Tumor lysis syndrome pathophysiology

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1] Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Mohamad Alkateb, MBBCh [2]

Overview

Development of tumor lysis syndrome is the result of initiation of chemotherapy or radiotherapy in cancer patients.

Pathogenesis

  • Tumor lysis syndroms is a group of metabolic complications that can occur after treatment of cancer, usually lymphomas and leukemias, and sometimes even without treatment.
  • Pretreatment spontaneous tumor lysis syndrome is associated with acute renal failure due to uric acid nephropathy prior to the institution of chemotherapy and is largely associated with lymphomas and leukemias. The important distinction between this syndrome and the post-chemotherapy syndrome is that spontaneous tumor lysis syndroms is not associated with hyperphosphatemia. One suggestion for the reason of this is that the high cell turnover rate leads to high uric acid levels through nucleoprotein turnover but the tumor reuses the released phosphate for resynthesis of new tumor cells. In post-chemotherapy tumor lysis syndroms, tumor cells are destroyed and no new tumor cells are being synthesized.[1]

References

  1. "Tumor lysis syndrome".

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