Hyperphosphatemia during spontaneous tumor lysis syndrome culminate in severe hypophosphatemia at the time of blast crisis of Phneg CML to acute myelomoncytic leukemia

  • Salomon O
  • Holtzman E
  • Beckerman P
  • et al.
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Abstract

Extreme swing of phosphor from severe hyperphosphatemia to severe hypophosphatemia in a patient with blast crisis of myeloid origin was the result of imbalance between massive apoptosis of leukemic cells in the context of spontaneous tumor lysis syndrome and massive production of leukemic cells with only 1% of blast in peripheral blood. The mutated p53 protein suggested acting as oncogene in the presented case and possibly affecting phosphor status.

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Salomon, O., Holtzman, E. J., Beckerman, P., Avivi, C., Trakhtenbrot, L., Kneller, A., … Schiby, G. (2012). Hyperphosphatemia during spontaneous tumor lysis syndrome culminate in severe hypophosphatemia at the time of blast crisis of Phneg CML to acute myelomoncytic leukemia. Experimental Hematology & Oncology, 1(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/2162-3619-1-24

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