| Literature DB >> 29760815 |
Saturnino Marco Lupi1, Arianna Rodriguez Y Baena1, Gabriele Cervino2, Claudia Todaro1, Silvana Rizzo1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML) in pediatric patients is a serious disease, although, for the subgroup of patients who receive proper treatment, a long-term survival rate above 50% is typical. The cycles of chemo- and radiotherapy used to treat AML can impair dental development. CASE REPORT: Herein, we describe the oral condition of a 25-year-old male patient treated for AML with chemo- and radiotherapy from 5 to 7 years of age; his AML has remained in remission for the past 18 years. He had lost only one permanent tooth, but the remaining teeth demonstrated serious deformations and radicular hypoplasia. Two teeth required immediate extraction and subsequent replacement by implant-supported crowns. We found that the decayed, missing, filled teeth (DMFT) index was not representative of the real oral condition. Here, we report the full case and provide a brief review of the literature.Entities:
Keywords: Acute myeloid leukemia; Bone marrow transplantation; Children teeth; Dental anomalies; Dental implants; Long-term effects
Year: 2018 PMID: 29760815 PMCID: PMC5897961 DOI: 10.2174/1874210601812010230
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Open Dent J ISSN: 1874-2106
Patient's history.
| November 1996 | Diagnosis of monocytic AML (age 5), by the Department of Pediatric Oncohematology of Policlinico San Matteo of Pavia; |
| - | Chemotherapy for the diagnosed AML, according to the modified AIEOP LAM 92 protocol; |
| March 1997 | Diagnosis of medullary recidivism (age 6) refractory to the above chemotherapy protocol upon its re-introduction; |
| April 1997 | Allogenic bone marrow transplantation from an HLA-adequate donor (the patient’s brother), after conditioning via busulfan, cyclophosphamide, and melphalan administration; |
| April 1998 | Diagnosis of new recidivism at the rear-peritoneal abdominal level (age 7); |
| July 1999 | Allogenic bone marrow transplantation from patient’s brother, after a myeloablative treatment via total-body irradiation combined with cyclophosphamide and thiotepa; |
| January 2009 | Diagnosis of AML-free (age 18) after reaching the 10-year disease-free checkpoint. |