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Apex Nursing

Reference — Oncology

Tumor Lysis Syndrome (TLS)

Tumor lysis syndrome is a potentially fatal oncologic emergency caused by the rapid release of intracellular contents following massive cancer cell death. It most commonly occurs within 24–72 hours of initiating cytotoxic chemotherapy in hematologic malignancies with high tumor burden.

Educational use only. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

Oncologic emergency. TLS requires immediate recognition, aggressive IV hydration, cardiac monitoring, frequent labs, and prompt provider notification. Delay in management can result in fatal cardiac arrhythmia or acute renal failure.

Pathophysiology

When cancer cells die en masse — whether from chemotherapy, radiation, or spontaneously — they release intracellular contents into the bloodstream faster than the kidneys can clear them. The key released substances are:

Potassium

Hyperkalemia → cardiac arrhythmia

Phosphate

Hyperphosphatemia → binds calcium → hypocalcemia

Nucleic acids

Converted to uric acid → hyperuricemia → crystal deposition in renal tubules

Calcium bound by ↑ phosphate

Hypocalcemia → tetany, seizures, arrhythmia

Uric acid and calcium-phosphate crystals precipitate in renal tubules, causing acute kidney injury. AKI reduces the kidneys' ability to excrete potassium, phosphate, and uric acid — creating a dangerous positive feedback loop.

Cairo-Bishop Classification

Laboratory TLS

2 or more of the following within 3 days before or 7 days after initiating chemotherapy:

  • Uric acid ≥8 mg/dL (or 25% increase from baseline)
  • Potassium ≥6.0 mEq/L (or 25% increase)
  • Phosphorus ≥4.5 mg/dL adults (or 25% increase)
  • Calcium ≤7.0 mg/dL (or 25% decrease)

Clinical TLS

Laboratory TLS PLUS one or more of the following:

  • Creatinine ≥1.5× ULN (acute kidney injury)
  • Cardiac arrhythmia or sudden death
  • Seizure

Clinical TLS = end-organ dysfunction — significantly higher mortality

High-Risk Tumors

Risk LevelTumor TypesRationale
HighBurkitt lymphoma (highest risk), ALL (acute lymphoblastic leukemia), large-volume AML, diffuse large B-cell lymphomaHigh proliferative index, large tumor burden, exquisitely chemosensitive — massive rapid cell lysis with treatment
IntermediateChronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) with high WBC or rapid lymph node regression, mantle cell lymphoma, multiple myelomaModerate tumor burden, less rapid proliferation
LowerMost solid tumors (breast, lung, colon, prostate) — except high-burden sensitive casesLower proliferative rate, less dramatic tumor cell lysis response; however, large-burden sensitive solid tumors can still develop TLS

Lab Abnormalities — KPUCA Mnemonic

LetterLabDirectionCritical Consequence
KPotassium↑ HyperkalemiaVentricular fibrillation, peaked T waves, wide QRS, asystole
PPhosphorus↑ HyperphosphatemiaCalcium-phosphate precipitation, tissue injury, drives hypocalcemia
UUric acid↑ HyperuricemiaRenal tubular crystal deposition → AKI
CCalcium↓ HypocalcemiaTetany, Chvostek's sign, Trousseau's sign, seizures, QT prolongation
AAKI (creatinine)↑ Creatinine (BUN)Impaired metabolite clearance → worsens all other electrolyte abnormalities

Prevention Strategies

InterventionMechanismNotes
IV hydrationDilutes metabolites, increases GFR, promotes renal excretion2–3 L/m²/day or 200 mL/hr NS. Goal urine output ≥100 mL/hr. Must be started BEFORE chemotherapy in high-risk patients.
AllopurinolXanthine oxidase inhibitor — blocks conversion of xanthine to uric acid. Prevents new uric acid formation.Oral or IV. Given 24–48 hrs before chemotherapy. Does NOT reduce already-elevated uric acid — only prevents further accumulation.
RasburicaseRecombinant urate oxidase — converts existing uric acid to allantoin (water-soluble). Rapidly lowers uric acid within hours.Contraindicated in G6PD deficiency (causes severe hemolysis). More effective than allopurinol for treatment (not just prevention). Blood samples must be kept on ice for accurate uric acid measurement.
Urinary alkalinizationHistorically used to increase uric acid solubility — now controversialNot routinely recommended — increases calcium phosphate precipitation risk

Nursing Priorities

Aggressive IV hydration BEFORE and DURING chemotherapy — monitor I&O strictly, Foley catheter preferred
Continuous cardiac monitoring — hyperkalemia ECG changes: peaked T waves → widened QRS → sine wave → VF
Frequent labs: K, PO4, uric acid, Ca, BUN, Cr, CBC every 4–6 hours or per order
Daily weights — monitor for fluid overload from aggressive hydration
Report immediately: any ECG changes, AMS, tetany, decreased urine output
Administer allopurinol or rasburicase per order — verify G6PD status before rasburicase
Hold nephrotoxic agents: NSAIDs, contrast dye, aminoglycosides during TLS risk period
No potassium-containing IV fluids (D5NS is preferred over LR which contains some potassium)
Calcium supplementation: only for symptomatic hypocalcemia — calcium + high phosphate = calciphylaxis risk
Dialysis readiness: anticipate that severe, refractory TLS may require emergent hemodialysis

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This page is written to align with Oncology Nursing Society (ONS) · National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) · American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO). It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →