Factors that may increase your risk of developing some types of leukemia include:
Symptoms of leukemia depend on how much the cancer has grown and may include:
The chronic forms of leukemia often cause no symptoms until much later in the
Chemotherapy is the standard treatment for many types of leukemia. Even when a cure is not possible, chemotherapy may help you live longer and feel better.
What type of treatment you need will depend on many things, including what kind of leukemia you have, how far along it is, and your age and overall health.
Treatments for leukemia include:
The risk factors may be different for the different types of leukemia:
Having one or more risk factors does not mean that a person will get leukemia. Most people who have risk factors never develop the disease.
Leukemia usually starts in the white blood cells. Your white blood cells are potent infection fighters — they normally grow and divide in an orderly way, as your body needs them. But in people with leukemia, the bone marrow produces a large number of abnormal white blood cells, which don't function properly.
When you are healthy, your bone marrow makes:
When you have leukemia, the bone marrow starts to make a lot of abnormal white blood cells, called leukemia cells. They don't do the work of normal white blood cells, they grow faster than normal cells, and they don't stop growing when they should.
Over time, leukemia cells can crowd out the normal blood cells. This can lead to serious problems such as anemia, bleeding, and infections. Leukemia cells can also spread to the lymph nodes or other organs and cause
The four main types of leukemia are: