Radiation Oncology/Leukemia

< Radiation Oncology


Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia (ALL)
Small Lymphocytic Lymphoma (SLL) / Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia (CLL)

Epidemiology

Leukemias are the most common cancer of childhood and the number one cause of cancer related death in children. 32% of cancers in children under 15. This varies by year, with leukemia representing 17% of cancers in the first year of life, peaking at 46% for 2-3 year olds, and 9% for nineteen year olds. Total cases of leukemia is 7.24 per 100,000 for age 0-5, 3.8 per 100,000 for ages 5-9, decreasing to about 2.5 for ages 10-19.

Incidence in Children: (SEER 1975-1995, age-adjusted)

ALL and AML have the incidence at younger ages (<5 years) then decrease. AML incidence rises after age 10, causing 36% of leukemias at age 15-19, but ALL is still the most common leukemia in the older age group (50%).

Incidence in Adults: (SEER 1997-2001, age-adjusted)

Risk of Relapse

Risk groups:

Adults with ALL:

CNS disease

See also: Radiation Oncology/CNS/CSF involvement

CNS 1 - Negative cytology (no blasts)
CNS 2 - +cytology, < 5 WBC/microliter
CNS 3 - +cytology, >=5 WBC/microliter, or any CN lesion

CNS involvement at diagnosis in 3% of children with ALL.
CNS involvment is more common in ALL, rare in AML (except for the variant acute myelomonocytic leukemia, AMML), and rare in CML and CLL. Risk in AMML is 20%. 5-10% risk in adults with ALL.

Roles for Radiation

BMT

Indications for allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT):

High risk patients (relapsed or t(9;22) (Philadelphia) may benefit from BMT

Conditioning regimens prior to HSCT: purpose is to prevent graft rejection and eliminate leukemic cells. Regimen may consist of chemotherapy alone or chemotherapy + TBI. There is a suggestion of improved outcomes with TBI.

TBI - Socié et al, Blood 2001

CNS prophylaxis

Indications:

PCI for CNS prophylaxis as frontline treatment for patients with ALL led to an increase in survival in the 1960s. Toxicity from PCI is significant. Earlier trials used 24 Gy. Later trials showed that the dose can be reduced to 12-18 Gy or eliminated entirely if appropriate systemic and intrathecal chemotherapy is used.

Treatment of CNS disease

See also: Radiation Oncology/CNS/CSF involvement

Therapeutic Cranial Irradiation -5% of those on initial presentation -CNS failure

See appropriate protocol for chemotherapy regimen, individual risk-adapted, and response criteria to stratify by risk category.

Treatments:
CCG trials from 1971-78 used cranial RT + intrathecal MTX but no spinal RT.
CSI was found to be more effective than cranial RT in treating pts with CNS relapse. (Willougby, MRC, PMID 816410, 1976)
CCG trials from 1978-83 used 24 Gy cranial + 12 Gy spinal given during consolidation phase along with systemic and intrathecal chemo.

CNS disease at diagnosis was not an independent prognostic factor, thereby indicating the effectiveness of CNS treatment regimens used.

CCG trials from 1983-89 used more intensive chemotherapy. Reduced spinal dose to 6 Gy in those treated with intensive consolidation phase in order to limit hematopoietic toxicity.


Toxicity

Review articles

References

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