Friday, June 10, 2011

CHRONIC MYELOID LEUKAEMIA


Abstract

Chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML) can be considered as a paradigm for neoplasias that evolve through a multi-step process. CML is also one of the best examples of a disease that can be targeted by molecular therapy; however, the success of new 'designer drugs' is largely restricted to the chronic phase of the disease. If not cured at this stage, CML invariably progresses and transforms into an acute-type leukaemia undergoing a 'blast crisis'. The causes of this transformation are still poorly understood. What mechanisms underlie this progression, and are they shared by other common cancers?

Introduction

For various reasons, chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML) is probably one of the most comprehensively studied human malignancies. CML was the first human cancer to be associated with a consistent chromosomal abnormality — the Philadelphia (Ph) chromosome — a balanced, reciprocal translocation involving the long arms of chromosomes 9 and 22.[1, 2] CML is characterized by distinct clinical phases: most patients present in chronic phase (CP), a phase in which mature granulocytes are still produced, but patients have an increased number of myeloid progenitor cells in the peripheral blood. As the disease progresses, patients enter an accelerated phase (AP) followed by blast crisis (BC), in which haematopoietic differentiation has become arrested and immature blasts accumulate in the bone marrow (BM) and spill into the circulation. The CP is relatively long-lasting, so researchers have the opportunity to study malignant cells with an 'indolent' behaviour and to identify the changes associated with transformation to the 'aggressive' phenotype of blast crisis. Furthermore, CML is unusual in that a single genetic lesion, or 'hit', occurring in a haematopoietic stem cell generates a fusion oncogene, BCR-ABL, which encodes a protein tyrosine kinase that is necessary and sufficient for cell transformation.[3,4,5] Access to the neoplastic clone is relatively straightforward without the need for invasive surgery, which simplifies the collection of samples for studying the disease. Finally, CML was the first haematological malignancy for which a programme of rational drug design yielded an effective targeted molecular therapy (imatinib mesylate, Gleevec or Glivec).[6,7] In this Review we consider how the current state of knowledge regarding the biology of advanced phase CML compares with other human cancers. In particular, we discuss those features that, if not universal, are still relevant for most human cancers, including differentiation arrest, genomic instability (which includes failures of genome surveillance, deficiencies of DNA repair and mutator phenotype), telomere shortening and the loss of tumour-suppressor functions (Fig. 1; Table 1 ). The role of gene-expression profiling as a means of identifying candidate genes involved in disease progression is also highlighted.


Leukaemias
What are Leukemias
Neoplasm of white blood cell and its precursor
Clonal proliferations and accumulation of cells in marrow
Classify as
· Acute leukaemias
· Chronic leukaemias
Types of Leukaemia
Introduction- CML
· Clonal malignant myeloproliferative disorder characterized by increased proliferation of the granulocytic cell line without the loss of their capacity to differentiate
· Results in increases in myeloid cells, erythroid cells and platelets in peripheral blood and marked myeloid hyperplasia in the bone marrow
· Originate in a single abnormal haemopoietic stem cell
· Incidence :1 per 100,000 (UK)
· Accounts for 7-15% of all leukaemia in adults
· Median age : 53 years
· All age groups, including children, can be affected
Etiology
· Not clear
· Little evidence of genetic factors linked to the disease
· Increased incidence
o Survivors of the atomic disasters at Nagasaki & Hiroshima
o Post radiation therapy
Leukaemogenesis
· Philadelphia chromosome is an acquired cytogenetic anomaly that is characterizes in all leukaemic cells in CML
· 90-95% of CML pts have Ph chromosome

 

