Chronic myelogenous leukemia

A form of leukemia, chronic myelogenous leukemia (or CML) is a clonal stem cell disorder characterized by excessive proliferation of myeloid cells.

Table of contents
1 Signs and symptoms
2 Diagnosis
3 Epidemiology
4 Treatment
5 Complications

Signs and symptoms

The disease is often without specific symptoms. Often it is detected on a routine full blood count.

Symptoms can include: malaise, low grade fever, increased susceptibility to infections, anemia and thrombocytopenia (although an increased platelet count — thrombocytosis — is often a feature).

Diagnosis

CML is often suspected on the basis on the full blood count. When the index of suspicion is high, a bone marrow biopsy is required to distinguish CML from other diseases that feature the same symptoms.

Ultimately, CML is diagnosed by detecting the Philadelphia chromosome (a translocation between the 9th and 22nd chromosome leading to an abberant protein that drives cell division).

Epidemiology

CML occurs in all age groups, but most commonly in the middle-aged and elderly.

Treatment

Chronic-phase CML is treated with:

Complications

In a proportion of patients, the disease remains indolent. In a number, however, it proceeds to accelerated phase and eventually blast crisis, which is virtually indistinguishable from
acute myelogenous leukemia and has a very high mortality rate. This stage can most effectively be treated by a bone marrow transplant after high-dose chemotherapy.


Health science - Medicine - Hematology
Hematological malignancy and White blood cells
Lymphoma (Hodgkin's disease;, NHL) - Leukemia (ALL, AML, CLL, CML) - Multiple myeloma; - MDS - Myelofibrosis - Myeloproliferative disease; (Thrombocytosis, Polycythemia) - Neutropenia
Red blood cells
Anemia - Hemochromatosis - Sickle-cell anemia; - Thalassemia - other hemoglobinopathies
Coagulation and Platelets
Thrombosis - Deep venous thrombosis; - Pulmonary embolism; - Hemophilia - ITP - TTP






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