Extramedullary disease in patients with acute myeloid leukemia assessed by (18)F-FDG PET

2013 ◽  
Vol 90 (4) ◽  
pp. 273-278 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anne-Sofie Weindel Ibar Cribe ◽  
Maria Steenhof ◽  
Claus Werenberg Marcher ◽  
Henrik Petersen ◽  
Henrik Frederiksen ◽  
...  
2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (10) ◽  
Author(s):  
Chauhan P ◽  
◽  
Gupta A ◽  
Ora M ◽  
Agrawal S ◽  
...  

Extramedullary disease in acute myeloid leukemia is a known phenomenon with reported incidence of 2.5-9.1 %. However, acute kidney injury due to direct infiltration of malignant cells is reported in only 1% cases of acute leukemia. We report a case of acute myeloid leukemia who developed acute kidney failure at presentation, was diagnosed with renal and pancreatic infiltration by FDG-PET scan and was treated successfully with hypomethylating agent and venetoclax. PET-CT scan can be a non-invasive modality for diagnosing extramedullary disease in acute myeloid leukemia and monitoring of response to therapy in these cases. Early initiation of anti-leukemia therapy in our case lead to complete metabolic response with normalization of the renal functions.


2016 ◽  
Vol 41 (3) ◽  
pp. e137-e140 ◽  
Author(s):  
Saeed Elojeimy ◽  
A. Luana Stanescu ◽  
Marguerite T. Parisi

Haematologica ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 96 (10) ◽  
pp. 1552-1556 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Stolzel ◽  
C. Rollig ◽  
J. Radke ◽  
B. Mohr ◽  
U. Platzbecker ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Vol 34 (29) ◽  
pp. 3544-3553 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chezi Ganzel ◽  
Judith Manola ◽  
Dan Douer ◽  
Jacob M. Rowe ◽  
Hugo F. Fernandez ◽  
...  

Purpose Extramedullary disease (EMD) at diagnosis in patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) has been recognized for decades. Reported herein are results from a large study of patients with AML who were treated in consecutive ECOG-ACRIN Cancer Research Group frontline clinical trials in an attempt to define the incidence and clinical implications of EMD. Methods Patients with newly diagnosed AML, age 15 years and older, who were treated in 11 clinical trials, were studied to identify EMD, as defined by physical examination, laboratory findings, and imaging results. Results Of the 3,522 patients enrolled, 282 were excluded, including patients with acute promyelocytic leukemia, incorrect diagnosis, or no adequate assessment of EMD at baseline. The overall incidence of EMD was 23.7%. The sites involved were: lymph nodes (11.5%), spleen (7.3%), liver (5.3%), skin (4.5%), gingiva (4.4%), and CNS (1.1%). Most patients (65.3%) had only one site of EMD, 20.9% had two sites, 9.5% had three sites, and 3.4% had four sites. The median overall survival was 1.035 years. In univariable analysis, the presence of any EMD ( P = .005), skin involvement ( P = .002), spleen ( P < .001), and liver ( P < .001), but not CNS ( P = .34), nodal involvement ( P = .94), and gingival hypertrophy ( P = .24), was associated with a shorter overall survival. In contrast, in multivariable analysis, adjusted for known prognostic factors such as cytogenetic risk and WBC count, neither the presence of EMD nor the number of specific sites of EMD were independently prognostic. Conclusion This large study demonstrates that EMD at any site is common but is not an independent prognostic factor. Treatment decisions for patients with EMD should be made on the basis of recognized AML prognostic factors, irrespective of the presence of EMD.


2014 ◽  
Vol 39 (2) ◽  
pp. e173-e175 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hongyun June Zhu ◽  
Lindsey N. Clark ◽  
Linda A. Deloney ◽  
James E. McDonald

Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 5129-5129
Author(s):  
Omur Gokmen Sevindik ◽  
Ali Ihsan Gemici ◽  
Furkan Selim Usta ◽  
Asli Çakır ◽  
Sevil Sadri ◽  
...  

