achieved in a young patient, postremission therapy is started. The type of postremission therapy depends largely on the type of AML the patient has. It may involve additional chemotherapy or, alternatively, bone marrow transplantation. Chemotherapy to the central nervous system (CNS) is given to most children, since without it, roughly one in five will develop CNS relapse. The CNS includes the brain and spinal cord.

The prognosis of patients with AML varies. A number of different matters should be examined before the prognosis of any individual patient is assessed. The most important of these is whether or not the patient attains a complete remission (CR). The most important consideration in terms of whether a patient is likely to achieve CR is the patient's age. However, it may be that chronological age is not what really matters. Rather, to a large extent, what is truly significant is the patient's ability to survive the difficulties associated with induction therapy. For example, the patient who has some other disease in addition to AML may have a more difficult time with the rigors of the therapy. Yet, it is also true that older patients are more likely to have AML that expresses certain characteristics associated with poorer outcomes.

Other factors also affect the patient's prognosis. For example, in the tests performed during diagnosis, the chromosomes of cells are examined. Some chromosomal findings are associated with a good prognosis. Others are only mildly good, while still others indicate the patient is less likely to achieve CR.

Other factors that may provide physicians with hints as to the patient's prognosis include: how long symptoms were present before the illness was diagnosed, and how quickly immature blast cells disappear after treatment is started.

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Author Info: Lata Cherath Ph.D., Bob Kirsch, The Gale Group Inc., Gale, Detroit, Gale Encyclopedia of Cancer, 2002
 
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