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Specific Diagnoses

Roundup and Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia (CLL) — What the Science and the Cases Show

By The Alvarez Law Firm · June 15, 2026

Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) is the most common form of adult leukemia in the United States, and it is also one of the lymphoid cancers most consistently linked to glyphosate exposure in the epidemiologic literature. For the Roundup litigation, CLL is among the qualifying diagnoses our team evaluates routinely. This guide walks through what CLL is, how it is diagnosed, the science of the glyphosate-CLL association, the treatment landscape, and what CLL Roundup cases need.

What CLL Is

Chronic lymphocytic leukemia is a slow-growing cancer of B lymphocytes — a type of white blood cell that normally helps fight infection. In CLL, the affected B cells multiply uncontrollably and accumulate in the blood, bone marrow, lymph nodes, and spleen. The disease shares many biologic features with small lymphocytic lymphoma (SLL); in fact, CLL and SLL are considered the same disease with different presentations, and the literature often refers to them together as CLL/SLL.

CLL is classified as a non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) under the World Health Organization classification system. That classification matters for the Roundup litigation because the qualifying diagnosis framework used by federal and state courts in NHL cases generally encompasses CLL/SLL.

How CLL Gets Diagnosed

CLL is often discovered incidentally. Many patients have no symptoms at the time of diagnosis. The trigger is usually an abnormal complete blood count (CBC) showing an elevated lymphocyte count — sometimes during a routine physical, sometimes during workup for another condition entirely.

Confirmation involves:

The Glyphosate-CLL Connection

The epidemiologic literature linking glyphosate exposure to CLL specifically is part of the broader NHL evidence base. Key elements:

The defense disputes the strength of the CLL-specific association in some cases by arguing that CLL has a less robust epidemiologic link than DLBCL or follicular lymphoma. The plaintiffs' response cites the inclusion of CLL within the NHL classification, the consistency across studies that did report subtype-specific findings, and the broad biological mechanism that applies across lymphoid malignancies.

Treatment Landscape

CLL treatment has evolved substantially. The historical chemoimmunotherapy regimens (FCR, BR) have been largely replaced by targeted therapies:

CLL is often a chronic, indolent disease — patients may live for many years with periodic treatment cycles. Some patients require no treatment for years after diagnosis (the "watch and wait" approach). Others require active therapy from the start. The disease course is highly variable.

What CLL Roundup Cases Need

The Damages Picture for CLL Cases

CLL is a chronic disease, which changes the damages calculation compared to aggressive lymphomas like DLBCL. CLL cases typically include:

If You or a Family Member Has CLL

Free, confidential case review. CLL cases with documented Roundup or glyphosate exposure history are among the diagnoses we evaluate most frequently.

Free case review. No fees unless we recover compensation for you.

Sources

CLL Diagnosis with Roundup History?

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