Table 5.

Characteristics of older and younger adults with acute myeloid leukemia (AML).

CharacteristicOlder AMLPatientsAYounger AMLPatientsA
A In general, Older AML Patients are defined as ≥ 60 years of age; Younger AML Patients as < 60 years of age. 
B New diagnoses, per 100,000 US citizens per year. Older/younger division occurs at 65 years. 
C Percentages rounded to nearest whole number 
D Rates following remission-induction therapy with an anthracycline- or anthracenedione-based regimen. 
Population incidenceB 17.6 1.8 
Favorable cytogeneticsC 
    t(8;21) 2% 9% 
    inv 16 or t(16;16) 1–3% 10% 
    t(15;17) 4% 6–12% 
Unfavorable cytogeneticsC 
    −7 8–9% 3% 
    +8 6–10% 4% 
    Complex 18% 7% 
MDR1 expression 71% 35% 
Secondary AML 24–56% 8% 
Treatment-related mortalityD 25–30% 5–10% 
Complete remissionD 38–62% 65–73% 
Long-term survivalC 5–15% 30% 
CharacteristicOlder AMLPatientsAYounger AMLPatientsA
A In general, Older AML Patients are defined as ≥ 60 years of age; Younger AML Patients as < 60 years of age. 
B New diagnoses, per 100,000 US citizens per year. Older/younger division occurs at 65 years. 
C Percentages rounded to nearest whole number 
D Rates following remission-induction therapy with an anthracycline- or anthracenedione-based regimen. 
Population incidenceB 17.6 1.8 
Favorable cytogeneticsC 
    t(8;21) 2% 9% 
    inv 16 or t(16;16) 1–3% 10% 
    t(15;17) 4% 6–12% 
Unfavorable cytogeneticsC 
    −7 8–9% 3% 
    +8 6–10% 4% 
    Complex 18% 7% 
MDR1 expression 71% 35% 
Secondary AML 24–56% 8% 
Treatment-related mortalityD 25–30% 5–10% 
Complete remissionD 38–62% 65–73% 
Long-term survivalC 5–15% 30% 

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