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Acute Promyelocytic Leukemia

Acute Promyelocytic Leukemia

What is leukemia? — Leukemia is a type of cancer of blood cells. Blood is made up of different types of cells that are made in the center of your bones, in a part called the bone marrow.
When people have leukemia, their bone marrow makes abnormal blood cells instead of normal blood cells. These abnormal blood cells grow out of control, get into the blood, and travel around the body. Sometimes, these cells collect in certain parts of the body.
When the bone marrow makes abnormal blood cells, it does not make the normal blood cells a person’s body needs. This can cause symptoms.
There are different types of leukemia. Some types grow very slowly ("chronic leukemias"), while others grow much faster ("acute leukemias"). Sometimes, people have a type of chronic leukemia that is slow-growing at first and later becomes a fast-growing acute leukemia.
What are the symptoms of leukemia? — Leukemia does not always cause symptoms, especially at first. When it does cause symptoms, the most common ones include:
Feeling very tired and weak
Bleeding more easily than normal
Getting sick from infections more easily than normal
These symptoms can also be caused by conditions that are not leukemia. But if you have these symptoms, you should let your doctor or nurse know.
Is there a test for leukemia? — Yes. Your doctor or nurse can use different tests to diagnose leukemia. These include:
Blood tests
Bone marrow biopsy – For this test, a doctor takes a small sample of the bone marrow. The sample is then examined under a microscope to see if abnormal (cancer) cells are present.
Your doctor or nurse will also do an exam and ask about your symptoms.
How is leukemia treated? — Doctors can treat leukemia in different ways. Sometimes, doctors treat leukemia right away. Other times, if the leukemia is slow-growing and not causing symptoms, doctors might watch it closely until treatment is needed.
The right treatment for you will depend on the type of leukemia you have, your age, and your other health problems.
Treatment for leukemia can include one or more of the following:
Chemotherapy – Chemotherapy is the medical term for medicines that kill cancer cells or stop them from growing.
Immunotherapy – This is the term doctors use for medicines that kill cancer cells by recognizing proteins on the cancer cells.
Bone marrow transplant (also called "stem cell transplant") – This treatment replaces cells in the bone marrow that are killed by chemotherapy or radiation. These "donor" cells can come from different places, including your own bone marrow or another person's bone marrow.
What happens after treatment? — After treatment, you will be checked every so often to see if the leukemia comes back. Regular follow up tests include talking with your doctor, exams, and blood tests. Sometimes, the doctor will also do a bone marrow biopsy.
What happens if the leukemia comes back? — If the leukemia comes back, you might have more chemotherapy, radiation, or bone marrow transplantation.
What else should I do? — It is important to follow all your doctor's instructions about visits and tests. It's also important to talk to your doctor about any side effects or problems you have during treatment.
Getting treated for leukemia involves making many choices, such as what treatment to have and when.
Always let your doctors and nurses know how you feel about a treatment. Any time you are offered a treatment, ask:
What are the benefits of this treatment? Is it likely to help me live longer? Will it reduce or prevent symptoms?
What are the downsides to this treatment?
Are there other options besides this treatment?
What happens if I do not have this treatment?
All topics are updated as new evidence becomes available and our peer review process is complete.
This topic retrieved from UpToDate on: Mar 30, 2020.
Topic 15491 Version 15.0
Release: 28.2.2 - C28.105
© 2020 UpToDate, Inc. and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

