Author:
Biró Erika,Erdélyi Dániel,Varga Petra,Sinkó Mária,Bartyik Katalin,Kovács Gábor,Ottóffy Gábor,Vincze Ferenc,Szegedi István,Kiss Csongor,Szabó Tamás
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Tumor lysis syndrome (TLS) and its most serious complication, acute kidney injury (AKI) are one of the emergency conditions in onco-hematology. It is difficult to predict the degree of kidney involvement. Therefore, we studied children with leukemia and lymphoma treated in four Hungarian tertiary centers (inpatient university clinics) retrospectively (2006–2016) from a nephrological aspect.
Method
Data of 31 pediatric patients were obtained from electronic- and paper-based medical records. Physical status, laboratory test results, treatments, and outcomes were assessed. Patients were analyzed according to both “traditional” TLS groupings, as laboratory TLS or clinical TLS, and nephrological aspect based on pRIFLE classification, as mild or severe AKI.
Results
Significant differences were found between the changes in parameters of phosphate homeostasis and urea levels in both classifications. Compared to age-specific normal phosphate ranges, before the development of TLS, hypophosphatemia was common (19/31 cases), while in the post-TLS period, hyperphosphatemia was observed (26/31 cases) most frequently. The rate of daily change in serum phosphate level was significant in the nephrological subgroups, but peaks of serum phosphate level show only a moderate increase. The calculated cut-off value of daily serum phosphate level increased before AKI was 0.32 mmol/L per ROC analysis for severe TLS–AKI. The 24-h urinalysis data of eight patients revealed transiently increased phosphate excretion only in those patients with TLS in whom serum phosphate was elevated in parallel.
Conclusion
Daily serum phosphate level increase can serve as a prognostic factor for the severity of pediatric TLS, as well as predict the severity of kidney involvement.
Graphical abstract
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Nephrology,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
Reference50 articles.
1. Saeed F, Ali MS, Ashraf MS, Vadsaria K, Siddiqui DE (2018) Tumour Lysis Syndrome in children with haematological cancers: experience at a tertiary care hospital in Karachi. J Pak Med Assoc 68:1625–1630
2. Howard SC, Jones DP, Pui C-H (2018) The tumor lysis syndrome. N Engl J Med 379:1094. https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJMra0904569
3. Cheung WL, Hon KL, Fung CM, Leung AK (2020) Tumor lysis syndrome in childhood malignancies. Drugs Context 9:1–14. https://doi.org/10.7573/dic.2019-8-2
4. Mika D, Ahmad S, Guruvayoorappan C (2012) Tumour lysis syndrome: implications for cancer therapy. Asian Pac J Cancer Prev 13:3555–3560. https://doi.org/10.7314/apjcp.2012.13.8.3555
5. Lupușoru G, Ailincăi I, Frățilă G, Ungureanu O, Andronesi A, Lupușoru M, Banu M, Văcăroiu I, Dina C, Sinescu I (2022) Tumor lysis syndrome: an endless challenge in onco-nephrology. Biomed 10:1012. https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines10051012
Cited by
3 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献