Gemtuzumab Ozogamycin (GO) is a drug conjugated monoclonal antibody which targets CD33 an antigen highly expressed on the surface of AML blasts. GO is approved for the treatment of both newly-diagnosed and relapsed AML. Despite growing evidence regarding its efficacy and safety among AML patients there is limited data about the use of GO in isolated extra-medullary relapsed AML. Extramedullary AML remains as an unmet clinical need regarding the poor prognosis and lack of a standard therapeutic approach. Our cases demonstrated a rapid and long lasting response with a favorable toxicity profile, in patients who were treated with GO as a single agent after an isolated extramedullary relapsing disease. Our first case was a 40-years-old woman admitted to our outpatient clinic with pain in her joints and redness in her back and stomach. She was diagnosed with CD33-positive Acute Myeloid Leukemia according to the immunophenotyping of bone marrow blasts. Idarubicin and ARA-C (7+3) combination initiated as a frontline induction therapy and morphological remission was achieved after the first cycle of induction. After the first cycle of consolidation chemotherapy with high dose ARA-C she has relapsed with skin myeloid sarcomas and diffuse bone marrow infiltration. Soon after the relapsing disease she was put on to ida-flag salvage chemotherapy and she responded well with the disappearance of skin lesions and morphological complete remission of bone marrow. After achieving response, an allogeneic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) was applied from her sibling donor with a myeloablative conditioning. Unfortunately patient had a relapsing extramedullary disease with reappearance of skin lesions even with an ongoing acute skin gvhd (Figure) soon after allogeneic HSCT. Bone marrow biopsy revealed no increase in blast count. We have decided to initiate a novel targetted therapy to control the extramedullary disease. As her blasts infiltrating the skin were universally CD 33 positive we considered to put her on GO therapy with the approval obtained from health authority. GO was applied according to the dosage approved by FDA for relapsing disease. After the first cycle of GO she had a rapid disappearance of all skin lesions just complicated with a febrile neutropenic episode and re-activation of CMV infection which was controlled with Gancyclovir. She has retained a complete remission regarding extramedullary disease throughout the repeated courses of GO for 3 times, and she is still in remission for 4 months after the first appearance of skin lesions (Figure). Our second case was a 24-years-old boy who admitted to our outpatient clinic with a worsening fatigue and shortness of breath. He was also diagnosed with CD33-positive Acute Myeloid Leukemia according to the immunophenotyping of bone marrow blasts and was able to achieve a morphological CR after frontline induction therapy with 7+3 protocol. After two cycles of high dose ARA-C consolidation he was transplanted from a matched unrelated donor because of an intermediate cytogenetic risk profile. At the 14th month of allogeneic transplantation he had relapsed with a bone marrow blast count of 90% and harboring a monosomy on the 10th chromosome. After the first salvage chemotherapy with IDA-FLAG protocol he has achieved a morphological CR and we have decided to proceed with an alternative donor transplantation. But unfortunately soon after discharge, he has admitted to the emergency clinic with a new onset headache and nausea and vomiting. A cranial CT revealed multiple foci of solid masses with peripheral edema. We have performed a lumbar puncture and CSF fluid revealed a high number of CD33 positive blastic cells (over 100 cells per HPF). At the time of central nervous system (CNS) relapse his bone marrow was free of blastic infiltration. We decided to initiate GO treatment with the diagnosis of isolated central nervous system relapse of AML, accompanying intra-thecal chemotherapy via an Omaya Reservoir. He has received two cycles of GO which was complicated with neutropenic fever and grade 4 leukopenia and thrombocytopenia, and his CNS lesions also responded well and clinically he had no CNS related signs or symptoms. The patient received additional GO with continued response but unfortunately after a severe pneumonia he passed away at intensive care unit. Our case series documented a clinically relevant therapeutic field for GO in isolated extramedullary relapse of AML. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 3863-3863
Author(s):  
Meera Yogarajah ◽  
William J Hogan ◽  
Naseema Gangat ◽  
Dong Chen ◽  
Rong He ◽  
...  

Objective : Central nervous system (CNS) involvement is a known phenomenon of acute lymphoblastic leukemia. However little is known about the incidence of CNS involvement in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) as routine lumbar punctures are not done if patients are asymptomatic at diagnosis. Our practice has been to obtain lumbar puncture (LP) at or after complete remission (CR) for patients that present with any one of the following high risk features;hyperleukocytosis with WBC >10,000 or blastic crisis, extramedullary disease,monocytic differentiation. Methods: We reviewed our leukemia database at Mayo Clinic to determine the incidence of CNS involvement in patients with high risk features after due IRB approval. We also compared baseline demographic characteristics, blood counts, cytogenetic risk groups, presence of extramedullary disease, relapse rate ,transplant rate and overall survival (OS) among patients with and without CNS involvement. OS estimates were calculated by Kaplan-Meier curves and log-rank testing using JMP v.13. Results: 298 patients with AML were identified with presence of at least 1 risk factor for CNS involvement. The results of LP were only available for 126 (42%) patients. The overall incidence of CNS involvement was 12% (15/126, figure 1). Among the patients with positive disease 3 had CSF examination at diagnosis prior to CR due to the presence of CNS myeloid sarcoma (n=2) and ambiguous lineage myeloid leukemia and were excluded from further evaluation. The incidence of CSF involvement at CR1 was 9.7% (12/123). All patient with CNS positive disease received intrathecal chemotherapy with alternating cytarabine and methotrexate until they cleared their blast and additional 2-4 treatments as per treating physician's discretion .The CNS positive and negative patients were compared and did not show any statistical difference in age, gender, presence of extramedullary disease ,cytogenetic risk group, relapse rate and transplant rate as shown in table1. Molecular data was not available in most of the patients and hence was not included for analysis. The median OS was significantly lower among patients with CNS involvement compared to absence of CNS involvement but was not statistically significant likely due to small sample size (3.9 vs12.8 years (p=0.2), figure 2). The overall CNS relapse rate in patients who did not have a LP done at CR was 5.8%(10/172). Conclusions : CNS evaluation should be done in AML patients with high risk features before declaring CR. CNS disease portends overall a poor prognosis with impaired overall survival and high relapse rate. However the sample size was small and true incidence of CNS disease will need routine diagnostic LP in all high risk patients. Disclosures Patnaik: Stem Line Pharmaceuticals.: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees. Al-Kali:Astex Pharmaceuticals, Inc.: Research Funding.


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