There is no specific time for the formation of leukemia.
Leukemia may occur in a multistep process in which hematopoietic cells are normally renewed, differentiated, and apoptosed in the bone marrow and other hematopoietic tissues.
However, if there is an abnormality in this process, such as enhanced self-renewal, uncontrolled proliferation, impaired differentiation, and blocked apoptosis of leukemia cells, normal hematopoiesis will be inhibited and infiltrate other organs and tissues; this process is not detectable, and in the early stages, it is usually asymptomatic, and not easy to detect.
In addition, leukemia is divided into two major categories, acute and chronic, for the acute mostly primitive cells and early juvenile cell differentiation stagnation, progress faster, while the chronic mostly more mature naïve cells and mature cell differentiation stagnation, usually slower development of the disease. However, these cellular arrests are asymptomatic before the onset of the disease, and it is impossible to accurately count the time of formation.
If leukemia is suspected, you should seek timely medical attention. For diagnosed leukemia, you should actively treat the disease and communicate with your doctor to improve the cure rate.