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Oncologic Emergencies. Haskell (Gill) Kirkpatrick M.D. 9/22/05. Malignant Spinal Cord Compression (MSCC). Affects 5-10% cancer patients Most commonly: breast, prostate, lung, lymphoma and multiple myeloma 20% MSCC cases are initial presentation
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Oncologic Emergencies Haskell (Gill) Kirkpatrick M.D. 9/22/05
Malignant Spinal Cord Compression (MSCC) • Affects 5-10% cancer patients • Most commonly: breast, prostate, lung, lymphoma and multiple myeloma • 20% MSCC cases are initial presentation • Bone (axial skeleton) common site of metastasis • Vertebral and epidural venous plexus (Batson’s plexus) • Most common mechanisms • Hematogenous met to vertebral body extending into epidural space • Pathologic fracture of vertebral body (infiltrated with tumor) resulting in cord injury from bone fragmentation or instability • 65% cases affect thoracic spine • 20% cases lumbar spine (colon and prostate predilection) • Cervical and sacral involvement rare
Clinical Presentation of MSCC • Back pain: In certain cancer patients should be considered metastatic origin until proven otherwise • Periostium richly innervated • Vertebral body tender to palpation/percussion • Pain worse with recumbancy • Usually precedes neurologic symptoms (1-2 months) • Radicular pain most common with lumbosacral lesions • Thoracic radicular pain usually bilateral, band-like
Clinical Presentation of MSCC • Progression of motor findings: weakness, loss of gait, paralysis • Majority of compressions at thoracic level: paraparesis • Upper lumbar spine: conus medullaris syndrome • Distal lower extremity weakness, saddle paraesthesias and overflow leakage from bowel and bladder • Loss of bladder and bowel function generally a late finding • Majority of patients not ambulatory at time of diagnosis
Diagnosis of MSCC • Average time from onset symptoms to diagnosis: 3 months • MRI of whole spine is most sensitive test • Decision to use modality based on history of back pain • Suspicion for pain secondary to Degenerative disease • mostly affects lower cervical and lower lumbar spine • Waxes and wanes • Responds to NSAIDs and bed rest • Suspicion for pain secondary to MSCC • Thoracic spine • Progresses despite conservative treatments • Aggravated by supine position
Treatment of MSCC • Corticosteroids: Optimal dose? • “High dose” studied in only randomized trial (+/- XRT) • 96 mg IV bolus then 24 mg 4 X /day (tapered over 10 days) • Serious side effects (GI perforations and bleeding) • Most common regimen: • 10 mg bolus then 16 mg/day (divided over 4 doses) • Radiation therapy • Relieves pain in most patients • Pre-treatment neurologic fxn strong predictor of response • Underlying tumor type also predictor • Aggressive surgery • New data shows that all patients should be considered for decompressive radical resection
Febrile Neutropenia • Should be considered an emergency • Early studies have shown high mortality when delay initiation of appropriate antibiotics • Before era of empiric antibiotics infection accounted for up to 75% of deaths associated w/ chemotherapy • Definitions: • Fever: single temp > 38.3°C (101.3°F) or 38.0°C (100.4°F) sustained greater than 1 hour • Neutropenia: usually ANC < 500 • Absolute neutrophil count (ANC)=total WBC X (%neutrophils + %bands)
Infection as Cause of Death in Cancer Patients Bodey GP et al, Ann Intern Med 1966;64:328
Organisms Causing Infection During Chemotherapy of Acute LeukemiaBodey GP et al, Ann Intern Med 1966;64:328
Febrile Neutropenia • Seeding of the bloodstream from endogenous flora in the GI tract most common cause • Commonly cultured bacterial pathogens • Gram neg (Pseudomonas, E Coli, Klebsiella etc..) • Gram pos (Coag-neg staph, staph aureus, streptococcus etc…) • Commonly cultured fungal pathogens • Candida species, Aspergillus • usually arise later as a secondary infection in patients with prolonged neutropenia and antibiotic use • Viral pathogens • HSV, VZV
Treatment of Febrile Neutropenia • Empiric Antibiotics • Appropriate coverage of known or suspected infection based on history/exam findings/radiographic studies • Monotherapy: • ceftazidime, imipenem, meropenem, or cefepime • Double coverage: • beta-lactam and an aminoglycoside • Awareness of institutional resistance patterns • Addition of empiric Vancomycin • Skin or catheter site infection, hypotensive, hx of MRSA colonization, mucositis, quinolone prophylaxis
Causes of Fever in Patients with Prolonged Neutropenia Who Are Receiving Broad-Spectrum Antibiotics Corey, L. et al. N Engl J Med 2002;346:222-224
Treatment of Febrile Neutropenia • Empiric anti-fungal coverage with persistent fever on broad-spectrum antibiotics and prolonged neutropenia • Amphotericin B (liposomal), caspofungin, voriconazole • Colony stimulating factors • Should not be used routinely • Appropriate for critically ill patients
General Principles for the Management of Fever in Patients with Neutropenia Pizzo, P. A. N Engl J Med 1993;328:1323-1332
Hyperleukocytosis • Neutrophil count (CML) > 250,000 may cause vasoocclusive complications • Leukemic blasts (AML) are nondeformable • Cause hyperviscosity at lower counts ( 70,000 +) • Leukostasis in microvasculature leads to clinical symptoms • Pulmonary: hypoxemia • CNS: headaches, vision changes/loss, focal deficits • Symptomatic hyperleukocytosis and AML associated with initial high mortality
Treatment of Hyperleukocytosis • Emergent leukophoresis can be used • Should be used as adjunct to chemotherapy • Temporizing measure • Initiate cytoreductive therapy ASAP • Blasts are rapidly accumulating • Can result in another oncologic emergency…
Tumor Lysis Syndrome • Rapid cell death in face of high tumor burden • Large amounts of intracellular metabolites released • Uric acid, potassium, phosphate.. • Most commonly associated with poorly differentiated lymphomas and leukemias • Burkitt’s • ALL (more commonly than AML) • Uric acid can deposit in kidney leading to ARF • Dialysis can support patient • Rasburicase or Elitek (urate oxidase): oxidizes uric acid to allantoin which is water soluble
Prevention of tumor lysis syndrome • Vigorous hydration • Allopurinol 300-900 mg/day • Ideally 2 days before cytotoxic therapy • Role of alkalinizing urine debatable • Increases the solubility of uric acid and decreases tendency for precipitation but… • Alkalinizing could promote calcium-phosphate deposition • Animal studies have shown that increased tubular flow rate is most important protective measure • Vigorous hydration with saline is likely as effective
Superior Vena Cava Syndrome • Invasion or external compression of SVC • Malignant tumors responsible for 80% cases • Infection and thrombosis account for most of the rest • Symptoms • Dyspnea • Facial swelling, arm edema, cyanosis • Signs • Venous distension on neck and chest wall • Facial edema
Superior Vena Cava Syndrome • 60% cases due to malignancy present without known diagnosis • CT preferred diagnostic tool • Importance of biospy • Short delay not compromise outcome most cases • Histology helps determine treatment and prognosis • Treatment responsive tumors: SCLC, germ cell tumors, NHL • Role for intraluminal stents?