Title: Oncology Emergencies Presentation and Management Clinical Training Information
1Oncology EmergenciesPresentation and
ManagementClinical Training Information
- Imperial Hospitals NHS Trust
- and
- North West London Cancer Network
-
2Aims for todays talk
- Briefly cover the evidence that defines the need
for an Acute Oncology service - Review the common cancer emergencies and their
management - Details of the structure of the acute oncology
service and contact information are on the
handout
3(No Transcript)
4NCEPOD
- 85 re-admitted, 15 to different
- hospital
- 51 under care of haem/oncologist
- 49 under care of acute physicians
- Advice before admission telephone triage 19,
- GP 30, A E 43, OPD 8
- 17 with G 3 or 4 toxicity delayed gt24 hrs
- 83 admissions with neutropenic sepsis delays in
- admission, lack of policies in A E and DGHs,
- failure to make diagnosis, lack of assessment by
- senior staff, delays in prescribing admin of
antibiotics
5A key recommendation
- Development of an Acute Oncology Service
- Management of patients who develop severe
complications following chemotherapy or as a
consequence of their cancer - Management of patients who present as
emergencies with previously undiagnosed cancer
6Key Features of an Acute Oncology Service
- Access to information on individual patients
across the Trust - Early review by an oncologist or oncology nurse
specialist (within 24 hours) - 24/7 access to telephone advice from an
oncologist - Fast track clinic access from AE
- Protocols for the management of oncological
emergencies and training for AE staff - Training for physicians on management of
acutely unwell cancer patients
7A Growing Problem
- Increasing incidence of cancer
- 250,000 people diagnosed annually in UK
- Estimated that an additional 100,000 cases will
be diagnosed each year by 2025 - Improved survival
- More complex therapies
8Emergency admissions in cancer patients
- Patients with advanced malignancies can have
acute problems as a result of their illness or
treatment - Patients having standard outpatient adjuvant
treatment can have life threatening side effects
from chemotherapy treatment - Patients with undiagnosed advanced malignancies
can present as emergencies to A and E or
medical/surgical specialities
9Some general points
- Oncology emergencies have considerable morbidity
and mortality - Patients frequently present to clinicians other
than their oncologists, often at hospitals other
than their cancer treatment centre - High clinical suspicion and early detection,
combined with a low threshold to initiate
investigations and the optimal treatment,
undoubtedly results in improved outcomes - Patients die needlessly die every year because
of a failure to recognise and appropriately treat
these conditions
10The most common oncology emergencies
- Neutropenic sepsis
- Malignant hypercalcaemia
- Spinal cord compression
- Tumour lysis syndrome
- Superior vena cava obstruction
- Others Acute renal failure
- Pulmonary embolus
- Hyponatraemia
11Neutropenic Sepsis
- Temperature gt38 deg or single reading of 38.3 deg
- Neutrophils lt1.5
- Typically day 7-10 post chemotherapy
- Chemo effect on bone marrow therefore anaemia,
thrombocytopenia also. - Incidence neutropenic sepsis 5-10
12Neutropenic sepsis
- Febrile neutropenia / neutropenic sepsis is a
common, expected complication of chemotherapy - If untreated, it has extremely high morbidity and
mortality - Every year a number of patients die from their
cancer treatment - How can we minimise this risk?
13Neutropenic SepsisBackground Information
- Neutrophils are the most abundant of the
leukocytes, normally accounting for 54-75 of the
WBCs - An adult typically has 3,000-7,500
neutrophils/mm3 of blood. They are called
neutrophils because their granules stain poorly -
they have a neutral color - What is the life span of a neutrophil in health?
A day or two - What about a Red cell? 100 days
- How many neutrophils do we make a day?
- The bone marrow makes about 80,000,000 new
neutrophils per minute!
14Neutropenic sepsis
- Normal Neutrophil count 3.0-7.5 (that is thousand
per cubic mm) - Nadir the low point
- Grade 1 1.5-2.0
- Grade 2 1.0-1.5
- Grade 3 0.5-1.0
- Grade 4 lt 0.5
15What is the likely risk of neutropenia and
neutropenic sepsis?