· Reciprocal translocation of chromosome 22 and chromosome 9
· BCR (breakpoint cluster region) gene on chromosome 22 fused to the ABL (Ableson leukemia virus) gene on chromosome 9
· Ph chromosome is found on myeloid, monocytic, erythroid, megakaryocytic, B-cells and sometimes T-cell proof that CML derived from pluripotent stem cell
· Molecular consequence of the t(9;22) is the fusion protein BCR–ABL, which has increased in tyrosine kinase activity
· BCR-ABL protein transform hematopoietic cells so that their growth and survival become independent of cytokines
· It protects hematopoietic cells from programmed cell death (apoptosis)
Clinical Features
o Disease is biphasic, sometimes triphasic
o 40% asymptomatic
o Chronic phase
o Splenomegaly often massive
o Symptoms related to hypermetabolism
o Weight loss
o Anorexia
o Lassitude
o Night sweats
o Features of anaemia
o Pallor, dyspnoea, tachycardia
o Abnormal platelet function
o Bruising, epistaxis, menorrhagia
o Hyperleukocytosis
o thrombosis
o Increased purine breakdown : gout
o Visual disturbances
o Priapism
o Lab features
o Peripheral blood film
o Anaemia
o Leukocytosis (usu >25 x 109/L, freq> 100 x 109/L
o WBC differential shows granulocytes in all stages of maturation
o Basophilia
o thrombocytosis
o Bone marrow
o Hypercellular (reduced fat spaces)
o Myeloid:erythroid ratio – 10:1 to 30:1 (N : 2:1)
o Myelocyte predominant cell, blasts less 10%
o Megakaryocytes increased & dysplastic
o Increase reticulin fibrosis in 30-40%
o Other lab features :
o NAP reduced
o Serum B12 and transcobalamin increased
o Serum uric acid increased
o Lactate dehydrogenase increased
o Cytogenetic : Philadelphia chromosome
Laboratory- summary
Lab investigation to confirm diagnosis
Full blood picture
Neutrophil alkaline phosphatase
Bone marrow cytogenetic
Phases
Accelerated phase
Median duration is 3.5 – 5 yrs before evolving to more aggressive phases
Clinical features
Increasing splenomegaly refractory to chemo
Increasing chemotherapy requirement
Lab features
Blasts>15% in blood
Blast & promyelocyte > 30% in blood
Basophil 20% in blood
Thrombocytopenia
Cytogenetic: clonal evolution
Phases
Blastic phase
Resembles acute leukaemia
Diagnosis requires > 30% blast in marrow
2/3 transform to myeloid blastic phase and 1/3 to lymphoid blastic phase
Survival : 9 mos vs 3 mos (lym vs myeloid)
General Management
o Discussion with family
o The disease & diagnosis
o Prognosis
o Choices of treatment
§ Cytotoxic drug vs bone marrow transplant
§ Side effect
o CML - principles of treatment
o Relieve symptoms of hyperleukocytosis, splenomegaly and thrombocytosis
o Hydration
o Chemotherapy (bulsuphan, Hydoxyurea)
o Control and prolong chronic phase (non-curative)
o alpha interferon+chemotherapy
o imatinib mesylate
o chemotherapy (hydroxyurea)
o CML - principles of treatment
o Treatment cont…
o Eradicate malignant clone (curative)
o allogeneic transplantation
o alpha interferon ?
o imatinib mesylate/STI 571 ?(Thyrosine kinase inhibitor)
o Chemotherapy
o Busulphan
o Alkylating agent
o Preferred in older pts (not candidate for transplant)
o Side effect :
§ prolonged myelosuppression
§ Pulmonary fibrosis
§ Skin pigmentation
§ infertility
o Chemotherapy
o Hydoxyures
o Fewer side effect
o Acts by inhibiting the enzyme ribonucleotide reductase
o Haematological remissions obtain in 80% for both drugs
o However disease progression not altered and persistence of Ph chromosome containing clone
o Chemotherapy
o Recombinant human α- Interferon
o Prolong chronic phase and increase survival
o Haematogical and cytogenetic remission
o Side effect
§ Flu like symptoms
§ Fever and chills
§ Anorexia
§ Depression
o CML - prognosis
o Median survival 3.5 yrs (range 2-8 yrs)
o Interferon + chemotherapy :6 years
o Transplant : 5+ years
o imatinib mesylate ?

1 comment:

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