| Literature DB >> 26162467 |
Jemianne Bautista Jia1, Chandana Lall, Temel Tirkes, Rajesh Gulati, Ramit Lamba, Scott C Goodwin.
Abstract
UNLABELLED: Nephrotoxicity is a common adverse effect of many chemotherapeutic agents. The agents most commonly associated with chemotherapy-associated nephrotoxicity are methotrexate, semustine, streptozocin, mithramycin, and cisplatin. Certain chemotherapeutic agents have adverse effects on the kidneys and urothelium that can be visualized radiographically, including cystic change, interstitial nephritis, papillary necrosis, urothelial changes, haemorrhagic cystitis, acute tubular necrosis, and infarction. This review focuses on imaging features identifying complications of chemotherapy in the kidneys and collecting system and provides didactic cases to alert referring clinicians. TEACHING POINTS: • Nephrotoxicity is a common adverse effect of many chemotherapeutic agents. • Chemotherapies have adverse renal and urothelial effects that can be visualized radiographically. • Crizotinib use can result in the development of complex renal cysts.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26162467 PMCID: PMC4519818 DOI: 10.1007/s13244-015-0417-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Insights Imaging ISSN: 1869-4101
Table summarizing adverse effects in the kidneys and collecting system visible on imaging and associated cancer therapies
| Adverse effect | Associated agents | Laboratory findings | Radiologic findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Complex renal cysts | Crizotinib | None |
|
|
| |||
| Interstitial nephritis | Ipilimumab | ↑Plasma creatinine |
|
| Sorafenib | Azotemia | ||
| FENa> 1 % |
| ||
| Eosinophiluria | |||
| Proteinuria |
| ||
| Pyuria | |||
| Renal papillary necrosis | Nedaplatin | ↑ Plasma creatinine |
|
| Azotemia | |||
| Leukocytosis | |||
| Hematuria | |||
| Proteinuria |
| ||
| Pyuria | |||
|
| |||
| Renal infarction | Methotrexate | ↑ Lactate dehydrogenase |
|
| Combination Cisplatin and Gemcitabine Regimens | |||
| Proteinuria | |||
|
| |||
|
| |||
| Acute tubular necrosis | Cisplatin | ↓ GFR |
|
| Ifosfamide | |||
| Imatinib | |||
|
| |||
|
| |||
| ↓ Urine osmolality | |||
| ↓ Urine/plasma creatinine ratio | |||
| Urine sediment: renal tubular epithelial cells, epithelial cell casts, and muddy brown granular casts | |||
| Chemotherapy cystitis | Intravesical Mitomycin C | Hematuria |
|
|
| |||
|
| |||
| Hemorrhagic cystitis | Cyclophosphamide | Hematuria |
|
| Ifosphamide | |||
| Busulfan | |||
| Cabazitaxel |
Fig. 1Forty-nine-year-old female with NSCLC being treated with long-term crizotinib therapy. (a) Pre-treatment axial CT with normal renal findings. (b, c) Axial and coronal CT images, respectively, performed 3 years following initiation of treatment with crizotinib revealing multiple complex cystic lesions bilaterally (arrows). (d) Axial positron emission tomography (PET)/CT without evidence of abnormal FDG-avid uptake supporting a benign process. (e, f) Axial PET/CT of a different patient with abnormal FDG-avid uptake positive for renal neoplasm provided as comparison (arrows)
Fig. 2Forty-three-year-old male with soft tissue sarcoma, on a combination high-dose cisplatin chemotherapy regimen. (a) Pre-chemotherapy coronal CT showing normal renal findings. (b) Post-chemotherapy coronal CT showing an interstitial nephritis pattern with enlargement of the kidneys and multiple hypo-attenuating lesions, more prominent in the right kidney (arrow)
Fig. 3Sixty-five-year-old female with multiple myeloma being treated with a combination chemotherapy regimen that included carmustine. Post-chemotherapy CT showing bilateral enlarged kidneys and a hypo-attenuating lesion in the right kidney (arrows) consistent with interstitial nephritis
Fig. 4Sixty-two-year-old woman with node positive ductal carcinoma undergoing treatment with carboplatin and paclitaxel. (a) Coronal maximum intensity projection (MIP) image showing bilateral blunting of the calices consistent with renal papillary necrosis. (b) CT-urographic image demonstrating bilateral irregularly shaped, projections at the apex of the left renal pyramids suggestive of papillary necrosis
Fig. 5Fifty-four-year-old male with testicular cancer presenting with evidence of renal infarct following four cycles of bleomycin, etoposide, and cisplatin. (a) Pre-treatment coronal CT showing normal appearance of the kidneys. (b) Post-treatment coronal CT showing developing left renal infarct appearing as an area of hypoattenuation in the inferior aspect (arrow)
Fig. 6Eighty-year-old woman with gastric cancer mid-treatment with cisplatin and 5-FU. (a) Pretreatment axial CT demonstrating normal renal characteristics. (b) Noncontrast axial CT demonstrating contrast retention in the right renal parenchyma consistent with ATN (arrow)
Fig. 7Forty-four-year-old male with non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma status post treatment with cyclophosphamide. (a) Axial CT pre-chemotherapy image showing normal bladder findings. (b) Axial CT image showing thickened urinary bladder wall consistent with chemotherapy induced hemorrhagic cystitis (arrows)