| Literature DB >> 16677413 |
Michael Darmon1, Magali Ciroldi, Guillaume Thiery, Benoît Schlemmer, Elie Azoulay.
Abstract
Acute renal failure (ARF) in cancer patients is a dreadful complication that causes substantial morbidity and mortality. Moreover, ARF may preclude optimal cancer treatment by requiring a decrease in chemotherapy dosage or by contraindicating potentially curative treatment. The pathways leading to ARF in cancer patients are common to the development of ARF in other conditions. However, ARF may also develop due to etiologies arising from cancer treatment, such as nephrotoxic chemotherapy agents or the disease itself, including post-renal obstruction, compression or infiltration, and metabolic or immunological mechanisms. This article reviews specific renal disease in cancer patients, providing a comprehensive overview of the causes of ARF in this setting, such as treatment toxicity, acute renal failure in the setting of myeloma or bone marrow transplantation.Entities:
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Year: 2006 PMID: 16677413 PMCID: PMC1550893 DOI: 10.1186/cc4907
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Causes of acute renal failure in cancer patients
| Pre-renal failure | Sepsis |
| Extracellular dehydration (diarrhoea, mucitis, vomiting) | |
| Sinusoidal obstruction syndrome (formerly called hepatic veno-occlusive disease) | |
| Drugs (e.g., calcineurin inhibitors, ACE inhibitors, NSAIDs) | |
| Capillary-leak syndrome (IL2) | |
| Intrinsic failure | |
| Acute tubular necrosis | Ischaemia (shock, severe sepsis) |
| Nephrotoxic agents (contrast agents, aminoglycosides, amphotericin, ifosfamide, cisplatin) | |
| Disseminated intravascular coagulation | |
| Intravascular haemolysis | |
| Acute interstitial nephritis | Immuno-allergic nephritis |
| Pyelonephritis | |
| Cancer infiltration (e.g., lymphoma, metastasis) | |
| Nephrocalcinosis | |
| Vascular nephritis | Thrombotic microangiopathy |
| Vascular obstruction | |
| Glomerulonephritis | Amyloidosis (AL, myeloma; AA, renal carcinoma or Hodgkin's disease) |
| Immunotactoid glomerulopathy | |
| Membranous glomerulonephritis (pulmonary, breast or gastric carcinoma) | |
| IgA glomerulonephritis, focal glomerulosclerosis | |
| Post-renal failure | Intra-renal obstruction (e.g., urate crystals, light chain, acyclovir, methotrexate) |
| Extrarenal obstruction (retroperitonal fibrosis, ureteral or bladder outlet obstruction) |
ACE inhibitors, angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors; NSAIDs, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs.
Acute tumour lysis syndrome: associated malignancies, risk factors, clinical presentation and prophylactic treatment
| Malignancies associated with TLS | |
| High risk | High-grade non-Hodgkin's lymphoma |
| Acute lymphoid leukaemia | |
| Acute myeloid leukaemia | |
| Intermediate risk | Myeloma |
| Low-grade non-Hodgkin's lymphoma | |
| Small-cell lung carcinoma | |
| Low risk | Medulloblastoma |
| Breast or gastrointestinal carcinoma | |
| Risk factors | Tumour spread |
| Rapid tumour growth | |
| Chemosensitive tumour | |
| LDH >1,500 IU/l | |
| Hypokalaemia/hypophosphataemia | |
| Pre-existing renal failure | |
| Clinical presentation | |
| Hyperkalaemia | Intracellular potassium release |
| Hyperphosphataemia | Intracellular PO4- release |
| Calcium phosphate deposition | |
| Hypocalcaemia | Calcium phosphate deposition |
| Rarely symptomatic | |
| Hyperuricaemia | Nucleic acid degradation |
| Acute renal failure | |
| Prevention | Volume expansion |
| Urate oxidase if risk factor for TLS | |
| Urine alkalisation controversial | |
| Do not correct hypocalcaemia if asymptomatic | |
| If [calcium] × [phosphate] remains above 4.6 despite prophylactic measures, initiate renal replacement therapy | |
| Avoid correction of hypokalaemia or hypophosphoraemia before induction |
LDH, lactate dehydrogenase; TLS, tumour lysis syndrome.
Factors associated with sinusoidal obstruction syndrome
| Patient characteristics | Age |
| Pre-existing liver disease | |
| Hormonal treatment | |
| Conditioning regimen | Cyclophosphamide |
| Total body irradiation | |
| Busulfan | |
| Carmustine | |
| Carboplatin | |
| Thiotepa | |
| Melphalan | |
| Gemtuzumab ozogamicin | |
| Transplant source | HLA-identical non-related donor |
| HLA mismatch donor | |
| Infection or antibiotics | Cytomegalovirus reactivation |
| Amphotericin during conditioning | |
| Acyclovir during conditioning | |
| Vancomycin during conditioning |
LDH, lactate dehydrogenase; TLS, tumour lysis syndrome.
Diagnostic and severity criteria for sinusoidal obstruction syndrome
| Diagnostic criteria | Hepatomegaly |
| Sudden weight gain (+ 2% of body weight) | |
| Jaundice (total bilirubin >34 μmol/l) | |
| Right upper quadrant pain | |
| No other cause: | |
| Budd-Chiari syndrome | |
| Sepsis | |
| Heart failure | |
| Graft versus host disease | |
| Other symptoms | Cytolysis |
| Gall bladder wall thickening | |
| Portal hypertension | |
| Multiple organ failure | |
| Thrombocytopenia | |
| Severe sinusoidal obstruction syndrome | Multiple organ failure |
| Thrombocytopenia | |
| Cytolysis with ASAT or ALAT >750 IU/l | |
| Confusion or disorientation | |
| Maximum total bilirubin or severity of weight gain |
LDH, lactate dehydrogenase; TLS, tumour lysis syndrome.