Which is more serious, lymphoma or leukemia?

Lymphoma and leukemia are both very serious diseases, which may lead to the death of the patient if the treatment is not timely or ineffective.
Lymphoma is a malignant tumor originated from lymphohematopoietic system, which mainly manifests as painless enlarged lymph nodes, enlarged liver and spleen, and may also have systemic symptoms such as fever, night sweating, and emaciation. All tissues and organs of the body can be involved, and if the treatment is not effective, it may eventually lead to the failure of various tissues and organs, resulting in the death of the patient.
Leukemia is also a kind of malignant tumor of the blood system, mainly due to a large number of clonal leukemia cells proliferating and accumulating in the bone marrow and can infiltrate other non-hematopoietic tissues and organs, which may cause anemia, bleeding, infection and fever as well as enlarged liver, spleen and lymph nodes, and in severe cases, sepsis and cerebral hemorrhage may lead to the death of the patient.
Patients with lymphoma and leukemia should go to regular hospitals as early as possible for professional treatment under the guidance of physicians, and hematopoietic stem cell transplantation can be used to rebuild patients’ hematopoietic function and immune function, so as to treat lymphoma and leukemia fundamentally.