Hematological Malignancies
Hematological Malignancies
Hematological Malignancies
Hematological malignancies:
Acute lymphoblastic leukemia
leukemia
Non-Hodgkin lymphoma
Hodgkin lymphoma
Childhood leukemia
Uncontrolled proliferation of immature blood cells
with a different immunological subtypes which is
lethal within 1 –6 months without treatment
The disorder starts in the bone marrow, where
normal blood cells are replaced by leukemic cells
Morphological (FAB), immunological, cytogenetic,
biochemical, and molecular genetic factors
characterize the subtypes with various response to
treatment
Incidence
Unknown
Higher risk in congenital disorders:
-trisomy 21 (14 times higher) and other trisomies
-Turner syndrome
-Klinefelter syndrome
-monosomy 7
-neurofibromatosis type 1
-Fanconi anemia (high
fragility of chromosomes)
-Bloom syndrome, Kostmann S., Shwachman-Diamond S.,
-ataxia- teleangiectasia
-congenital agammaglobulinemia
-Wiskott- Aldrich S.
Ionizing radiation (atomic bomb developed high
incidence of leukemia)
Chemical and drugs:
-benzene
-chloramphenicol
-
alkylating agents
Infection (viral –HTLV, EBV, HIV)
Immunodeficiency: agamma/hypogammaglobulinemia,
Wiskott-Aldrich S, HIV infection
Acute lymphoblastic
leukemia
80% of leukemias
Girl – to- boy ratio is 1: 1.2
Peak incidence 2 – 5 years
Incidence in white children is twice as high as in
nonwhite children
Clinical manifestation
General aspects:
- history and symptoms reflect:
1. the degree of bone marrow infiltration by
leukemic cells
and
2. the extramedullary involvement of the disease
Gastrointestinal involvement:
-hepato- and/or splenomegaly
Testicular involvement: enlargement of one
or both testes without pain , hard consistency
Penis: priapism is occasionally associated with
elevated WBC
Bone and joint involvement:
-bone pain
initially present in 25 % to 50% of
patients ! -bone or
joint pain, sometimes with swelling and
tenderness due to leukemic infiltration of the
periosteum.
Differential diagnosis:
rheumatic fever,
rheumatoid arthritis -
radiological changes: diffuse demineralization,
osteolysis,
Laboratory findings
Red cells:
-hemoglobin – normal/
moderate /markedly low -low
number of reticulocytes
White blood cell :
- normal/ low/ high
-in
children with high WBC- leukemic blast cells present
Platelets:
-usually low
Coagulopathy:
-in children with hyperleukocytosis
-more common in AML
-low levels of prothrombin,
fibrinogen, factors V, IX, and X may be present
Chemistry:
-the serum uric acid is often high
initially - the serum
potassium level may be high (cell lysis) -
serum hypocalcemia or hypercalcemia (in marked
leukemic bone infiltration)
abnormal liver function > increased level of
transaminases
Bone marrow analysis: >25% blasts
-characterize the blast
cells -
determine the degree of reduction of normal
hematopoiesis
-morphological,
immunological, biochemical, and cytogenetic
analyses
Differential diagnosis: aplastic anemia,
myelodysplastic syndrome, neoplastic infiltrations
(neuroblastoma, NHL)
Leukemic cell characterization and
classification:
ALL-L2,
ALL-L3
AML M0 – M7
chemistry:
Favorable: Unfavorable:
WBC <10x10 9/l WBC >50 x 10 9/L
Age 2-7 Age < 2 and >10
Female Male
Response on steroid (+) Response on treatment (-)
Pre-B-ALL Hypoploid, t(9;22)/t(9;11)
Hyperploid FAB L2/L3
FAB L1 ↑↑LDH high
↑LDH moderate visceromegaly
Differential diagnosis
Prognosis
Rate of first remission in ALL: more than 90%
80% of children survive without relapse
Response on treatment
Prognosis
5+year survival rate 50-60 %
Non-Hodgkin lymphoma
(NHL)
Neoplasia of the lymphatic system and its
precursor cells with genetically disturbed regulation,
differentiation and apoptosis
If marked bone marrow involvement is present the
clinical condition is equal of leukemia
Incidence 5 –7 % of all neoplasias in childhood
Peak incidence between 5 and 15 years
Ratio of boys to girls 2:1
Burkitt lymphoma (BL): endemic form in Africa
10:100,000 children and sporadic form in Europe
and USA
Etiology, pathogenesis and
molecular genetics
Lymphoblastic lymphoma
30% of NHL
Usually mediastinal localization
Other locations:
CNS, cranial and peripheral nerves, skin, muscles,
bone, thorax, gonads, parotid gland, epidural region→
spinal cord compression
Differential diagnosis
Histological classification:
Lymphocyte predominance
Nodular sclerosing
Lymphocyte-depleted
Mixed cellular
Laboratory analyses
Blood
Bone marrow
Ferritin, LDH
Immunological analyses
Prognosis
Stage I/II EFS >90%
Stage III/IV EFS 70-80%