“there’s really a lot of precision to add to the term leukemia because you can have a chronic lymphocytic leukemia, which is an indolent disease that sometimes we don’t even need to treat. and when we do treat it, people can be on the treatment for years,” says dr. marc-étienne beaudet, an expert in blood cancer at hotel dieu hospital of levis, quebec, near quebec city. his focus is research and treatment of acute myeloid leukemia, or aml, the most common type of leukemia in adults.
“on the other side of the spectrum, you have acute lymphoblastic leukemia (all) that usually happens in young patients and children. this leukemia is very aggressive, and patients need a lot of chemotherapy, a lot of treatment. usually, they’re cured with their therapy,” he says. “so, for the patient, it’s very hard to navigate through this information because there’s a lot of scientific language and nuance to add to the diagnosis.”
while leukemia is complex and doesn’t form a tumour that can be more easily found and targeted, beaudet says he’s seen incredible progress in effective drug therapies that continue to evolve. the incidence of leukemia in canada is stable, but because of medical advances, more people are living with it.