Name

Leukemia in Adults

Body systems

Adult,Hematologic

The Basics

Written by the doctors and editors at UpToDate
What is leukemia? — Leukemia is a type of cancer of blood cells. Blood is made up of different types of cells that are made in the center of your bones, in a part called the bone marrow.
When people have leukemia, their bone marrow makes abnormal blood cells instead of normal blood cells. These abnormal blood cells grow out of control, get into the blood, and travel around the body. Sometimes, these cells collect in certain parts of the body.
When the bone marrow makes abnormal blood cells, it does not make the normal blood cells a person’s body needs. This can cause symptoms.
There are different types of leukemia. Some types grow very slowly ("chronic leukemias"), while others grow much faster ("acute leukemias"). Sometimes, people have a type of chronic leukemia that is slow-growing at first and later becomes a fast-growing acute leukemia.
What are the symptoms of leukemia? — Leukemia does not always cause symptoms, especially at first. When it does cause symptoms, the most common ones include:
Feeling very tired and weak
Bleeding more easily than normal
Getting sick from infections more easily than normal
These symptoms can also be caused by conditions that are not leukemia. But if you have these symptoms, you should let your doctor or nurse know.
Is there a test for leukemia? — Yes. Your doctor or nurse can use different tests to diagnose leukemia. These include:
Blood tests
Bone marrow biopsy – For this test, a doctor takes a small sample of the bone marrow. The sample is then examined under a microscope to see if abnormal (cancer) cells are present.
Your doctor or nurse will also do an exam and ask about your symptoms.
How is leukemia treated? — Doctors can treat leukemia in different ways. Sometimes, doctors treat leukemia right away. Other times, if the leukemia is slow-growing and not causing symptoms, doctors might watch it closely until treatment is needed.
The right treatment for you will depend on the type of leukemia you have, your age, and your other health problems.
Treatment for leukemia can include one or more of the following:
Chemotherapy – Chemotherapy is the medical term for medicines that kill cancer cells or stop them from growing.
Immunotherapy – This is the term doctors use for medicines that kill cancer cells by recognizing proteins on the cancer cells.
Bone marrow transplant (also called "stem cell transplant") – This treatment replaces cells in the bone marrow that are killed by chemotherapy or radiation. These "donor" cells can come from different places, including your own bone marrow or another person's bone marrow.
What happens after treatment? — After treatment, you will be checked every so often to see if the leukemia comes back. Regular follow up tests include talking with your doctor, exams, and blood tests. Sometimes, the doctor will also do a bone marrow biopsy.
What happens if the leukemia comes back? — If the leukemia comes back, you might have more chemotherapy, radiation, or bone marrow transplantation.
What else should I do? — It is important to follow all your doctor's instructions about visits and tests. It's also important to talk to your doctor about any side effects or problems you have during treatment.
Getting treated for leukemia involves making many choices, such as what treatment to have and when.
Always let your doctors and nurses know how you feel about a treatment. Any time you are offered a treatment, ask:
What are the benefits of this treatment? Is it likely to help me live longer? Will it reduce or prevent symptoms?
What are the downsides to this treatment?
Are there other options besides this treatment?
What happens if I do not have this treatment?
All topics are updated as new evidence becomes available and our peer review process is complete.
This topic retrieved from UpToDate on: Mar 30, 2020.
Topic 15491 Version 15.0
Release: 28.2.2 - C28.105
© 2020 UpToDate, Inc. and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

What are other common names?

Acute Granulocytic Leukemia,Acute Lymphatic Leukemia,Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia,Acute Lymphocytic Leukemia,Acute Lymphoid Leukemia,Acute Myeloblastic Leukemia,Acute Myelogenous Leukemia,Acute Myeloid Leukemia,Acute Nonlymphoblastic Leukemia,Acute Nonlymphocytic Leukemia,ALL,AML,ANLL,Chronic Granulocytic Leukemia,Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia,Chronic Lymphoid Leukemia,Chronic Myelocytic Leukemia,Chronic Myelogenous Leukemia,Chronic Myeloid Leukemia,CLL,CML

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This information is not specific medical advice and does not replace information you receive from your health care provider. This is only a brief summary of general information. It does NOT include all information about conditions, illnesses, injuries, tests, procedures, treatments, therapies, discharge instructions or life-style choices that may apply to you. You must talk with your health care provider for complete information about your health and treatment options. This information should not be used to decide whether or not to accept your health care provider's advice, instructions or recommendations. Only your health care provider has the knowledge and training to provide advice that is right for you.The use of UpToDate content is governed by the UpToDate Terms of Use. ©2020 UpToDate, Inc. All rights reserved.

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© 2020 UpToDate, Inc. and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

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