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Acute Leukemia. . DEFINITION. Failure of cell maturationProliferation of immature cells which fill up marrowUltimately immature cells spill over to peripheral blood. Classification of leukemias. Acute. Chronic. Myeloid origin. Lymphoid origin. Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML). Acute Lymphoblastic
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1. Dr Chaitanya Vemuri Leukemia & Lymphoma
2. Acute Leukemia
3. DEFINITION
Failure of cell maturation
Proliferation of immature cells which fill up marrow
Ultimately immature cells spill over to peripheral blood
4. Classification of leukemias
5. Leukemia Classification Acute Leukemias:
Myeloid - M0, M1, M2, M3, M4, M5, M6, M7
Lymphoid - L1, L2, L3.
Chronic Leukemias:
Myeloid - CML
Lymphoid- CLL, PLL, HCL,
6. Acute Leukemia accumulation of blasts in the marrow
7. AML-M3 - Auer Rods
8. Causes of acute leukemias
Idiopathic (most)
Underlying hematologic disorders
Chemicals , drugs
Ionizing radiation
Viruses (HTLV I)
Hereditary / genetic conditions
9. CLINICAL FEATURES Fever
Anemia
Thrombocytopenia
Bone pain tenderness (Sternal), Migrating joint pains
Leukemic infiltration of tissues
Hepatosplenomegaly
Lymphadenopathy
Gum hypertrophy
Soft tissues (Chloroma)
Intracerebral leukocytostatis (BALL’s disease) (AML)
Leukemic meningitis (ALL)
10. Clincal manifestations
Symptoms due to:
Marrow failure
Tissue infiltration
Leukostasis
Constitutional symptoms
Other (DIC)
Usually short duration of symptoms
11. Marrow failure
Neutropenia : infections, sepsis
Anemia : fatigue, pallor
Thrombocytopenia : bleeding
12. Infiltration of tissues/organs
Enlargement of liver, spleen, lymph nodes
Gum hypertrophy
Bone pain
Other organs: CNS, skin, testis, any organ
13. Gum hypertrophy
14. ALL:Cervical Lymphadenopathy
15. Organomegaly
16. Mediastinal Lymphnodes-ALL
19. LAB INVESTIGATIONS
Normocytic / Normochromic Anemia
Thrombocytopenia
? Total count (20,000 to 50,000 cells)
Peripheral blood smear – Numerous blast cells
Marrow – Blast cells > 20% (Nucleated cells)
X-Ray chest – Mediastinal widening
20. MANAGEMENT Supportive
Anemia – Blood Transfusion
Thrombocytopenia – Platelet Transfusion
Infection – Blood culture and sensitivity
Barrier nursing
21. How to distinguish AML vs CMLfrom looking at peripheral blood Myeloid cell CML AML Normal
Blasts q q
Promyelocytes q
Myelocytes q
Metamyelocytes q
Bands q
Neutrophils q # q
22. AML M1 – Myloblast without maturation (Non granular cytoplasm)
M2 – Myloblast with maturation (more mature cells seen)
M3 – Hypergranular “Promyelocytic” Leukemia
M4 – Myelomonocytic Leukemia – Both Myeloid / Monocyte immature cells
M5 – Monocytic Leukemia
M6 –Erythroleukemia(Erythroblasts>50%, marrow with immature myeloblasts)
M7 – Megakaryoblastic Leukemia (? Megakaryoblasts)
23. ALL
L1 – Homogenous small lymphoblasts
L2 – Heterogenous Lymphoblasts
L3--Homogenous large lymphoblasts
24. POOR PROGNOSTIC FEATURES
Increasing age
Male sex
High leucocyte count at diagnosis
CNS involvement at diagnosis
Antecedent hematological disorder
