Scenario 1: Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia (ALL) An 11-year-old boy is brought to the clinic by his parents who states that the boy has not been eating and listless. The mother also notes that he has been easily bruising without trauma as he says he is too tired to go out and play. He says his bones hurt sometimes. Mother states the child has had intermittent fevers that respond to acetaminophen.

Scenario 1: Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia (ALL)

 

An 11-year-old boy is brought to the clinic by his parents who states that the boy has not been eating and listless. The mother also notes that he has been easily bruising without trauma as he says he is too tired to go out and play. He says his bones hurt sometimes. Mother states the child has had intermittent fevers that respond to acetaminophen.

Maternal history negative for pre, intra, or post-partum problems.

PMH: Negative. Easily reached developmental milestones.

PE: reveals a thin, very pale child who has bruises on his arms and legs in no particular pattern.

LABS: CBC revealed Hemoglobin of 6.9/dl, hematocrit of 19%, and platelet count of 80,000/mm3. The CMP demonstrated a blood urea nitrogen (BUN) of 34m g/dl and creatinine of 2.9 mg/dl.

DIAGNOSIS: acute leukemia and renal failure and immediately refers the patient to the Emergency Room where a pediatric hematologist has been consulted and is waiting for the boy and his parents.

CONFIRMED DX: acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) was made after extensive testing.

Question

1.     Why does ARF occur in some patients with ALL? 

     
Selected Answer: Renal injury in ALL is common and can occur through many different mechanisms, including prerenal acute kidney injury, acute tubular necrosis, reno-vascular disease, obstruction, glomerulonephritis, and parenchymal infiltration of tumor cells. Although renal involvement is not uncommon in ALL, renal failure is rarely a presenting symptom in ALL and is thought to be a poor prognosis indicator. Leukemic may lead to significant impairment of renal function if it is bilateral and diffuse, particularly involving the cortical region. Acute renal failure in patients with acute leukemia is usually a consequence of a chemotherapeutic regimen, leading to tumor lysis syndrome—the tumor lysis syndrome results in acute uric acid and calcium phosphate nephropathy. The most common form of kidney injury in leukemia is related to prerenal AKI in the setting of volume depletion. When infiltration is suspected, kidney biopsy is typically recommended as the extent of infiltration can give prognostic information regarding the malignancy as the rate of infiltration parallels the stage and grade of the disease
Correct Answer: Renal failure as a result of hyperuricemia can be associated with ALL, particularly at diagnosis or during active treatment. Uric levels rise as an end product of purine metabolism from cellular destruction. Because the major excretory pathway is through the kidneys, urates can precipitate
Response Feedback: [None Given]

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