Resumen:
Cancer in children, and mainly the acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), is considered as one of the leading public health problems in Mexico. Glucocorticoids used to treat ALL may cause suppression of the hypothalamic-pituitaryadrenal axis. The aim of the present study was to determine whether cortisol levels in saliva of the patients with ALL are related to the response to the remission induction therapy. The authors have conducted a clinical, prospective and comparative study. The Mann-Whitney U test was used to compare the variables values by gender or type of evolution. According to the patients’ evolution, ROC curves were made for salivary cortisol levels and uric acid. An absolute value of 1000 blasts in peripheral blood count after a week of prednisone regimen was defined as a satisfactory response to the treatment. Review of the data has shown that area under the salivary cortisol levels’ curve (AUC) was greater than that under the uric acid levels’, as a predictor of a poor response to the remission induction. There were no statistically significant gender-associated differences in any variables except in erythrocytes. High levels of cortisol in saliva at the time of diagnosis of ALL seem to be of bad prognosis of the response to the remission induction therapy.