Abstract

Acute leukemia is more common in older people than in the young or middle-aged. However, the possibilities of achieving remission or prolonging survival are both inversely correlated with increasing age. We studied survival in 118 acute leukemia patients over the age of 64 seen at a university hospital from 1970 to 1987. Seventy percent had myeloid morphology. Median survival times were 106 days in those diagnosed in the 1970s and 71 days for those diagnosed in the 1980s. This was little changed from an earlier series from the same hospital extending back to the 1940s in which median survival was 69 days. Considering the two decades separately, age at diagnosis, sex, race, type of leukemia, and whether or not disease-specific treatment was applied had no significant effect on survival duration. Acute leukemia in the older patient demands difficult medical and ethical choices. Supportive therapy provides immediate comfort and relatively limited morbidity with certainty of death within a few months. Disease-specific therapy causes immediate morbidity for all, shortened life for the majority, and extended life for the minority.

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