research
Unraveling Glucocorticoid Resistance In MLLrearranged Infant Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia
- Publication date
- 26 March 2014
- Publisher
- __Abstract__
In the Netherlands, approximately 650 children aged between 0 and 18 years are diagnosed
with cancer every year, including ~120 patients suffering from leukemia. Leukemia (Greek for
leukos - white, and haima for blood) is a type of cancer characterized by an abnormal increase
of immature (non-functional) white blood cells in the bone marrow. As a result, the production
of all healthy, functional blood cells is impaired, leading to anemia (loss of functional red blood
cells), infections (loss of functional white blood cells) and (internal) bleeding (loss of functional
platelets), and eventually to leukemic infiltration of other tissues such as liver, spleen, skin and
in some instances even in the central nervous system. Depending on the rate of disease
progression, leukemia is classified into “acute” (rapidly developing) or “chronic” (slowly
developing). Acute leukemias are usually characterized by uncontrolled proliferation of highly
immature (leukemic) white blood cells, whereas chronic leukemias more often involve the
malignant transformation of more differentiated white blood cells. Leukemia can further be
classified into lymphoid (B-cell or T-cell leukemias) or non-lymphoid (myeloid) types of leukemia,
depending on the type of white blood cell that was subjected to leukemic transformation.