Chronic Myeloid Leukemia (CML) | Learn What Is CML (original) (raw)

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What You Should Know


For more information about CML and treatment, access the free booklets, Chronic Myeloid Leukemia and The CML Guide: Information for Patients and Caregivers.


What You Should Do


To download lists of suggested questions to ask your healthcare providers, click here.


How Does CML Develop?

The DNA (genetic material) of a developing stem cell in the bone marrow is damaged. This is called an “acquired mutation.”

This damaged cell becomes a leukemic cell and multiplies into many CML cells. The CML cells grow and survive better than normal cells.

As a result, the number of healthy blood cells (red cells, white cells and platelets) is usually lower than normal.

The Philadelphia Chromosome and the BCR::ABL1 Fusion Gene

Sometimes errors occur during the process of a cell copying itself or dividing into new cells. One type of error is called a “translocation.” A translocation occurs when a piece of one chromosome breaks off and attaches to another chromosome. This can result in a “fusion gene,” an abnormal gene that is formed when two different genes are fused together.

All cases of CML are caused by the BCR::ABL1 fusion gene. This gene is not found in normal blood cells.

The BCR::ABL1 gene is formed by a translocation between parts of chromosomes 9 and 22 in a single bone marrow cell during cell division. The abnormal chromosome 22 is called the "Philadelphia chromosome" (Ph chromosome).

Genes provide cells with instructions for making proteins. BCR::ABL1 oncogene produces an abnormal protein called "BCR::ABL1 tyrosine kinase," which leads to the development of CML cells.

For more information please refer to the free information booklet, Chronic Myeloid Leukemia.

Risk Factors

For most people who have chronic myeloid leukemia (CML), there are no obvious reasons why they develop the disease. No one is born with CML. It happens when there is an injury to the DNA of a single bone marrow cell. Risk factors for CML are:

Source: Chronic Myeloid Leukemia. Reviewed by Ehab Atallah, MD