Cutaneous Presentation of Juvenile Chronic Myelogenous Leukemia: A Diagnostic and Therapeutic Dilemma

Abstract
Annular, erythematous, circinate plaques were the first manifestation of juvenile chronic myelogenous leukemia (JCML) in an otherwise healthy 2.5-year-old boy who had had these lesions since 6 months of age. The lesions showed an atypical hematopoietic infiltrate on biopsy. Biopsy of a bone marrow specimen and peripheral blood smear were normal six months before leukemic transformation. At 3 years of age the boy developed splenomegaly, thrombocytopenia, and petechiae, and a bone marrow aspirate and cell marker studies were regarded as consistent with, if not diagnostic of, JCML. Four previous cases of cutaneous leukemic infiltrate associated with JCML have been published. Our patient had recurring urticarial-like plaques for two years before the initial bone marrow finding of JCML. Given the poor prognosis and progressively evolving course of JCML, it may be appropriate to consider therapy before bone marrow changes, based on the presence of the cutaneous eruption with the appropriate findings on skin biopsy and an elevated fetal hemoglobin.