? The risk of serious grade 3 or 4 neutropenia
Overall risk of neutropenic sepsis -gt
16How to minimise the risks from neutropenic sepsis
- Appropriate dosage of treatment
- Chemo adjusted for patients size (BSA body
surface area) - Chemo usually adjusted for advanced age
- Doses altered in renal or hepatic insufficiency
- Patient and Medical Education
- Educating patients re the risks and need for
urgent hospital assessment in the event of
symptoms or raised temperature - Nadir counts in patients at risk
- Educating other medical teams who patients may
present to
17Prophylactic treatment for neutropeniaGranulocyte
Colony Stimulating Factors
- G-CSF
- Controls proliferation of committed progenitor
cells and influences their maturation into mature
neutrophils. - Stimulates the release of neutrophils from bone
marrow storage pools and reduces their maturation
time. - Acts to increase the phagocytic activity of
mature neutrophils. - In patients receiving cytotoxic chemotherapy,
G-CSF can accelerate neutrophil recovery, leading
to a reduction in duration of the neutropenic
phase .
18Daily G-CSF (Neupogen)
- We have been using daily G-CSF injections for
many years to minimise the risk of neutropenic
sepsis. A course is usually 5 days - More recently a single injection, long acting
form Neulasta has been available. Is it any
better?
19Studies submitted for Neulasta Approval
- Two randomized, double-blind, non-inferiority
studies - Dosing
- Study 1 used 100 ug/kg dose
- Study 2 used a fixed 6 mg dose
- Population
- High-risk Stage II or Stage III/IV Breast Cancer
patients - Age 18 years
- Receiving Docetaxel and Doxorubicin
- Endpoint
- Duration of severe neutropenia comparing
Neulasta to Neupogen
20STUDY RESULTS
21Study Results
? In both studies the results for the following
were similar for both Neulasta and Neupogen
?DSN in cycles 2 through 4 ?Depth of ANC nadir
in cycles 1 through 4 ?Rates of FN by cycle and
across all cycles ?Time to ANC recovery by cycle
and across all cycles
22Neutropenic sepsis
- Neulasta and daily G-CSF have similar efficacy.
- Daily G-CSF is a hassle to give
- Daily G-CSF is often poorly used
- Conclusion
- In treatment when neutropenia is a high risk
15 - Use Neulasta if the cycle is 14 days or longer
- Use G-CSF for shorter cycles or stem cell
mobilisation
23Case 1
- 51 y female presents to AE
- 24 hr history of shivering, fever, unwell
- Diagnosed with breast cancer 2 months previously
- What other elements of history are important?
- What examination would you perform?
24Case 1
- She is 12 days post- chemotherapy
- Temp 37.8 C
- P 120, BP 90/70
- No focal signs of infection
- What tests need to be done?
- Would you initiate any treatment at this stage?
25Investigations
- History (Chemotherapy ? Symptoms?).
- Examination (focus of infection?).
- Blood cultures (also from indwelling
catheters if present). - MSU and urine dipstick.
- Chest X ray.
- Throat swab for culture.
- FBC, LFT, UE, CRP.
26Case 1
- Urgent FBC
- Hb 11.4, WC 1.1, Neut 0.5, Plt 75
- Na 135, K3.7, Urea 11.0, Creat 120
- What treatment would you initiate at this stage?
27Case 1
- She is started on first line antibiotics for
neutropenic sepsis according to hospital protocol - In cases such as this the antibiotics should have
been started without waiting for the FBC results!
28Treatment (1)
- Fever may be absent in neutropenic patients.
- Dont delay while waiting for culture results or
full blood counts if any clinical suspicion! It
is better to treat even if subsequently the blood
count is normal. - Usually bacterial pathogens, but investigations
are frequently negative. - Empirical use of broad spectrum antibiotics.
- Local guidelines but typically iv
aminoglycoside with either a cephalosporin or
broad-spectrum penicillin.
29Treatment of Neutropenic sepsis
- Admission last for 2-10 days until the neutrophil
count rises above 1.0 and the patient has been
apyrexial for 24hrs. - Antibiotics are given intravenously
- G-CSF (daily G-CSF not Neulasta) support can be
considered for patients admitted and on IV
antibiotics - Death in patients admitted to hospital is rare
30Imperial Antibiotic Guidelines for Neutropenic
Sepsis
- First Line
- Tazocin 4.5g IV tds
- Amikacin kg 15mg/kg IV od (Amikacin is C-I in
renal impairment or recent exposure to
nephrotoxic drugs) - In renal impairment etc use Meropenem
- If still pyrexial after 48hrs
- Second Line
- add teicoplanin
- Or switch to Meropenem (after d/w micro)
- Third Line
- add antifungal
- Continue IVAB 48hrs after becoming afebrile
completed at least 5 days treatment
31Causative Organisms in neutropenic sepsis
- Majority from host bowel/skin
- 80 not identified
- Gram negatives -E Coli -Klebsiella -Pseu
domonas - Gram Positives -Staph Aureus
- -Staph
Epidermidis -Strep Faecalis - Rarely pneumocystis, CMV, fungal
32Potential Sources
33GCSF
- prolonged neutropenia
- haemo-dynamically compromised
- clinical deterioration (hypoxia, multi-organ
dysfunction) - fungal infection
- Continue GCSF until neutrophils gt1.0
34Thrombocytopenia
- Low platelet counts are common after chemotherapy
- Blood risks only rise significantly when the
count is less than 10-20 - What is the treatment
- Platelet transfusion
- As yet there are no growth factor treatments of
platelets
35Hypercalcaemia
- Serum Ca gt 3.0 mM.
