Could COVID-19 induce remission of acute leukemia?

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Abstract

Background: COVID-19 viral pandemic caused many mortalities in cancer patients especially those with hematological malignancies. The immunological response to COVID-19 infection is responsible for the outcome of cases whether mild, severe or critical. Case presentation: Two cases presented with moderate COVID-19 viral infection, concomitant with acute myeloid leukemia and T acute lymphoblastic leukemia, respectively. Surprisingly, after the administration of COVID-19 supportive therapy, the cases showed disease remission after a follow-up period of 12 and 5 months, respectively. Additionally, the blast cells dropped to only 3% and 0% in the bone marrow aspirates of those two cases, respectively, after it was 30% in both cases at diagnosis. Conclusion: The immune response that emerged against COVID-19 infection could potentially produce anti-tumor immunity in some patients, or the virus may act as an oncolytic virus. However, further investigations are required to explain this phenomenon, which may help in finding a possible new targeted therapy for these cases.

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Kandeel, E. Z., Refaat, L., Abdel-Fatah, R., Samra, M., Bayoumi, A., Abdellateif, M. S., … Khafagy, M. (2021). Could COVID-19 induce remission of acute leukemia? Hematology (United Kingdom), 26(1), 870–873. https://doi.org/10.1080/16078454.2021.1992117

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