Abstract

Acute myeloid leukemia in children is a heterogeneous disease with different morphological and cytogenetic features. New diagnostic tools and treatments, improved supportive care and the use of genomic tissue typing in selecting donors for hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) adds to increased survival rates. Candidates to HSCT in first complete remission are patients with cytogenetic or molecular unfavorable prognostic markers, or blasts >15% after first induction. The use of minimal residual disease can also identify children benefiting from HSCT in first complete remission and the patients post HSCT with signs of relapse. The outcome and cure rate of acute myeloid leukemia, still remains poor and new diagnostic tools and treatments strategies need to be evaluated. In this management perspective, future management of novel minimal residual disease tools are discussed, conditioning therapies, as well as different transplantation procedures including haplo-transplantation and haplo-identical natural killer cell transplantation, but also altered graft-versus-host-disease treatments.

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