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Spontaneous Remission In Congenital Leukemia Is Not Related To (mosaic) Trisomy 21: Case Presentation And Literature Review

Van et al., 2004Leukemia

van den Berg, H., Hopman, A. H., Kraakman, K. C., & de Jong, D. (2004). spontaneous remission in congenital leukemia is not related to (mosaic) trisomy 21: case presentation and literature review. Pediatric hematology and oncology, 21(2), 135–144. https://doi.org/10.1080/08880010490273000

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Abstract

Congenital leukemia is seldomly diagnosed. Cases should be differentiated from transient leukemoid reaction, which is noted in Down syndrome. Outcome in congenital leukemia is poor, but spontaneous remissions have been described. The authors report on a female neonate with myeloid leukemia of the skin; no blood and bone marrow involvement was noted. Constitutional 47, XX, + 21 was excluded. In situ hybridization on a paraffin-embedded skin biopsy sample did not show trisomy 21 in the leukemia lesions. No antileukemia therapy was given. During follow-up, small nodules (diameter up to 3 mm) on the soles of both feet came and went over a 3-month period. The child is now 3.5 years old and well. To date, 18 cases of congenital leukemia showing spontaneous remission have been described in the literature, almost exclusively myeloid leukemia (FAB M4 and M5). Congenital leukemia confined to the skin was described in only 4 cases. On follow-up, 6 cases relapsed; only one of them initially had skin involvement only. The data from this patient and literature indicate that cytostatic treatment should start only if the malignancy interferes with vital parameters. In case of relapse or progression, initial postponement of chemotherapy in these frail neonates will result in less toxicity and probably a better survival.

Case Details

Disease Location

Skin

Personal Characteristics

New born female

Clinical Characteristics

At first exam, pink lesion with a 1cm diameter was noted on the back during the first 5 days after birth, other lesions developed all over the body a biopsy of one lesion was taken and the diagnosis of cutaneous myeloid leukemia m2 was made, diagnosis was based on morphology, histochemistry, and immunohistochemistry (positive for myeloperoxidase, CD15, 43, 45, 68, and 117) patient was referred at 26 days, physical exam a biopsy lesion was noted on her right leg, on the soles of both feet, there were a total of three small purple subcutaneous nodules with a diameter of 3mm were seen DNA analysis of bone marrow noted a rearrangement of the mll-gene the dig-labeled pac probe for 21 qter was detected with avidin-fitc in both epidermal cells and tumor cells, a disomy for chromosome 21 was seen

Remission Characteristics

Before lab and staging, sr of all lesions was observed after a few weeks, small nodules (up to 3cm diameter) on the soles of both feet came and went during a 3 months period; subsequently, the nodules became purple and disappeared in 2 weeks no new nodules developed after the age of 3.5 months she is now 3.5 years and well

Treatment & Mechanisms

Proposed Remission Mechanisms

It might be that the anomaly isn't a true leukemia but a derailment similar to tmd might be that the tumor burden is low and is attacked by the immune system possibility that the abnormal cells seen in the neonatal period have not yet acquired full proliferative capacity and still have a very high rate of spontaneous apoptosis suspection of maternal-fetal immune interactions and a role for oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes

Clinical Treatment

None reported

Non-Clinical Treatment

None reported