Leukemia is a cancer of the blood-forming tissues, most often involving white blood cells. The main way patients and families understand is by two big categories: acute vs chronic and lymphoid vs myeloid. That is why the four major types most often explained on patient pages are AML, ALL, CLL, and CML. Different types behave differently and can have very different treatment paths.
What Leukemia Is
Leukemia is a cancer of early blood-forming cells, usually in the bone marrow. As cells build up, they can crowd out normal blood-forming cells, which helps explain why symptoms often relate to anemia, infection risk, and easy bruising or bleeding. American Cancer Society guidance explains that leukemias are mainly classified by whether they are acute or chronic and whether they begin in myeloid or lymphoid cells
Main Types of Leukemia
Is often grouped by how quickly it grows and which blood-forming cells are affected.
This table gives a simple patient-facing overview of the main types of leukemia and the
treatment pathways commonly associated with each one.
| Type | Simple overview | Common treatment pathways |
|---|---|---|
Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) | A fast-growing leukemia that affects myeloid cells. | Chemotherapy, radiation therapy, stem cell transplant, targeted therapy, and other drug therapy. |
Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) | A fast-growing leukemia affecting lymphoid cells. | Chemotherapy, radiation therapy, stem cell transplant, targeted therapy, and immunotherapy. |
Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) | A slower-growing leukemia in which the bone marrow makes too many lymphocytes. | Observation, steroids, chemotherapy, targeted therapy, and stem cell transplant. |
Chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) | A leukemia of myeloid cells that often has a distinct targeted-therapy treatment pathway. | Targeted therapy, immunotherapy, chemotherapy, stem cell transplant, and donor lymphocyte infusion in some settings. |
AML vs ALL
Simple Difference
AML = acute leukemia affecting myeloid cells
ALL = acute leukemia affecting lymphoid cells
Both are acute, which means they usually progress faster and often need treatment started promptly.
Diagnosis
Leukemia is usually diagnosed with tests that examine the blood and bone marrow. NCI’s CLL page specifically says tests that examine the blood are used to diagnose CLL, and patient guidance more broadly explains that the exact tests depend on the type of suspected.
Treatment Overview
Treatment depends heavily on the exact type, subtype, and pace of disease.
Chemotherapy
Chemotherapy remains a major treatment pathway, especially for many acute leukemias. ACS patient guidance says treatment for many acute leukemias most often starts with intravenous chemotherapy, and NCI lists chemotherapy in AML and ALL treatment options.
Targeted therapy and other drug treatments
Some types, especially CML and some CLL settings, are strongly linked to targeted drug therapies. NCI’s CML guidance specifically highlights targeted therapy as a key treatment pathway.
Stem cell transplant
Stem cell transplant is an important treatment consideration in some leukemias, especially certain higher-risk or recurrent cases. NCI includes stem cell transplant among AML, ALL, CLL, and CML treatment options in appropriate settings.
Watchful waiting / observation
Not all chronic leukemias need immediate treatment. NCI’s CLL guidance includes observation as one management option, which is important because many users assume always needs urgent treatment right away.
Clinical trials
Clinical trials are part of treatment development across leukemia types, and NCI’s treatment pages repeatedly note that new types of treatment are being tested in clinical trials.
Stem Cell Transplant Considerations
Since this page needs to route to a transplant page, keep this section high-level.
A stem cell transplant is not needed for every leukemia, but it can be part of treatment for some people depending on the type, response to treatment, and overall risk. NCI lists stem cell transplant among treatment options for AML, ALL, CLL, and CML in selected situations.
Questions to Ask Your Care Team
What type of leukemia do I have?
Is it acute or chronic?
Is it myeloid or lymphoid?
What subtype or phase do I have?
Does treatment need to start now?
Will chemotherapy be part of treatment?
Do I need to ask about stem cell transplant?
Are targeted drugs or immunotherapy part of my treatment plan?
Should I ask about clinical trials now?
What symptoms should make me call urgently?
FAQ
What are the main types of leukemia?
The four major types most often explained to patients are AML, ALL, CLL, and CML. They are grouped based on whether they are acute or chronic, and whether they start in myeloid or lymphoid cells.
What are common leukemia symptoms?
Common symptoms can include tiredness, infections, easy bruising or bleeding, breathlessness, fever, night sweats, and weight loss. Symptoms vary by type.
What is the difference between AML and ALL?
Both are acute leukemias, but AML starts in myeloid cells and ALL starts in lymphoid cells.
Is chemotherapy used for leukemia?
Yes. Chemotherapy is a major treatment for many leukemias, especially many acute leukemias, although some chronic leukemias may rely more on targeted drugs or observation first.
Does every leukemia patient need a stem cell transplant?
No. Stem cell transplant is important in some leukemia cases, but not every person with leukemia needs one. It depends on the type of leukemia and the treatment plan.
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