- Most common life-threatening metabolic
abnormality in cancer patients. - Often under-diagnosed.
- Significant impact on quality of life if treated
sub-optimally.
36Symptoms of hypercalcaemia
- Fatigue
- Nausea and vomiting
- Constipation
- Polyuria polydypsia
- Psychological disturbance
- Related to degree of hypercalcaemia and rate of
increase in Ca
37Hypercalcaemia of malignancy
- Incidence varies with cancer type highest for
breast and myeloma (40). Lung 12-35, SCC 5-25,
renal cancer 5-20, lymphoma 5. - Results from aberrant Ca homeostasis in bone,
gut and kidney. - Hypercalcaemia is not a result of bone
metastases and can happen in their absence - Presenting symptoms often vague and easily
missed. - Check the Ca in every cancer patient you see
in A and E
38What is the mechanism of hypercalcaemia?
- Direct bony destruction is not the mechanism
- Metastatic Breast Cancer 85 get bone mets but
only 15 gets hypercalcaemia - Small cell lung cancer patients frequently get
bone mets but hypercalcaemia is rare - Squamous cell lung cancer rarely get bone mets
but 25 get hypercalcaemia
39Factors contributing to hypercalcaemia
- Ectopic PTHrP (most common)
- 1, 25 (OH)2 vitamin D3 (B lymphomas)
- TNF
- Interleukin 6
- TGF alpha and beta
40Bisphosphonates
- Analogues of pyrophosphate.
- Inhibit bone resorption by osteoclasts.
- No effect on renal tubular absorption of Ca.
- Zometa is the most potent and simplest to give
(4mg iv over 15 minutes in the day treatment
unit) and is most commonly used.
41Case 3
- A 63 yr old man with NSCLC is brought to hospital
by, having been found by his wife at home
confused. - She gives a history of the patient not being
himself for several days. There are no other
symptoms of note. - What are your differential diagnoses?
- What investigations do you perform?
42Case 3
- Bloods (Do not just do U and Es in cancer
patients. Always do full biochem in A and E) - FBC Hb 10.4, WBC 5.7 Neuts 4.0 Plts 157
- UE Na 134 K 3.7 Ur 11.5 Creat 168
- LFTs NAD
- Bone profile Corr Ca 3.4, ALP 130
- Would you like any further investigations?
- What is your management?
43Management
- Best treatment treat underlying malignancy.
- Stop drugs which inhibit Ca excretion
(thiazides, NSAIDs). - Careful intravenous fluid replacement.
- Bisphosphonate
- Corticosteroids useful in appropriate
malignancies (myeloma, lymphoma). - Loop diuretic may be helpful if in positive fluid
balance and when fully hydrated.
44Spinal cord compression
- Caused by metastatic disease.
- Affects up to 5 of patients.
- An important source of morbidity despite
treatment being effective in gt 90 of (DIAGNOSED)
cases. - Symptoms are frequently vague and often become
worse before the diagnosis is made.
45Tumours producing cord compression
- Breast 29
- Lung 17
- Prostate 14
- Lymphoma 5
- Myeloma 4
- Renal 4
- Sarcoma 2
- Others 23
46First symptoms
- 1st symptom Present at diagnosis
- Back pain 94 97
- Weakness 3 74
- Autonomic 0 52
- Sensory loss 0.5 53
47Signs to look for
- Symmetrical weakness (marked).
- Reflexes can be absent or increased at ankle and
knee. - Upgoing plantar.
- Symmetrical sensory deficit with a level.
- Sphinters Loss occurs late.
48What does this mean ?
