Abstract

BackgroundHyponatremia is a well-known adverse event of repeated therapy with vincristine in oncological patients. However, to date, data in pediatric patients with malignant diseases other than acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) are sparse or lacking.Materials and MethodsA retrospective study of 98 pediatric patients was conducted to analyze the incidence of hyponatremia in a Caucasian cohort of newly diagnosed ALL. For comparison, we further examined five other pediatric oncological cohorts (Hodgkin’s disease, Ewing sarcoma, Wilms tumor, benign glioma of the CNS, Langerhans cell histiocytosis) that receive alkaloids in their induction regimes.ResultsWe found a high incidence of hyponatremia (14.7%) in our ALL cohort with a trend toward male patients of elementary school age. None of the affected patients showed neurological symptoms. By comparison, patients from other malignancy groups did not show significant hyponatremia, regardless of their comparable therapy with alkaloids. We here show a noticeable coincidence of hyponatremia and hypertriglyceridemia in ALL patients, indicating a possible role of L-asparaginase-related hypertriglyceridemia in the development of severe hyponatremia in such patients.ConclusionWe report a higher incidence of hyponatremia following vincristine therapy in Caucasian children with ALL than published before. This hyponatremia could not be demonstrated in other oncologic cohorts treated with alkaloids. L-Asparaginase-induced hypertriglyceridemia may play a role in the certainly multifactorial development of hyponatremia in childhood leukemia.

Highlights

  • Hyponatremia is an electrolyte disturbance commonly seen in clinical practice

  • We focus on the occurrence of severe hyponatremia during induction chemotherapy with vinca alkaloids in a pediatric Caucasian cohort of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) patients

  • The incidence of severe hyponatremia during ALL-BFM 2009 induction therapy was 14.7% (14/95 cases, Table 2) in our Caucasian cohort, a value higher than those reported for pediatric ALL cohorts [24, 25]

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Summary

Introduction

Hyponatremia is an electrolyte disturbance commonly seen in clinical practice. Its etiology is heterogeneous. Vincristine and, to a lesser extent, vinblastine have been frequently reported to trigger hyponatremia in oncological patients through a direct neurotoxic effect on sites in the hypothalamus, the neurohypophyseal tract, or the posterior pituitary gland [5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20]. To date, data in pediatric patients with malignant diseases other than acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) are sparse or lacking

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