Post-cytokine-release salt wasting as inverse tumor lysis syndrome in a non-cerebral natural killer-cell neoplasm

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Abstract

The pathogenesis of cerebral/renal salt-wasting syndrome remains unknown. We herein present a case of salt-wasting syndrome with a natural killer-cell neoplasm without cerebral invasion. A 78-year-old man with hemophagocytic syndrome received two cycles of chemotherapy that did not induce tumor lysis syndrome, but repeatedly caused polyuria and natriuresis. The expression of tumor necrosis factor-α in the neoplasm led us to hypothesize that an oncolysis-induced cytokine storm may have caused renal tubular damage and salt wasting. Our theory may explain the pathogenic mechanism of cerebral/renal salt-wasting syndrome associated with other entities, including cerebral disorders, owing to the elevation of cytokine levels after subarachnoid hemorrhage.

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Ariizumi, H., Sasaki, Y., Harada, H., Uto, Y., Azuma, R., Isobe, T., … Mori, H. (2017). Post-cytokine-release salt wasting as inverse tumor lysis syndrome in a non-cerebral natural killer-cell neoplasm. Internal Medicine, 56(14), 1855–1861. https://doi.org/10.2169/internalmedicine.56.8125

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