- Any cancer patient with back pain requires urgent
investigation. - Upper motor neurone signs cord compression
until proven otherwise. - Look carefully for a sensory level and ask about
sphincter symptoms. - You can save your patient from incontinence and
spastic paraparesis!
49What should you do?
- High dose iv corticosteroids (eg dexamethasone
8mg TDS) should be given on clinical suspicion
alone. Dont wait for imaging! - Call the Imperial/NWLCN Spinal cord Compression
Coordinator. This is the Clinical Oncology SpR
and they can be reached 24/7 on - 020-3311-7866 (ex 17866 if call internally)
- Follow the Imperial/NWLCN spinal cord compression
guidelines and arrange Urgent MRI spine
50- Pretreatment ambulatory function is the main
determinant of post-treatment gait function. - Tumour type influences time to presentation with
cord compression, ambulatory function at
presentation and response to therapy. - Thus, the key to gait and continence preservation
is prompt diagnosis and treatment. Ambulatory
function can be preserved in gt 80 of patients
who are ambulatory at presentation.
51Case 4
- 75 year old man treated with goserelin for his
known prostate cancer, presents to AE with 2 day
history of bilateral leg weakness, and recent
onset urinary retention - What would you be concerned about?
- How would you proceed?
52Case 4
- On further questioning, the patient admits he has
had thoraco-lumbar back pain for several days,
and also noticed numbness of his feet legs - Neuro examination of lower limbs
- Power 3 bilat, reflexes , increased tone,
decreased sensation up to level of umbilicus
53Case 4
- What is the level of the lesion?
- What investigations do you request?
- What is your immediate management?
54MRI showing SCC
55Spinal Cord CompressionManagement
- Dexamethasone 8mg TDS
- PPI cover
- Neurosurgery followed by RT
- If no histological diagnosis
- Fit with a long life expectancy
- Radiotherapy
- Chemotherapy
- Chemoresponsive tumours e.g. NHL, HD, Germ cell,
neuroblastoma
56Neurosurgery
57Neurosurgical Referral
- Spinal stability
- Diagnosis
- Bony fragments causing cord compression
- Neurological deterioration despite RT
- 1-2 vertebral bodies involved
- Good Performance Status
- Stable disease/long disease free interval
- Life expectancy gt3months
58Radiotherapy
59Radiotherapy
- Treated with high energy X-rays using single
posterior field - Treatment field includes one vertebra and above
below involved vertebra/e - Prescribed to the depth of the cord (as measured
on MRI) - Dose 20 Gray (Gy) in 5 daily fractions
60Cauda Equina Lesions
- Cord ends at L1/2, so lesions below this cause
cauda equina syndrome. - What signs would you expect to find if there is a
lesion at this level? - Flaccid paralysis
- Reduced reflexes
- Sensory loss (saddle parasthesia)
- Urinary retention
- Decreased anal tone
61Key Points
- Back pain Malignancy Spinal Cord Compression
- Image the whole spine
- 30 will live for a year so important for quality
of life
62Tumour lysis syndrome (TLS)
- Hyperuricaemia
- Hyperkalaemia
- Hyperphosphataemia
- Secondary hypocalcaemia
63What causes TLS?
- Rapid destruction of malignant cells by
treatment. - Usually associated with high tumour burden and
rapid response to treatment. - Most commonly seen with high grade lymphomas,
acute leukaemias and small cell lung cancer. But
can complicate other cancers during chemotherapy.
64Tumour Lysis Syndrome
- Chemotherapy induced cell lysis
- Can be spontaneous e.g. Burkitts lymphoma
- Large tumour bulk, rapid doubling time and
sensitivity to chemo - Metabolic triad
Hyperurecaemia
Hyperkalaemia
Hyperphosphataemia
65TLS Clinical Findings
- Lethargy, nausea, vomiting, renal colic,
haematuria - Renal failure, mental status changes
- Cardiac arrhythmias
- Seizures/sudden death
66Management
- Treat specific metabolic disorder
- Decrease production ? allopurinal,
rasburicase - Reduce concentration ? volume expansion
- Promote solubility ? alkalinization
- Controversial rarely used in practice
- Remove from circulation ? haemodialysis
67Hyperphosphotaemia/Hypocalcaemia
- Lymphoblasts 4x more P04
- Sole elimination via glomerulus
- Management
- IV fluids
- Diuretics
- Calcium gluconate
68Management
- Frequent checks on electrolytes
- Every 2 hours
- Dialysis
- K gt7
- Uric acid gt10
- P04 gt10
- Volume overload
69Risk factors for TLS
- Bulky chemosensitive disease, especially
high-grade lymphomas. - High blast count in leukaemia.
