Title: The Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia (CLL)
1The Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia (CLL)
2The Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemias (1)
- The group of clonal diseases characterized by
proliferation and accumulation of small, mature
lymphocytes in blood, bone marrow and lymphoid
tissues (lymph nodes, spleen) - Neoplastic lymphocytes belong most often to
B-cell lines and they have the special for B-cell
antigenes on their surface exceptionally
neoplastic lymphocytes belong to T-cell lines or
NK-cell - According to REAL (Revised European-American
Lymphoma)/ /WHO classification CLLs belong to the
group of - lymphoproliferative diseases
- lymphomas
3Lymphoproliferative diseases
- Primary lymphatic system (central)
- bone marrow
- thymus
- Secondary lymphatic system (peripheral )
- spleen
- lymph nodes
- MALT (The mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue
also called mucosa-associated lymphatic tissue)
4Clinical stages of lymphomas according to Ann
Arbors classification
A no general symptoms B general symptoms such
as fever, night sweats, weight loss
Lister T, et al. J Clin Oncol 1989 71630
5(No Transcript)
6- Ann Arbors classification is specific for all
lymphomas - CLL is classified according to
- Rai and Binet classification
7 WHO classification
- B-Cell neoplasms
- - Precursor B-cell neoplasm
- B-lymphoblastic leukemia/lymphoma
- - Mature (peripheral) B-cell neoplasms
- B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia/small
lymphocytic lymphoma - B-cell prolymphocytic leukemia
- Lympfioplasmacytic lymphoma
- Splenic marginal zone B-cell lymphoma ( /-
villous lymphocytes) - Hairy cell leukemia
- Plasma cell myeloma/plasmacytoma
- Extranodal marginal zone B-cell lymphoma of MALT
type - Nodal marginal zone B-cell lymphoma (/
monocytoid B cells) - Follicular lymphoma
- Mantle-cell lymphoma
- Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma
- Mediastinal large B-cell lymphoma
- Primary effusion lymphoma
- Burkitts lymphoma/Burkitt cell
leukemia
T-cell and NK-cell neoplasms - Precursor T-cell
neoplasm T-lymphoblastic
lymphoma/leukemia - Mature (peripheral)
T-cell neoplasms T-cell prolymphocytic
leukemia T-cell granular lymphocytic
leukemia Aggressive NK-cell leukemia Adult T-cell
lymphoma/leukemia (HTLV1 ) Extranodal NK/T-cell
lymphoma, nasal type Enteropathy-type T-cell
lymphoma Hepatosplenic gamma-delta T-cell
lymphoma Subcutaneous panniculitis-like T-cell
lymphoma Mycosis fungoides/Sezary
syndrome Anaplastic large-cell lymphoma, T/null
cell, primary cutaneous type Peripheral T-cell
lymphoma, not otherwise characterized Angioimmunob
lastic T-cell lymphoma Anaplastic large-cell
lymphoma, T/null cell, primary systemic type
8The Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia (1)
- Chronic lymphocytic leukemias are derived from
- B-cell line
- B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia
- B-cell chronic prolymphocytic leukemia
- Hairy cell leukemia
- Splenic marginal zone B-cell lymphoma ( /-
villous lymphocytes) - T-cell line
- T-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia
- T-cell chronic prolymphocytic leukemia
- T-cell granular lymphocytic leukemia
- Chronic lymphocytic leukemias differ form each
other in biology, morphology, antigen structure
of the cell and in clinical course
9The B-CLL - definition
- B-CLL is a neoplastic disease characterized by
proliferation and accumulation of small, mature,
long-living lymphocytes in blood, marrow and
lymphoid tissues (lymph nodes, spleen) - This lymphocytosis leads to specific clinical and
laboratory symptoms of B-CLL - The neoplastic lymphocytes have on their surface
the special for B-cell line antigens CD19, CD20
and also CD5, CD23, and a very weak expression of
surface immunoglobulin
10B-CLL epidemiology
- Most common adult leukemia in Europe and North
America (in USA incidence of about 3/100.000
population) - predominantly, CLL is a disease of elderly (50-55
years) - 40 of leukemias in patients over 60 years old
- Morbidity
- Men 2,2-3,69 / 100 000 / year
- Women 0,9-1,59 / 100 000 / year
- /men affect twice as often as women 21 ratio of
male to female / - CLL morbidity rapidly increases with age
(especially between 50 and 60 years of age) - in 98 of patients the leukemic cells are a
monoclonal population of mature B lymphocytes
with low-density surface immunoglobulin - death from infections, BM failure, high-grade
transformation (Richter's syndrome), kachexia
11B-CLL etiology pathogenesis (1)
- the cause of CLL is unknown
- there is increased incidence in farmers, rubber
manufacturing workers and tire repair workers - genetics factors have been postulated to play a
role in high incidence of CLL in some families
12B-CLL etiology pathogenesis (2)
- Cytogenetics - clonal chromosomal abnormalities
are detected in approximately 50 of CLL patients - Immunoglobulin genes - monoclonal surface
immunoglobulin is expressed by over 90 of
patients (60 kappa and 40 lambda light chains) - nearly half of all cases have leukemia cells that
express mutated immunoglobulin variable region
genes (Ig VH genes) - associated with more
indolent disease - Immunologic abnormalities
- autoimmune disease (hemolytic anemia and
thrombocytopenia, pure red cell aplasia) - hypogammaglobulinemia
- cellular immune defects
13B-CLL clinical symptoms (1)
- often none! - 25 of patients are asymptomatic
and the diagnosis is typically accidental - unspecific night sweats, fever, weakness (many
patients have fatigue, reduced exercises
tolerance or malaise, weight loss) - recurrent infections (bacterial, viral Herpes
Zoster, fungal) they are the most common cause
of death - bleeding and symptoms of anemia and
thrombocytopenia - Lymphadenopathy (lymph node enlargement)
- at diagnosis - nontender in 80 of patients
- later - may become very large
- splenomegaly - mild to moderate in 50 of
patients - hepatomegaly
- some organs infiltration (lungs, pleura, skin and
soft tissue) - Blood lymphocytosis does not cause symptoms!
14B-CLL clinical symptoms (2)
Cervical and axillary limfadenopathy in 60-years
old patient with B-CLL
15B-CLL clinical symptoms (2)
Cervical and axillary limfadenopathy in 70-years
old patient with B-CLL
16B-CLL clinical symptoms (3)
Cervical limfadenopathy in patient with B-CLL
17B-CLL clinical symptoms (3)
The CLL patient can have splenomegaly
18B-CLL clinical symptoms (3)
The CLL patient has splenomegaly, which is visble
19B-CLL laboratory features (1)
- Morphology
- Leucocytosis with monoclonal lymphocytosis of
greater than 5.000/ul. - anemia
- Because of displacement
- and/or autoimmunohemolic (10-20 of patients have
a positive direct antiglobulin test AIHA is
commonly connected with the presence of warm
auto- antibodies IgG class rapidly increasing
fatigue, skin getting yellow, anemia with
enlarged reticulocytosis, higher level of
bilirubin) - pure red cell aplasia is very rare (selective
aplasia of red cell line in bone marrow) - thrombocytopenia
- Because of displacement
- and/or immunologic (about 5 of B-CLL patients
have anty-platelet antibodies) - protein electrophoresis Hipogammaglobulinemia,
monoclonal protein in 5 of patients
20B-CLL laboratory features (2)
- Peripheral blood smear
- Lymphocytosis
- small, mature, morphologically
- normal
- Smudge cells
- Neutropenia
- Because of displacement
- and/or autoimmunologic
21B-CLL laboratory features (3)
