Acute Promyelocytic Leukemia in a Patient with Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia —A Case Report

Publication date: Available online 16 August 2017 Source:Hematology/Oncology and Stem Cell Therapy Author(s): Prajwal Boddu, Ellen Schlette, Beenu Thakral, Guillin Tang, Naveen Pemmaraju, Tapan Kadia, Alessandra Ferrajoli, Farhad Ravandi, William Wierda, Nitin Jain Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) is known to be associated rarely with myeloid malignancies such as acute myelogenous leukemia. In this article, we report an extremely rare occurrence of acute promyelocytic leukemia in a patient with CLL. A 71-year-old man first presented to our clinic with a diagnosis of CLL and worsening motor neuropathy symptoms. It was suspected that his CLL might be contributing to the neuropathy as a paraneoplastic syndrome, and he was treated with rituximab monotherapy in weekly doses for the 1st month and monthly treatments thereafter. By the end of his sixth monthly course of rituximab, the patient noted significant improvement in neuropathy symptoms, but reported experiencing a new-onset worsening fatigue. He had new-onset cytopenias (white blood cells 1.6 k/µL, hemoglobin 11.7 g/dL, and platelet count 77 k/µL). A bone marrow examination was performed; it showed a high percentage of progranulocytes (21%), which stained positive for MPO and demonstrated a fine granular pattern on the PML oncogenic domain immunofluorescence test. The diagnosis of acute promyelocytic leukemia was confirmed by fluorescence in situ hybridization, which showed a PML/RARα rearrangement in 46% of...
Source: Hematology Oncology and Stem Cell Therapy - Category: Cancer & Oncology Source Type: research