Y5 - Hypercalcaemia of malignancy Flashcards

1
Q

what does hypercalcaemai of malignancy result from

A

1 secretion of parathyroid hormone related peptide by primary tumours
2 local release of factors which increase osteoclast proliferation/activity
3 production of calcitriol (1,25-dihydroxvitamin D) by lyphomas
4 production of PTH by primary tumours (rare)

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2
Q

what is most commonly used to treat hypercalcaemia of malignancy

A

IV biphosphonates

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3
Q

how common is malignancy associated with hypercalcaemia of malignancy

A

25% o cases

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4
Q

what four factors could lead to hypercalcaemia of malignancy

A

1 secretion of parathyroid hormone related peptide
2 release of factors including PTHrP to promote osteoclasts
3 calcitriol by lymphoma cells
4 ectopic hyperparathyroidism (PTH release from a primary tumour)

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5
Q

what is humoral hypercalcaemia (release of PTHrP) of malignancy associated with

A
renal cancer
ovarian cancer
breast cancer
endometrial cancer
squamous cell cancer
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6
Q

what is local osteolytic hypercalcaemia (promotion of osteoclasts) associated with

A

breast cancer

multiple myeloma

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7
Q

what is assoicated with calcitriol mediated hypercalcaemia

A

lymphoma
sarcoid
TB

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8
Q

how does humoral hypercalcaemia work

A

tumour secretion of PTHrP causes:
1 osteoclast bone resorption
2 suppression of osteoblast bone formation
causing an increase in calcium
also PTHrP reduces calcium clearance in the kidneys

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9
Q

what happens to phosphate levels in humoral hypercalcaemia

A

hyperphospaturia and hypophosphataemia

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10
Q

how does local osteolytic hypercalcaemia occur

A

cytokines (IL1/6), chemokines, and PTHrP cause increased osteoclast activity

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11
Q

how does calcitriol mediated hypercalcamia work

A

overexpression of 1-a hydroxylase (enzyme which converts 25-hydroxyvitamin D to calcitriol) by malignant cells which leads to autonomous production of bioactive vitamin D
vitamin D increases intestinal calcium absorption

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12
Q

epi

A

most common is humoral hypercalcaemia of malignancy

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13
Q

signs and symptoms

A

Hx of malignancy
often normal physical exam
sometimes signs of dehydration, fatigue, constipation, loss of appetite, polyuria, polydipsia

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14
Q

investigations

A
calcium studies
-raised total serum
-raised serum ionised 
serum albumin levels
metabolic panel
-raised urea and creatinine in AKI
-raised bicarbonate in malignancy
raised PTH or PTHrP
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15
Q

what would be found on ECG

A

shortened QT interval

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16
Q

mneumonic for symptoms of hypercalcaemia

A

“painful bones, renal stones, abdominal groans, and psychic moans,”

17
Q

approach to management

A

long-term maintenance of normocalcaemia requires eradication of malignancy

18
Q

management

A

IV saline
IV biphosphonate
calcitonin

treat underlying malignancy

19
Q

what medications should be avoided which can worsen hypercalcaemia

A

thiazide diuretics
calcitriol
lithium

20
Q

what is the first line therapy for hypercalcaemia and why

A

IV saline to reverse dehydration secondary to hypercalcaemia induced nephrogenic diabetes
PLUS oral rehydration

21
Q

what is the best treatment for reducing calcium levels

A

IV biphosphonates

-block osteoclastic bone resorption

22
Q

what biphosphonates are used

A

pamidronate disodium

zoledronic acid

23
Q

why might calcitonin be used to treat hypercalcaemia

A

interferes with osteoclast bone resorption

24
Q

first line treatment for mild hypercalcaemia or asymptomatic

A

treat underlying malignancy

25
Q

which works faster, biphosphonates or calcitonin

A

calcitonin (given while waiting for effects of biphosphonates)

26
Q

management for severe hypercalcaemia with advanced kidney disease

A

renal dialysis

27
Q

complications

A

biphosphonate induced flu like syndrome (aches, fever, chills)

28
Q

prognosis

A

IV saline, biphosphonates can temporarily induce normocalcaemia
however eradication of malignancy is required for long term effects