Approximately 23 new cases of AML appear per each million Americans each year. Men are somewhat more likely to develop AML than are women. Approximately 29 new cases appear per every million males while approximately 19 new cases appear per every million females per year.
Older persons are considerably more likely to develop AML. Approximately 13 people per million younger than 65 years of age will develop AML. In contrast, 122 people per million older than 65 years of age will develop the disease.
AML sometimes affects children. About 500 children develop AML in the United States every year. Approximately one in five of all children who develop leukemia develop AML. The disease affects boys and girls in roughly equal numbers. Children of all ethnic groups may develop the disease. If one of two identical twins develops AML, the chances are considerable that the other twin will develop it as well.
AML is neither contagious nor inherited. However, people who suffer from certain genetic disorders, such as Fanconi anemia, Klinefelter syndrome, Patau syndrome, Bloom syndrome, and Down syndrome, are at greater risk of developing AML than the general population. A child with Down syndrome is roughly 14 times as likely as the average child to develop leukemia.
Any person who has been exposed to radiation at high doses is at heightened risk of developing AML, as are people exposed to benzene, a chemical used in the manufacture of plastics, rubber, medicines, and certain other chemicals. Another group of people at increased risk for developing AML are those who have been treated for cancer with certain medicines, for example, chloramphenicol, phenylbutazone, chloroquine, and methoxypsoralen.
The symptoms of AML are generally vague and non-specific. A patient may experience all or some of the following symptoms:
A small minority of patients with AML have a tumor of leukemic cells at diagnosis. Such a tumor may appear in the lung, breast, brain, uterus, ovary, stomach, prostate, or certain other places in the body.
Some children with AML present to their doctor with very few symptoms, while other children present with severe symptoms. Anemia is usually present. The symptoms of the anemia may include fatigue, dizziness, headache, paleness of the skin, or, infrequently, congestive heart failure. Easy bruising, bleeding gums, and nosebleeds may be present, as may fever. There may be swollen gums, bone pain or joint pain, or, rarely, an actual tumor. Some infants with AML have skin disorders.
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Author Info: Lata Cherath Ph.D., Bob Kirsch, The Gale Group Inc., Gale, Detroit, Gale Encyclopedia of Cancer, 2002 |