- Bone Marrow smear (cytological examination)
- extensive replacement of marrow element by mature
lymphocytes (more than 30)
22B-CLL laboratory features (4)
- Bone Marrow Biopsy (histological examination)
- Lymphocyte infiltration
- nodular infiltration,
- interstitial infiltration,
- difussed infiltration
- mixed infiltration
- Difussed infiltration
- (unfavourable
- prognostic factor)
23B-CLL laboratory features (5)
- Bone Marrow Biopsy
- Interstitial
- infiltration
24B-CLL laboratory features (6)
- lymph node finding (histopathological
examination) - - diffuse infiltration of small lymphocytes
identical to low-grade, small lymphocytic
lymphoma
25B-CLL laboratory features (7)
- Immunophenotype
- CD5/CD19/CD23/CD20,
- sometimes also CD38,
- low expression of CD22
- lack expression of CD 10-, CD 103-,
- 90 of the patient have a very weak expression of
surface immunoglobulin (kappa or lambda light
chain, IgM, IgD)
26B-CLL features (8)
- Radiological examinations (X-ray,
ultrasonography, CT, ...) - Serological examinations (direct and indirect
antiglobulin tests) - Biochemical examinations (lactate dehydrogenase,
?2-microglobulin)
27B-CLL laboratory features (9)
- Cytogenetic examinations - clonal chromosomal
abnormalities are detected in approximately 50
of CLL patients - deletion 13 (13q14.3)
- trisomy 12
- structural abnormalities of chromosomes 11
(11q-), 14, 17 - Genomic aberrations found in approximately 50 of
CLL
28Diagnosis of B-CLL
Blood test lymphocytosis 5G/l (6 weeks)
Morphology monoclonal population of small mature lymphocyte
B-cell CLL phenotype clonal CD5/CD19 population of lymphocyte
Markers of clonality ?/? light chain restriction cytogenetical abnormalities
Bone marrow infiltration gt 30 of nucleated cells on aspirate
Lymph node diffuse infiltrate of small lymphocytes
29RAIs CLINICAL STAGING SYSTEM
Stage Clinical Features at Diagnosis Median Survival (years)
0 Low risk Blood lymphocytosisgt5G/l, Bone marrow lymphocytosisgt30 gt12,5
I Intermediate risk Blood lymphocytosisgt5G/l, Bone marrow lymphocytosisgt30 and enlarged lymph nodes 8
II Intermediate risk Blood lymphocytosisgt5G/l, Bone marrow lymphocytosisgt30 and enlarged spleen and/or liver 6
III High risk Blood lymphocytosisgt5G/l, Bone marrow lymphocytosisgt30 and anemia (Hb lt 11g/dl) 1,5-2
IV High risk Blood lymphocytosisgt5G/l, Bone marrow lymphocytosisgt30 and thrombocytopenia(lt 100 000 /ul) 1,5-2
30CLL Rai stages
31BINETs CLINICAL STAGING SYSTEM
Stage Clinical Features at Diagnosis Median Survival (month)
A Blood lymphocytosisgt5G/l, Bone marrow lymphocytosisgt30 and less than 3 areas of palpable lymphoid-tissue enlargement Without anemia (Hb gt 6,21 mmol/l, 10 g/dl) and thrombocytopenia gt 120 month
B Blood lymphocytosisgt5G/l, Bone marrow lymphocytosisgt30 and 3 and more areas of palpable lymphoid-tissue enlargement Without anemia (Hb gt 6,21 mmol/l, 10 g/dl) and thrombocytopenia 60 month
C Blood lymphocytosisgt5G/l, Bone marrow lymphocytosisgt30 with anemia (Hgb lt10g/dL) or thrombocytopenia (Plt lt100.000/uL) 24 month
An area cervical, axillary left, axillary right,
inquinofemoral left, inquinofemoral right lymph
nodes, spleen, liver
32CLL Binets stages
33New prognostic indicators in B-CLL (1)
Prognostic factor Good prognosis Bad prognosis
Clinical stage according to Binet Rai A 0 B, C I, II, III, IV
Bone marrow infiltration in - bone marrow biopsy - cytological examination Leucocytosis Prolymphocytes in peripheral blood Leukemia cell doubling time Non-Difussed infiltration lt80 lymphocytes lt 50 x 109/l lt 10 gt 12 months Difussed infiltration gt 80 lymphocytes gt 50 x 109/l gt10 lt 12 months
34New prognostic indicators in B-CLL (2)
Prognostic factor Good prognosis Bad prognosis
