Leukemia (leucemia, leukosis) represents a heterogeneous group of malignant tumors (neoplasms), with varying degrees of cell proliferation, differentiation, and maturation, originating from precursor cells of blood elements in the Bone Marrow (BM). Leukemia is classified among "liquid" tumors and unlike "solid" tumors (breast, uterus, stomach, pancreas, etc.) which can be benign and malignant, are always malignant (with the ability for local infiltration and distant metastasis) and are systemic (metastatic), i.e., spread throughout the entire BM (intramedullary) and beyond it (extramedullary).
1. Lymphoid Leukemia (LL) and non-Lymphoid (Myeloid Leukemia – ML).
2. Acute Leukemia (AL) and Chronic Leukemia (CL)
Central Blood – Hematopoietic Tissue, (blood-forming), Myeloid + Lymphoid in BM (active BM) and extramedullary Lymphoid Tissue (spleen, lymph nodes, etc.). It consists of blood-forming parenchyma and the necessary microenvironment for the production of blood elements and their release into circulation. It produces peripheral blood elements (with specific structure and function that live for a certain time and are eliminated to be replaced by the same quantity – a dynamic balance between elimination and production).
BM is primarily Myeloid Tissue and includes erythropoiesis + thrombopoiesis + granulopoiesis + monopoiesis. Therefore, Myeloid Tissue (and consequently the production of erythrocytes, granulocytes, monocytes, platelets) is located only in bones (in adults in the epiphysis of long bones, ribs, clavicle, sternum, spinous processes of the vertebrae, skull, iliac crest).
While Lymphoid Tissue (therefore the production of lymphocytes) is partly in BM but also in extramedullary lymphoid tissue (the lymphatic follicles of the spleen, lymph nodes, tonsils, etc.). All blood cells originate from a small number of cells – Hematopoietic Stem Cell (hematological progenitor cells) that enter cell division as needed.
Although capable of proliferation, the hematopoietic progenitor cell is relatively resistant to "killing" by radioactive substances or chemotherapeutic agents, indicating that their regenerative capacity is low and a portion of the population of progenitor cells is in G0.
This allows them to not be affected by the action of chemotherapeutic agents, which act at different phases of the cell cycle and will ensure the repopulation of the BM after the phase of Therapeutic Aplasia achieved during Induction in the treatment of AL or in BM Transplant. Examination is done with Myelogram (BM Aspiration) and BM Biopsy. For Leukemia, often Myelogram is sufficient.
Peripheral Blood – A special connective tissue, liquid, that is distributed throughout the body (hence hematological tumors are systemic from the beginning. It consists of plasma and highly differentiated, matured (ripened - structurally and functionally) and specialized circulating cell elements, that no longer divide, but are destined to perform their function and be replaced with new ones (with the exception for the red series – reticulocytes and the white series band forms and MMCs which are slightly more immature than their corresponding final elements). The only cell with the potential to proliferate in circulation is the lymphocyte (nucleus larger than cytoplasm - inverted ratio in a mature cell).
Leukemia – literally means, white cells circulating in blood (similar to terms - glycemia, natremia, azotemia, creatinemia, etc.). Suffix -emia or -hemia also -aemia or –haemia – in blood. But this is normal. Suffix -cytosis includes all cases of an increase in the number of cells of a “physiological” and reactive nature (so if we use the terms leukocytosis, thrombocytosis, erythrocytosis we are talking about their increase with secondary, reactive causes. Suffix -cythemia includes all cases of an increase in the number of cells of an autonomous nature (so if we use the terms leukemia, erythremia, thrombocythemia, we are talking about tumoral, autonomous increase of cells).
Disease generally idiopathic, primary (de novo), in some cases secondary (post MDS, CT and RT, transformations in MPS). Be careful of secondary hematological tumors in patients who live a long time treated with CT/RT for another hematological or non-hematological disease, or hematological tumors in patients who use immunosuppressive drugs for a long time for non-malignant diseases (transplants, etc.).
If we say tumor (swelling, enlargement), the disease is:
a) monoclonal (the entire tissue/clone develops from a single tumor-origin cell, Tumor (Leukemoid) Stem Cell, but in reality, it has different subclones with secondary mutations acquired during new divisions of tumor cells). The process of tumor development is called tumorigenesis, for leukemia – leukemogenesis. The tumor cell clone - Leukemias, lymphomas, myelomas, i.e., all malignant hematopoietic tumors (liquid tumors, to distinguish them from solid tumors) originate from a single cell (the clone origin cell), where chromosomal genetic alterations (quantitative or qualitative) have occurred. This cell may be from BM or from peripheral lymphoid tissues. For leukemias, it is in BM. The entirety of cell generations formed by the mitotic division of the damaged origin cell forms a population called a “clone”. When the number of clone cells reaches a certain number, the disease appears. Each disease has one or more characteristic chromosomal anomalies. Progression of the tumor clone. Throughout all tumors, new characteristics appear during the course of the disease. This is accompanied by new chromosomal changes. The best example is CML, where the clone present in the chronic phase is replaced by a new clone, when the disease enters the acute phase. In 70% of cases, the new chromosomal changes are superimposed on the original Philadelphia chromosome. These new subclones (with new chromosomal anomalies) may have more malignant characteristics than the original clone and/or may be clones resistant to chemotherapeutic agents. Thus, the new subclones become the cause for progression, relapse of the disease, and acquired resistance to treatment.
b) autonomous (autonomous proliferation – not affected by physiological inhibitory stimuli of cell proliferation). They become "immortal" cells, cells that multiply continuously.
c) Metastasis is characteristic of malignant tumors (cancer, neoplasm) tumor cells lose adhesion molecules (located on the plasma membrane) and connection with the microenvironment and enter circulation and localize in one or more sites and find the necessary microenvironment to stay and proliferate. Blood is a special connective tissue originating from mesenchyme and spread throughout the body, meaning that its microenvironment is spread throughout the body and metastasis of tumor cells of this tissue is possible throughout the body.