Title: Acute Leukaemia
1Acute Leukaemia
2What are the Acute Leukaemias?
- Leukaemia
- Meaning white blood
- Malignancy
- Uncontrolled proliferation of blood cell
precursors - Acute
- Rapid onset and progression
- Proliferation of blasts /primitive cells
3Incidence
- 4/100 000 population/year
- Incidence and type of acute leukaemia varies with
age
4What determines the type of malignancy that
develops?
- Type of cell in which original mutation occurred
- E.g. Myeloid or lymphoid progenitor etc.
- Type of mutation
- Accumulation of mutations
5Types of Acute Leukaemia
6Acute Lymphoblastic Leukaemia
- Primitive lymphoid neoplasms
- Immunophenotyping and genetic techniques of more
value in classification than cytochemistry (and
morphology)
7Acute Lymphoblastic Leukaemia
- Predominantly a disease of childhood
- 75 of cases occur in children under 6 years
- Second peak does occur in the 6th to 7th decade
- WHO Precursor B cell and Precursor T cell
neoplasms
8Precursor B cell ALL
- Cure rates (disease free survival) gt70 in
childhood precursor B-cell ALL - However, distinct sub-groups are recognised which
are associated with better/worse prognosis
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10Precursor T-cell ALL
- Constitutes 15 of childhood leukaemia
- Considered high risk ALL in childhood
- More common in adolescents and males
- Frequently presents with high WCC
- Commonly present with mediastinal mass and/or
pleural effusion
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13Examples of molecular abnormalities in lymphoid
leukaemias
- t(922) the Philadelphia chromosome
14t(922)
- Philadelphia Chromosome
- CML
- ALL
- Translocation t(922)
- Breakpoint cluster region chr 22
- Abelson oncogene chr 9 (tyrosine kinase)
- Results in the formation of a chimeric fusion
gene (bcrabl) on chromosome 22.
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16t(922)
- Translated into an abnormal protein product
- Abl assumes an abnormal cytoplasmic location
- Inappropriately active
- Cell can grow and divide independently of normal
growth factors
17Poor prognostic factors in ALL
- Age
- WCC
- Immunophenotype
- Cytogenetics
- Hyperploidy
- Response to induction chemotherapy
18Acute Myeloid Leukaemia
- 70 of Acute Leukaemia
- FAB classification of AML
- Adopted since 1976
- Uses morphology, cytochemistry and
immunophenotype (flow cytometry) - Does not include the genetic findings
- AML M0 M7
- The WHO classification
- Incorporates all the available information to
define entities - Diagnosis 20 or more blasts in marrow
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20Pathogenesis
- 2 co-operating mutations
- Class 1
- Proliferative
- E.g. tyrosine kinase e.g. FLT3 abnormality
- Class 2
- Differentiation block
- Transcription factor
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22Acute Myeloid LeukaemiaWHO Classification
- Four distinct subgroups recognised
- AML with recurrent genetic abnormalities
- AML, myelodysplasia related
- AML and myelodysplastic syndromes therapy related
- AML not otherwise categorised
23Example of importance of molecular abnormality in
myeloid leukaemia
- t(1517) Acute Promyelocytic Leukaemia
24Acute Promyelocytic Leukaemia
- AML M3
- Medical emergency due to the high incidence of
haemorrhagic phenomena - Abnormal, heavily granulated promyelocytes
accumulate which have procoagulant activity - DIC
- Specific therapy
25APL t(1517)
26Normal RARa Activity
HDAC
RARa
RARE
RARa
HDAC
RARE
Transcription of genes required for
differentiation are suppressed
27Normal RARa Activity cont.
RA
HDAC
RARa
RARE
RA
RARa
RARa
HDAC
RARE
RARE
Transcription of genes required for
differentiation can occur.
28In APL
- APL is characterized by t(1517), which produces
the abnormal fusion gene - PML-RARa.
RA
RARa
PML
HDAC
RARE
The PML-RARa does not respond normally to
Retinoic Acid exposure (i.e.does not release the
DNA when exposed to Retinoic Acid at
physiological levels). Transcription of genes
required for differentiation is therefore
suppressed.
29Acute Promyelocytic Leukaemia
- Translocation t(1517)
- Chromosome 17 retinoic acid receptor alpha
(RARa) - Retinoic acid binds RARa and causes the
expression of genes essential for differentiation
of promyelocytes - In the presence of the translocation t(1517),
the cells are unresponsive to physiological doses
of retinoic acid
30Acute Promyelocytic Leukaemia Ctd
- However, high doses of retinoic acid
(pharmacological doses) cause transcription of
genes essential for differentiation - ATRA (all-transretinoic acid) pharmocological
preparation - causes differentiation of the
abnormal promyelocytes - APL first example of clinically successful
differentiation therapy
31Importance of Molecular Abnormalities in
Leukaemias
- Diagnosis
- CML t(922)
- APL t(1517)
- Prognosis
- ALL with Philadephia chr poor prognosis
- Treatment selection
- STI-571 CML
- ATRA APL
- Bone marrow transplant
- Minimal residual disease
32References
- Evans L et al. Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma. The Lancet
2003 362139-146 - Jaffe ES et al. Pathology and genetics neoplasms
of the haemopoietic and lymphoid tissues. In
Kleihaus P eds. World Health Organization
classification of tumours. Lyon IARC Press, 2001 - Postgraduate Haematology. Hoffbrand AV, Lewis SM.
Fourth edition. 1999 - Williams Haematology. Beutler E et al. Sixth
edition. 2001