Serum markers lactate dehydrogenase activity (LDH) ß2-mikroglobulin activity lymphocytes thymidine kinase activity CD23 expression Normal range Elevated
Clonal chromosomal abnormalities Normal karyotype isolated del (13q) Del (11q) Del (17p)
CD 38 expression lt 30 gt 30
35New prognostic indicators in B-CLL (3)
Prognostic factor Good prognosis Bad prognosis
The mutational status of immunoglobulin variable region of heavy chain genes (IgvH) mutated unmutated
ZAP70 expression low (lt 20) high ( gt 20 )
Survivin absence presence
36New prognostic indicators in B-CLL (4) - summary
- clinical stage
- bone marrow histology (diffuse replacement
carries worst prognosis) - leukemia cell doubling time (less than 1 year -
worse prognosis) - percentage of prolymphocyte
- high cell-surface expression of CD38
- ZAP-70 expression
- serum level of B2-microglobulin thymidine
kinaze, LDH, sCD23 - IgVH mutational status
- genetic features - FISH cytogenetic
- low-risk normal kariotype isolated del(13q)
- high-risk del(17p0, del(11q), trisomy 12
37CLL ZAP-70 ZAP70 is an intracellular protein
which is strongly correlated with the VH status
in CLL
38CLL treatment (1)
- We have to remember
- B-CLL indolent lymphoma, but incurable
- Elderly patients risk of additional diseases
- Course of the disease can be very long, indolent
for many years, patient can die because of
another reason which is not connected to B-CLL. - Decision about treatment depends on clinical
stage, prognostic factors and patients condition
- Indications to treatment
- III/IV stage according to Rais classification
- Progressive disease (rapidly increasing
lymphadenopathy, infections, general symptoms) - leukemia cell doubling time lt6 (12) months
- rapidly increasing organomegaly
- Secondary anemia, neutropenia, thrombocytopenia
because of bone marrow infiltration - Richters syndrome
39CLL treatment (2)
- Watch and wait
- Monotherapy
- Glucocorticoids (autoimmunological complications)
- alkylating agents (Chlorambucil,
Cyclophosphamide) - purine analogues (Fludarabine, Cladribine,
Pentostatin) - Combination chemotherapy
- Chlorambucil/Cyclophosphamide Prednisone
- purine analog (Fludarabine) Cyclophosphamide
/- Mitoxantrone - CVP, CHOP (Cyclophosphamide, Doxorubicin,
Vincristin, Prednisone) - Monoclonal antibodies (monotherapy and in
combination) - Alemtuzumab (anti-CD52) CAMPATH
- Rituximab (anti-CD20) Mabthera
- antiCD23 etc.
- monoclonal antibodies conjugated with
radionuclides Ibritumomab tiuxetan Zevalin - Splenectomy (hypersplenism)
- Radiotherapy (massive lymphadenopathy)
40CLL treatment (3)
- Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation
- autologous - still no cure with auto-SCT
- allogenic with reduced intensity conditioning
- Even RIC-SCT is still a risky procedure -
indicated only in high-risk disease - Can allo-SCT cure CLL? - YES
- New and novel agents
- Oblimersen bcl2-directed antisense
oligonucleotide - Lenalidomide
- Flavopiridol
- Anti-CD23
- Anti-CD40
- Vaccine strategies
- Supportive therapy (allopurinol, G-CSF, blood and
platelet transfusion, immunoglobulins,
antibiotics)
41Response criteria (NCI working group 1996)
- Complete response (for at least 2 months)
- clinical features normal
- morphology normal (Hbgt11 g/dl Ptgt100 000 /ul,
lymphocytes lt4000 G/l neutrofiles gt1500 G/l)) - bone marrow - lymphocytosis less than 30
- Partial response
- Stable Disease
- Progressive Disease
42Richters Syndrome
- is always the transformation of CLL into an
aggressive Lymphoma diffuse large cell lymphoma
(DLCL) or Hodgkins lymphoma - usually evolves after a long indolent course -
- can occur as 1st manifestation of CLL Primary
Richters - but still CLL - has a poor prognosis