May 31, 2023 – Once you test negative after a bout with COVID-19, it’s a great idea to get a full health screening. This is especially important for people who are at risk for, or have, blood cancers like leukemia.
If you have blood cancer, you need to have a clear picture of how strong your immune system is – which is extra important if you have any symptoms of long COVID, experts say. That’s because most leukemia treatments lead to some type of immunocompromise, meaning these patients have weakened immune systems and therefore have trouble fighting infections they have at the same time.
Several studies have also found a potential link between COVID and leukemia, based on patients having the disease shortly after having COVID.
A study from researchers at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York City, along with Universidade Estadual do Maranhão, Centro Universitário Christus, and Universidade Federal do Ceará in Brazil, described how, after recovering from COVID, previously healthy young adults were diagnosed, respectively, with acute myeloid leukemia, T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia and myelodysplastic syndrome, which turns into acute myeloid leukemia about 50% of the time.
And Iranian research reported on a patient who was diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia about 40 days post-COVID, having a severe drop in hemoglobin and platelets. Another study looked at the chance that COVID can increase the odds of the development of hairy cell leukemia.It’s important to note that these cases were not widespread. But the authors of these studies have recommended further research to see if a conclusive, known link between COVID and a later blood cancer diagnosis can be established.
“While significantly more research is needed to show a conclusive link between the two, data have shown the negative effects of a COVID-19 infection in patients with a blood cancer,” said Lee Greenberger, PhD, the chief scientific officer at the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society. “What we do know for sure is that COVID-19 infection can be quite dangerous for people who have blood cancer, particularly those with B-cell depleting forms of cancer. We need to stay focused on helping them avoid infection and its serious outcomes.”
Read on for a closer look at how COVID-19 has been found to impact leukemia so far, and how you can work with your doctor to best protect your health based on your specific risk factors.
What Are the Symptoms of Leukemia?
Leukemia, which is cancer of the tissues that form blood in your body, including your bone marrow and lymphatic system, can occur, as we’ve seen, in a number of types. Because of this, its symptoms can vary. Symptoms can include:
What Are the Risk Factors for Leukemia?
People have a higher chance of getting leukemia if they:
How Could COVID-19 Cause Leukemia?
One potential way is that COVID may cause hematological changes in the weeks after infection that can reduce cellular immunity in some patients. The authors of the Mount Sinai/Brazilian hospitals study believe there is a chance that COVID may cause an abnormal immune response in the body that could trigger the cell mutations that cause leukemia.
But no cause has been definitively found to explain a connection.
“There could be various hypothesized mechanisms that one could propose to suggest why and how COVID might ultimately lead to blood cancer,” said Oscar B. Lahoud, MD, a bone marrow transplant and cellular therapy specialist at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York City. “It could be through various immune system stimulations, and rapid proliferation leading to mutagenesis [the process by which DNA changes, resulting in a gene mutation], but these mechanisms are not substantiated by any documented experimental data.”
If You’ve Had COVID, Should You Get Screened for Leukemia?
“At this time, I would not recommend any patient with prior COVID infection to be screened for leukemia or other blood cancers,” Lahoud said. “Patients with a strong family history, however, irrespective of COVID, should discuss their potential risks with their [doctors].”
If You Already Have Leukemia, How Can COVID Specifically Affect You?
The treatments and drugs that you take could make a COVID infection hard to control.
“Many blood cancer therapies are immunosuppressive, and thereby inhibit the ability to clear a COVID-19 infection,” said Greenberger. “Any patient with a blood cancer who suspects they have a COVID-19 infection, or tests positive for COVID-19, needs to speak to their [doctor] immediately.”
And standard COVID treatments should be used carefully.
“There are antiviral therapies that can help you recover from a COVID-19 infection, but they must be administered shortly after the infection occurs,” Greenberger continued. “In the event Paxlovid is used, your physician should consider its effects on other current medications such as those used to treat your blood cancer. The Leukemia and Lymphoma Society has developed a four-step fact sheet to help patients understand their risk and plan ahead if they should become infected.”
At the same time, you don’t want to stop your leukemia treatment.
“Data has shown that delaying care for patients with high-risk blood cancers, such as acute leukemia, has resulted in devastating outcomes,” said Lahoud.“ However, we can now treat patients with COVID and concurrent leukemia better, as therapeutic interventions against COVID emerged. These include remdesivir, dexamethasone, and monoclonal antibodies.”
The bottom line: Work with your doctor to create a specific plan for your best outcome.
“Some leukemias do not need to be treated, and can be managed expectantly for several years, while others require a more immediate initiation of therapy,” Lahoud said. “We can now treat COVID quite effectively and achieve remission of respiratory and constitutional symptoms rapidly, so that managing both is generally feasible.”
If you’re at a high risk for leukemia, or have the disease, take COVID precautions – like masking up in crowds, social distancing around people who are sick, and testing if you feel sick. Don’t panic– just be proactive.
SOURCES:
Oscar B. Lahoud, MD, bone marrow transplant and cellular therapy specialist, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York City.
Lee Greenberger, PhD, chief scientific officer, Leukemia & Lymphoma Society.
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