How long can plasma cell leukemia live?
summary
Now many people will suddenly have a special emergency, acute plasma cell leukemia is a more serious one, so we must do a good job related to this disease, so how long can plasma cell leukemia live?.
How long can plasma cell leukemia live?
First, primary plasma cell leukemia refers to patients with no history of multiple myeloma, the onset of acute plasma cell leukemia; Secondary plasma cell leukemia refers to patients with multiple myeloma at the beginning, and eventually develop into plasma cell leukemia. Vela Ojeda et al. Reported 540 cases of multiple myeloma diagnosed from 1990 to 2000, of which 24 cases (4.4%) were plasma cell leukemia.
Second: I don't know which kind you belong to. Generally, you often have high fever, bleeding, liver, spleen, lymph node enlargement and sternal tenderness. Similar to acute leukemia, you often have multiple organ infiltration. It belongs to a kind of leukemia and malignant tumor. Generally, the long-term prognosis is not good. The specific survival period depends on the treatment of chemotherapy and the recovery of patients. It is suggested that chemotherapy and other treatment should be carried out as soon as possible to prolong the survival period.
Third: plasma cell leukemia (PCL) is a rare type of acute leukemia. There are two types of plasma cell leukemia: primary plasma cell leukemia and secondary plasma cell leukemia.
matters needing attention
One is the response to chemotherapy. If chemotherapy is effective, the survival period is longer. If there is no response, the survival period is very short; The other is chromosome karyotype. Primary plasma cell leukemia and multiple myeloma are similar, with a variety of chromosomal abnormalities and oncogene mutations. Among them, hypodiploid karyotype and monosome 13 or 13q - are closely related to poor prognosis.