Oncological Emergencies Dr. Gary Harding md, frcpc
Investigations CBC normal
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Investigations
CBC normal
Mildly
elevated BUN and Cr
Normal LFTs
Standard electrolytes normal
Concern of pneumonia
Chest x-ray ordered……
Calcium checked
4.5
Hypercalcemia
Symptoms
Usually nonspecific
Many times patients present with very high calcium level
Most research done in hyperparathyroidism
Gastrointestinal
Constipation is most common15
Exacerbated or confused with narcotic effects
Related to autonomic dysfunction
Anorexia
Vague abdominal pain
Rarely can lead to pancreatitis
Renal Dysfunction
Nephrolithiasis
More common in hyperparathyroidism
Nephrogenic diabetes insipidus
Defect in concentrating ability
Polyuria and polydipsia
Chronic
renal failure
Longstanding high calcium
Calcifcation, degeneration, and necrosis of tubules
Neuropsychiatirc
Anxiety
Depression
Cognitive dysfunction
Delerium
Psychosis
Hallucinations
Somnolence
Coma
Cardiovascular
Short QT interval
Supraventricualr arrhythmias
Ventricular arrhythmias
Physical Findings
Usually not specific
Dehydration secondary to diuresis caused by the hypercalcemia
Corneal deposition of calcium
“band keratopathy” on slit lamp exam
Epidemiology
Occurs in about 10 to 20% of patients with cancer
Both solid tumors and leukemias
Most common
Breast
Lung
Multiple myeloma
Pathogenesis
Three
mechanisms
Osteolytic metastases with local cytokine release
Tumor secretion of parathyroid hormone-related protein (PTHrP)
Tumor production of calcitriol
Osteolytic Metastases
Breast cancer
Breast cancer
Non-small cell lung cancer
Cytokines released
Tumor necrosis factor
Interleukin-1
Stimulate osteoclast precursor differentiation into mature osteoclasts
Leading to more bone breakdown and release of calcium
PTH-Related Protein
Most common in patients with non-metastatic tumors
Called humoral hypercalcemia of malignancy
Secretion of PTH itself is a rare event
PTHrP binds to same receptor as PTH and stimulates adeynylate cyclase activity
Increased bone resorption
Increases kidney calcium reabsorption and phosphate excretion
Calcitriol
Hodgkin’s disease (mechanism in majority)
Non-Hodgkin’s (mechanism in 1/3)
Usually responds
to glucocorticoid therapy
Diagnosis
Clinical symptomology with
Clinical symptomology with
History of cancer
Risk factors for cancer
Suppressed PTH
Some centers can test for PTHrP to confirm Dx of humoral hypercalcemia
High PTHrP may predict response to pamidronate16
Less of a response
Malignancy must be ruled out in patients that present with a very high calcium and no other obvious cause
Treatment
Aims
Lower serum calcium concentration
Treat complications if present
Treat underlying disease
Volume
Large volume of normal Saline administration
Expands intravascular volume
Increases calcium excretion
Inhibition of proximal tubule and loop reabosrption
Reduces passive reabsorption of calicum
Follow fluid status b/c
of danger of fluid overload
Inhibition of Bone Resorption
Three therapies
Calcitonin
Bisphosphonates
Gallium nitrate
Historical therapy
Antitumor antibiotic plicamycin (mithramycin)
Multiple serious side effects
No longer manufactured
Calcitonin
Salmon calcitonin
Increases renal excretion of calcium
Decreases bone reabsorption by interfering with osteoclast maturation
Weak agent
Works the fastest
Bisphosphonates
Adsorb to the surface of bone hyroxyapatite
Interfere with osteoclast activity
Cytotoxic to osteoclasts
Inhibit calcium release from bone
Three commonly used
Pamidronate
Zoledronic acid
Etidronate (1st generation, weaker)
Bisphosphonates
More
potent than calcitonin
Maxium effect occurs in 2 to 4 days
Trend to use of IV zoledronic acid in the acute situation
Both are can be renal toxic
More potent than pamidronate
Administered over a shorter period of time (15 minutes vs. 2 hours)
Prophylactic Bisphosphonates
Pamidronate use in patients with known lytic lesions17
Less episodes of hypercalcemia
Less pathologic fractures
Less pain
Less spinal cord compression
Less need for radiation or surgery
Newly discovered side effect…
Osteonecrosis of the jaw
Recent case reports of jaw bone necrosis in patients on pamidronate
EDUCATION needed
Gallium Nitrate
Effective
More potential for nephro
toxicity
Rarely used
Dialysis
Last resort
Dialysis fluid with little or no calcium is effective
Useful when patients can’t tolerate large volume resuscitation
If calcium needs to be correct emergently
Recommendations
in symptomatic situation
Volume expansion
Salmon calcitonin
IV zoledronic acid or pamidronate
Close follow up of calcium level and symptoms
Transitions in Treatment
Chemotherapy
Two roles
Direct treatment of cancer
Palliation of symptoms
Palliative Chemotherapy
Goal is not cure
Goals
Control of tumor
Preservation of function
Help tumor symptoms
Pain
Dsypnea
Pruritis
Poor appetite
Weight loss
Fine Balance
Chemotherapy can be very toxic
Ratio: benefit vs. toxicity
Host factors and tumor factors
Delicate balance in palliative situation
Want medications that affect tumor but do not heavily affect host
Psychology of Cancer
Psychological evolution during cancer treatment
Many people have fought very hard with their disease
Chemotherapy for “relief” not “cure” can be difficult concept for patients
ART of medicine
Evolution
Chemotherapeutic protocols that have less side effects
molecular targeted therapies
Attack tumor specifically
Less effect on host
Breast cancer
Breast cancer
Colon Cancer
Prostate cancer
Lung cancer
Breast Cancer
Aromatase inhibitors for ER positive tumors
Anastrozole, Letrozole, Exemestane
Trastuzumab (Herceptin)
Humanized monoclonal antibody targeting Her-2/neu
protein on breast cancer cells
Inhibits growth factor signal transduction
Tolerated quite well
Colon Cancer
Capecitabine (Xeloda)
Oral drug that is transformed into 5-FU with three enzymatic reactions
Final enzyme is at higher levels in tumor cells
Contributes to drug’s less toxic side effect profile
Less stomatitis, less myelosupression
Targeted GI Therapies
Bevacizumab
Monoclonal antibody to
vascular endotheial growth factor receptor
Some cardiac toxicity
Cetuximab
Monoclonal antibody to
human epidermal growth factor receptor
Skin toxicity
Prostate Cancer
LHRH
analogues
Leuprolide (Lupron)
Goserelin (Zoladex)
Stop testosterone production with limited side effects
Lung Cancer
In stage IV disease patients who receive Cisplatin based doublet chemotherapy live longer and feel better than best supportive care
Hard to balance side effects
Gefitinib (Iressa)
Targets epidermal growth factor receptor (tyrosine kinase small molecule inhibitor)
May have a role in the palliation of advanced non small cell lung cancer patients
Palliative Care Debate
Do not accept any patient on “active” therapy
This needs to be further elucidated
Patients being palliated with chemotherapy or targeted therapies still have other palliative care issues and needs
Should a patient still on Xeloda for breast or colon cancer not be admitted to St. Boniface 8A?
Thank you
Any questions?
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