Abstract

Patients with cancer represent a growing group among actual ICU admissions (up to 20 %). Due to their increased susceptibility to infectious and noninfectious complications related to the underlying cancer itself or its treatment, these patients frequently develop acute kidney injury (AKI). A wide variety of definitions for AKI are still used in the cancer literature, despite existing guidelines on definitions and staging of AKI. Alternative diagnostic investigations such as Cystatin C and urinary biomarkers are discussed briefly. This review summarizes the literature between 2010 and 2015 on epidemiology and prognosis of AKI in this population. Overall, the causes of AKI in the setting of malignancy are similar to those in other clinical settings, including preexisting chronic kidney disease. In addition, nephrotoxicity induced by the anticancer treatments including the more recently introduced targeted therapies is increasingly observed. However, data are sometimes difficult to interpret because they are often presented from the oncological rather than from the nephrological point of view. Because the development of the acute tumor lysis syndrome is one of the major causes of AKI in patients with a high tumor burden or a high cell turnover, the diagnosis, risk factors, and preventive measures of the syndrome will be discussed. Finally, we will briefly discuss renal replacement therapy modalities and the emergence of chronic kidney disease in the growing subgroup of critically ill post-AKI survivors.

Highlights

  • The association between cancer and kidney disease has long been recognized but received extra attention after the creation of a ‘new’ nephrological subspecialty, called ‘onco-nephrology’ [1].Over the past several years, important advances have occurred in the treatment and supportive care of patients with malignancies

  • Cancer patients are at risk for Acute kidney injury (AKI) secondary to infection and sepsis [5, 6], tumor lysis syndrome (TLS) [7], kidney damage induced by immunosuppression after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) [8], and direct effects from the primary malignancy [9]

  • AKI acute kidney injury, AKIN Acute Kidney Injury Network, ca pts cancer patients, chemo chemotherapy, CRRT, continuous renal replacement therapy, CVVHDF continuous venovenous hemodiafiltration, CVVHF continuous venovenous hemofiltration, hemato hematology, IHD intermittent hemodialysis, KDIGO and Kidney Diseases Improving Global Outcomes, onco oncology, pts patients, RIFLE Risk, Injury, Failure, Loss, End stage renal disease, RRT renal replacement therapy, SCr serum creatinine, TLS tumor lysis syndrome, ATN acute tubular necrosis related to AKI or a comparison with patients without AKI

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Summary

Background

The association between cancer and kidney disease has long been recognized but received extra attention after the creation of a ‘new’ nephrological subspecialty, called ‘onco-nephrology’ [1]. In the Dutch National Intensive Care Evaluation (NICE) database [33] AKI occurred in 19.4 % of hematological patients admitted to the ICU, which is comparable with incidence rates in patients with chronic liver cirrhosis and chronic heart failure, but higher than in patients with solid tumors (11 %). Important is that 60-day mortality in patients with hematological malignancies and solid cancer was similar to patients with other classical severe comorbidities, and in the ranges of those for critically ill hematological patients in ICUs in France and Belgium [36]. Many studies start from the oncologic viewpoint and consider AKI as one of the many determinants of outcome, not considering specific aspects

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