Tumor lysis syndrome laboratory findings

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]

Overview

Laboratory Findings

TLS should be suspected in patients with large tumor burden who develop acute renal failure along with hyperuricemia (> 15 mg/dL) or hyperphosphatemia (> 8 mg/dL). (Most other acute renal failure occurs with uric acid < 12 mg/dL and phosphate < 6 mg/dL). Acute uric acid nephropathy is associated with little or no urine output. The urinalysis may show uric acid crystals or amorphous urates. The hypersecretion of uric acid can be detected with a high urine uric acid - creatinine ratio > 1.0, compared to a value of 0.6-0.7 for most other causes of acute renal failure.

Cairo-Bishop Definition

  • Laboratory tumor lysis syndrome: abnormalitiy in two or more of the following and occurs within 3 days before or 7 days after chemotherapy.
    • uric acid > 8 mg/dL or 25% increase
    • potassium > 6 meq/L or 25% increase
    • phosphate > 4.5 mg/dL or 25% increase
    • calcium < 7 mg/dL or 25% decrease
  • Clinical tumor lysis syndrome: laboratory tumor lysis syndrome plus one or more of the following:
    • increase serum creatinine (1.5 times upper limit of normal)
    • cardiac arrhythmia or sudden death
    • seizure

A grading scale (0-5) is used depending on the presence of lab TLS, serum creatinine, arrhythmias, or seizures.

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