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Detailed Guide: Leukemia - Chronic Myeloid (CML)
How Is Chronic Myeloid Leukemia (CML) Staged?

For most cancers, staging is the process of finding out how far the cancer has spread. Most types of cancer are given stages of I, II, III, or IV, based on the size of the tumor and how far from the original site in the body the cancer has spread. Stages are useful because they can help guide your treatment. They also help determine your prognosis (outlook).

Chronic myeloid leukemia is a disease of the bone marrow. It isn't staged like most cancers. The outlook for someone with CML depends on other information, such as the phase of the disease, as well as factors like the age of the patient, blood counts, and if the spleen is enlarged.

Phases of chronic myeloid leukemia

CML is divided into 3 groups that help predict outlook. Doctors call these groups phases instead of stages. The phases are based mainly on the number of immature white blood cells - myeloblasts ("blasts") -- that are seen in the blood or bone marrow. Different groups of experts have suggested slightly different cutoffs to define the phases, but a common system (proposed by the World Health Organization) is described below.

Chronic phase

Patients in this phase typically have less than 10% blasts in their blood or bone marrow samples. These patients usually have fairly mild symptoms (if any) and usually respond to standard treatments. Most patients are diagnosed in the chronic phase.

Accelerated phase

Patients are considered to be in accelerated phase if any of the following are true:

  • the bone marrow or blood samples have more than 10% but fewer that 20% blasts
  • high blood basophil count (basophils making up at least 20% of the white blood cells)
  • increased white blood cell counts that do not go down with treatment
  • very high or very low platelet counts that are not caused by treatment
  • new chromosome changes in the leukemia cells

Patients whose CML is in accelerated phase may have symptoms such as fever, poor appetite, and weight loss. CML in the accelerated phase does not respond as well to treatment as CML in the chronic phase.

Blast phase (also called acute phase or blast crisis)

Bone marrow and/or blood samples from a patient in this phase have more than 20% blasts. The blast cells often spread to tissues and organs beyond the bone marrow. These patients often have fever, poor appetite, and weight loss. At this point the CML acts much like an aggressive acute leukemia.

Not all doctors may agree with or follow these cutoff points for the different phases. If you have questions about what phase your CML is in, be sure to have your doctor explain it to you.

Prognostic factors for chronic myeloid leukemia

Along with the phase of CML, there are other factors that may help predict the outlook for survival. These factors are sometimes helpful when choosing treatment. Factors that tend to be linked with shorter survival time are called adverse prognostic factors.

Adverse prognostic factors:

  • accelerated phase or blast phase
  • enlarged spleen
  • areas of bone damage due to growth of leukemia
  • increased number of basophils and eosinophils (certain types of granulocytes) in blood samples
  • very high or very low platelet counts
  • age 60 years or older
  • multiple chromosome changes in the CML cells

Many of these factors are taken into account in the Sokal system, which develops a score used to help predict prognosis. This system considers the person's age, the percentage of blasts in the blood, the size of the spleen, and the number of platelets. These factors are used to divide patients into low-, intermediate-, or high-risk groups. Another system, called the Euro score, includes the above factors, as well as the number of blood basophils and eosinophils. Having more of these cells indicates a poorer outlook.

The Sokal and Euro models were helpful in the past, before the newer, more effective drugs for CML were developed. It's not clear how helpful they are at this time in predicting a person's outlook. Newer drugs like imatinib (Gleevec®), dasatinib (Sprycel®), and nilotinib (Tasigna®) have changed the treatment of CML dramatically in recent years. These models haven't been tested in people who are being treated with these drugs.

Survival rates for chronic myeloid leukemia

New, highly effective drugs to treat most cases of CML first became available in 2001. There is no accurate information yet on how long patients treated with these drugs may live. All that is known is that most patients who have been treated with these drugs, starting in 2001 (or even before), are still alive.

One large study of CML patients treated with imatinib (Gleevec) found that about 90% of them were still alive 5 years after starting treatment. Most of these patients had normal white blood cells and chromosome studies after 5 years on the drug.

Last Medical Review: 11/05/2009
Last Revised: 11/05/2009

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