Acute myeloid leukaemia: Teenagers and young adults


This section is for teenagers and young adults and is about a type of cancer called acute myeloid leukaemia (AML). The other main type of leukaemia that can affect teenagers and young adults is acute lymphoblastic leukaemia.

For information about AML in people of all ages, read our general AML section.

Leukaemia is a cancer of the white blood cells. In leukaemia, the process for making new white blood cells gets out of control.

Immature white blood cells (called blasts) keep being made and build up in the bone marrow until there isn’t enough room for the bone marrow to make healthy white blood cells, red blood cells and platelets. The body needs these cells to:

help fight infection (white cells) carry oxygen from the lungs around the body (red blood cells) stop cuts bleeding by clotting blood (platelets)

Symptoms


Many of the symptoms of AML are caused by having fewer than normal healthy blood cells in the body. Symptoms can include:

looking paler than usual and feeling tired – because of too few red blood cells (anaemia) bruises or bleeding – you may bruise more easily and it could take longer for bleeding to stop, if you have less blood clotting cells (platelets) than normal infections – because there are too few mature white blood cells to fight infection aches and pains in your bones swollen glands (lymph nodes) in your neck, under your arm or in your groin feeling unwell and run down fever and sweats – you may have a high temperature without any obvious cause, such as an infection headaches and blurred vision – because of too many white blood cells breathlessness – because of too many white blood cells.