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Editorial
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Volume 361:1301-1303 September 24, 2009 Number 13
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An Old AML Drug Revisited
Hervé Dombret, M.D., and Claude Gardin, M.D.

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-PubMed Citation
Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a heterogeneous hematologic cancer whose wide range of outcomes probably reflects the accumulation of various acquired mutations that block the differentiation of blood-cell progenitors or confer a proliferative advantage to the malignant clone. Current therapies can cure approximately 40% of young patients, but outcomes are much worse in patients over the age of 60 years, who constitute the majority of cases of AML.

An older age, a poor performance status, a high white-cell count, previous exposure to genotoxic agents, or the diagnosis of a myelodysplastic syndrome preceding the diagnosis of AML all negatively influence the . . . [Full Text of this Article]


Source Information

From the Department of Clinical Hematology and Immunology, Hôpital Saint-Louis, Assistance Publique–Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP), Université Paris 7, Paris (H.D.); and the Department of Hematology, Hôpital Avicenne, AP-HP, Université Paris 13, Bobigny (C.G.) — both in France.


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