Cytogenetic abnormalities
27. Chronic Leukemia
28. Chronic Leukemia Chronic - (Long natural history)
CML
CLL
29. CML Myeloproliferative stem cell disorder
Proliferation of all haematopoietic lineages
Maturation occurs fairly normally
Characterised by presence of Philadelphia (Ph) chromosome
31. Natural History
Chronic Phase
Accelerated Phase
Blast Phase
32. Clinical Features - Symptoms Asymptomatic – 25%
Usually presents in chronic phase
General weakness
Weight loss
Dyspnoea (reduced Hb)
Abdominal pain, discomfort, fullness (Splenomegaly)
Fever, sweats (NOT due to infection)
Headache (occasionally) – hyperleucocytosis
Bruising, bleeding (uncommon)
33. Clinical Features - Signs Pallor
Splenomegaly (often massive) – occasional friction rub
Hepatomegaly (50%)
Lymphadenopathy – unusual – blast crisis
Retinal haemorrhage - leucostasis
34. Investigations CBC
Hb – low / Normal
WBC – Raised
Platelets – Low / Normal / Raised
35. Investigations Peripheral smear
Neutrophilia
Full range of granulocyte precursors from myeloid to
mature neutrophils seen
Accelerated phase
% of more primitive cells raised
Blast phase
Dramatic increase in number of circulating blasts
36. Investigations
Bone Marrow
Increased cellularity, increased myeloid precursors
Philadelphia chromosome
FISH / RT – PCR
For Cytogenetic / Molecular Abnormalities
37. Imatinib Mesylate
Hydroxycarbamide
Alpha interferon
Allogenic bone marrow transplantation
BLAST CRISIS : Imatinib / Cytarabine Management
38. CLL Commonest Leukemia
Male to female ratio 2 : 1
Median age – 65 to 70
Rise in frequency with advance age
Invariably lymphocytic in origin
Increased mass of Immuno – incompetent cells accumulate
39. Clinical Features - Symptoms Incidental finding
Insidious onset
Anemia (Hemolysis / Marrow infiltration)
Recurrent infections
Functional leukopenia
Immune failure (reduced immunoglobins)
Painless lymphadenopathy
Abdominal pain / discomfort / fullness – Splenomegaly
Night sweats / weight loss
40. Clinical Features - Signs
Anemia
Fever
Generalised lymphadenopathy
Hepatosplenomegaly
41. Investigations
Blood Count
Hb – Normal / Low
WBC raised
Platelet – Normal / Low
Peripheral smear
Mature lymphocytosis
42. Investigations Bone Marrow
Heavy infiltration with lymphocytes
For prognosis
Immunophenotyping
Cytogenetics
Prognosis
Reticulocyte Count
Direct Coombs test
Immunoglobins – Low / Normal
44. Management Chlorambucil
Alkylating agent
Reduced blood count, reduces lymphadenopathy and splenomegaly
Fludarabine
Purine analogue
Corticosteroids
45. Management Supportive Care
Anemia / Thrombocytopenia
Infections
Radiotherapy
Lymphnode causing discomfort / obstruction
Symptomatic splenomegaly
Splenectomy
Hypersplenism / Autoimmune destruction
Massive splenomegaly
46. Lymphoma
47. What is lymphoma ?
Neoplasms of lymphoid origin, typically causing lymphadenopathy
48. Introduction: Neoplastic lymphoid proliferation
Fever, lymphadenopathy.
Firm rubbery lymphnodes – painless
Immune disorders - Deficiency/ autoimmune
Rare metastasis out of RES.
Two types – Hodgkins & Non-Hodgkins.
Viral, genetic, unknown etiology.
Lack of programmed cell death - Apoptosis
49. Lymphoma classification(based on 2001 WHO)
B-cell neoplasms
Precursor B-cell neoplasms (2 types)
Mature B-cell neoplasms (19)
B-cell proliferations of uncertain malignant potential (2)
T-cell & NK-cell neoplasms
Precursor T-cell neoplasms (3)
Mature T-cell and NK-cell neoplasms (14)
T-cell proliferation of uncertain malignant potential (1)
Hodgkin lymphoma
Classical Hodgkin lymphomas (4)
Nodular lymphocyte predominant Hodgkin lymphoma (1)
50. Hodgkin lymphoma
51. Epidemiology less frequent than non-Hodgkin lymphoma
overall M > F, 1.5 : 1
Median age – 31 years, 1st peak at 20 -35 years, 2nd peak at 50 – 70 years
Etiology unknown
Link to EBV doubtful (IMN)
52. Hodgkin lymphoma
Cell of origin: germinal centre B-cell
Reed-Sternberg cells (or RS variants) – large malignant binucleate lymphoid cells of B cell origin – histological hallmark
Most cells in affected lymph node are polyclonal reactive lymphoid cells, not neoplastic cells
53. Reed-Sternberg cell
54. Clinical manifestations:
Painless, Rubbery lymphadenopathy
contiguous spread
Fever, Eosinophilia
Hepatosplenomegaly
extranodal sites (bone, brain, skin) relatively uncommon except in advanced disease
55.
Skin involvement as a late complication in 10%
Constitutional symptoms:
fever (Pel-Epstein),
pruritus,
alcohol-induced pain
in widespread disease
Diagnosis confirmed by histopathology of node
56. Staging of lymphoma
57. CBC, ESR
RFT, LFT
LDH
Chest X-ray
Bone marrow trephine biopsy
Abdominal and chest CT scan - staging
Lymphnode biopsy
Staging laparotomy - often not required Investigations
58. RT: Stage I, IIA with < 3 areas, post CT, pressure symptoms
Chemotherapy: B symptoms, IIA with > 3 areas, III & IV
Chlorambucil, Vinblastin, Procarbazine, Prednisolone (ChVPP)
Combined : bulky disease, CT followed by RT
Permanent infertility, premature menopause, AVN, myelodysplasia, a/c leukemia Treatment
59. Non-Hodgkin lymphomaIncidence
60. Risk factors for NHL immunosuppression or immunodeficiency
connective tissue disease
family history of lymphoma
infectious agents – HTLV 1, EBV, H.Pylori
ionizing radiation
Genetics : t (14 : 18) – follicular NHL
61. Clinical manifestations Variable
severity: asymptomatic to extremely ill
time course: evolution over weeks, months, or years
Systemic manifestations
Widely disseminated at presentation
fever, night sweats, weight loss, anorexia, pruritis
Extra nodular disease more common (BM, gut, thyroid, lung, skin, testis, brain, Bone)
Local manifestations
lymphadenopathy, splenomegaly most common
any tissue potentially can be infiltrated
62. Complications of lymphoma
bone marrow failure (infiltration)
CNS infiltration
immune hemolysis or thrombocytopenia
compression of structures (eg spinal cord, SVC, IVC )
by bulky disease
pleural/pericardial effusions, ascites
63. Clinical Staging of NHL Same as HL
Extranodular disease more common in T cell disease
Bone marrow involvement in low grade NHL
64. Laboratory Diagnosis of NHL Haematological:
Normocytic normochromic anemia, High ESR
Leucocytosis, Eosinophilia, lymphopenia
Leukoerythroblastic picture - BM infiltration
HIV testing
Bone marrow:
Normal, or late involvement.
Trephine biopsy- diffuse or follicular infiltration
Biochemical:
High serum LDH – poor prognosis
Hypercalcaemia, Alkaline phosphatase, Uric acid.
Serum transaminases & Bilirubin – Liver
65. Lymph node or tissue biopsy for evaluation of:
66. Low-grade lymphoma - watch & wait
Aggressive lymphoma grows faster, needs treatment as soon as possible
Indications for treatment :
Systemic symptoms
Lymphadenopathy causing discomfort / disfigurement
BM failure
Compression syndromes
Chemotherapy is the mainstay - CHOP
RT: for stage I
Monoclonal Ab – anti CD 20 Ab – Rituximab (R-CHOP)
Autologous SCT Treatment
67. THANK YOU