- Elevated pre-chemotherapy serum urate.
- Elevated serum LDH.
- Poor renal function.
70What happens if untreated?
- Acute renal failure.
- Acidosis.
- Hyperkalaemia.
- Arrythmias.
- Death.
71Management
- Identify at risk patients. Prevention is better
than cure. - Allopurinol.
- Intravenous fluids .
- Alkalinise the urine ( pH 7.0 - 7.5) with
bicarbonate which increases solubility of uric
acid and reduces precipitation in the renal
tubule. - Rasburicase (Fasturtec) recombinant urate
oxidase now licensed for treatment and
prophylaxis of hyperuricaemia. - Dialysis.
72TLS prevention
- Rasburicase
- Most patients with a high risk of TLS now get
prophylaxis with rasburicase which safely
minimises the risk of the tumour lysis syndrome - It is given IV prior and during chemotherapy
73Superior vena cava obstruction
- Essentially a clinical diagnosis.
- Obstruction of venous drainage of upper body.
- Clinical picture
- Oedema of the arms and face.
- Distended neck and arm veins, with loss of
pulsation. - Headaches.
- Dusky red skin colouration over chest, arms and
face. - Collaterals may develop (takes several weeks).
74Superior vena cava obstruction
- Severity of symptoms relates to the rate of
degree of obstruction and development of
compensatory collateral venous drainage. - Symptoms often made worse by lying flat or
bending over.
75Symptoms of SVCO syndrome
- Dyspnoea 63
- Facial swelling/ exploding head 50
- Cough 24
- Arm swelling 18
- Chest pain 15
- Dysphagia 9
76SVCO physical findings
- Venous distension of neck 66
- Venous distension of chest wall 54
- Facial oedema 46
- Cyanosis 20
- Plethora of face 19
- Oedema of arms 14
77Common causes of SVCO syndrome
- Small cell lung cancer
- Non-small cell lung cancer
- Lymphoma
- Mediastinal germ cell tumours
- Breast cancer
78Management of SVCO syndrome
- Treat underlying cause.
- Treatment aimed at symptom control as well as
underlying cause. - Whenever possible obtain a tissue diagnosis
(urgently) as some tumours are better treated
with chemotherapy than radiotherapy (eg SCLC). - Mediastinal radiotherapy is optimal treatment for
most tumours and is effective in up to 90 of
cases within two weeks. - With lymphoma, germ cell tumours and SCLC urgent
chemotherapy.
79Management of SVCO syndrome
- In the acute situation, it is vital to exclude
airway compromise. - Patients nearly always feel better if you sit
them up and give them oxygen. - Many clinicians routinely use corticosteroids in
SVCO syndromes (sometimes diuretics help). - Patients with lymphoma, SCLC and germ cell
tumours can have an excellent response to
treatment and in some cases prognosis, even in
the presence of SVCO.
80Case 5
- A 62 year lady presents with a swollen right arm
and shortness of breath when lying flat - On examination she has a facial and neck oedema
and a raised JVP - What would you be concerned about?
- How would you proceed?
81SVCO
82Investigations
- CXR
- Widened mediastinum
- Contrast CT
- Assess extent and level of obstruction
- MRI
- Arm venogram
83Investigations
Outline of SVC stent
84Management
- No longer considered an oncological emergency
unless STRIDOR - Steroids/Sit up
- HISTOLOGY
- Via minimally invasive technique
- Increased risk of bleeding
- Treat tumour ? RT or Chemo
- RT?symptom relief in 63 NSCLCa
- 77 SCLCa
- Stent
- Rapid relief of symptoms 24-48 hours
- Or in refractory disease
85And finally
- Perhaps the most important take home message is
that prompt diagnosis and institution of
appropriate management can save cancer patients
from premature mortality and morbidity. - A significant number of such patients may do well
and live for a long time even with advanced
malignancies.
86Further information
- There are clinical guidelines for all the common
emergency cancer presentations available on the
Acute Oncology pages of the Trust Intranet. - There is a full on call SpR and Consultant
Oncologist service available 24/7 for advice and
clinical review.
87Background
- November 2008 Chemotherapy Services in England
Ensuring quality Safety - 60 increase in chemotherapy
- National Confidentiality Enquiry into Patient
Outcome Death - 35 care judged as good
- 49 room for improvement
- 8 less than good