Leukostasis and hyperleukocytosis: Difference between revisions

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== Background ==
==Background==
*Hyperleukocytosis: WBC >100,000/μL (some define as >50,000)
*'''Leukostasis:''' Symptomatic hyperleukocytosis — a hematologic emergency
**White cell plugs obstruct microvasculature → end-organ damage
**Most commonly seen with [[AML]] or [[CML]] in blast crisis (blast cells are larger and stickier than mature WBCs)
**Brain and lungs are most commonly affected organs
*20-40% of patients with leukostasis die within first week of presentation
*Key distinction: WBC count alone does not predict leukostasis — CLL patients may have WBC >200K without leukostasis because mature lymphocytes are small and deformable


*Pathologic diagnosis where WBC plugs seen in microvasculature
==Clinical Features==
*High blast cell counts, blood viscosity is increased
*Fever — present in ~80%; may be from leukostasis-related inflammation or concurrent infection
*Blood flow is slowed by aggregates of tumor cells, and the primitive leukemic cells are capable of invading through endothelium and causing hemorrhage  
*CNS leukostasis: [[headache]], [[dizziness]], [[tinnitus]], visual disturbances, [[confusion]], [[ataxia]], stupor, [[coma]], [[intracranial hemorrhage]]
*Usually seen in pts with AML, not seen in CML or CLL
*Pulmonary leukostasis: [[Respiratory distress]], [[hypoxemia]], [[respiratory failure]]
*WBC count usu >100k, can happen as low as 50K
**Pearl: ABG may show falsely decreased PaO2 (leukocytes consume O2 in vitro); pulse oximetry is more accurate
*Brain and lung are most commonly affected
*Other: Priapism, renal insufficiency, limb ischemia, [[DIC]]


== Clinical Features  ==
==Differential Diagnosis==
{{Oncologic emergencies DDX}}


*Brain Leukostasis
==Evaluation==
**headache
*CBC with differential and peripheral smear
**stupor
*DIC labs: PT/INR, PTT, fibrinogen, D-dimer, FDP (DIC in up to 40%)
**dizziness
*[[Tumor lysis syndrome]] labs: BMP (potassium, calcium, phosphate), uric acid, LDH (TLS in up to 10%)
**tinnitus
*[[CXR]]: interstitial or alveolar infiltrates
**visual disturbances
*CT head if CNS symptoms (hemorrhage or infarction)
**ataxia
*Blood and urine cultures if febrile
**confusion
*Avoid transfusing RBCs before cytoreduction — may worsen viscosity and leukostasis symptoms
**coma
**sudden death


*Pulmonary Leukostasis
==Management==
**respiratory distress
*Hyperleukocytosis (asymptomatic): [[Hydroxyurea]] for cytoreduction may suffice
**hypoxemia
*Leukostasis (symptomatic):
**respiratory failure
**Aggressive IV hydration — prevent dehydration which worsens viscosity
**'''Chemotherapy''' — only treatment proven to improve survival; hematology consult immediately
**Hydroxyurea 50-100 mg/kg/day for urgent cytoreduction while awaiting chemotherapy
**Leukapheresis — temporizing measure to rapidly reduce WBC count; use if chemotherapy will be delayed
*TLS prophylaxis: [[Allopurinol]] or [[rasburicase]], aggressive IV hydration
*Broad-spectrum [[antibiotics]] — leading cause of death in blast crisis is infection (patients are functionally [[neutropenia|neutropenic]])
*'''Do NOT transfuse RBCs''' to Hgb >10 until WBC is reduced (increases viscosity)


== Diagnosis  ==
==Disposition==
*High degree of suspicion to make diagnosis
*Admit to ICU for symptomatic leukostasis
*WBC count usu >100k, can happen as low as 50K + symptoms from tissue hypoxia
*Immediate hematology/oncology consult for all cases
*CXR usu show interstial or alveolar infiltrates


== Treatment  ==
==See Also==
#IV hydration
*[[Tumor lysis syndrome]]
##Prevent dehydration which can worsen condition
*[[Neutropenic fever]]
#Chemotherapy
*[[DIC]]
##Only treatment proven to improve survival
#Hydroxyurea + leukapheresis
##Can be use for cytoreduction if chemo will be delayed


== Disposition  ==
==References==
*Admit to ICU
<references/>
 
== Source  ==
Harrison's Internal Medicine Oncologic Emergencies & Uptodate


[[Category:Heme/Onc]]
[[Category:Heme/Onc]]

Latest revision as of 09:34, 22 March 2026

Background

  • Hyperleukocytosis: WBC >100,000/μL (some define as >50,000)
  • Leukostasis: Symptomatic hyperleukocytosis — a hematologic emergency
    • White cell plugs obstruct microvasculature → end-organ damage
    • Most commonly seen with AML or CML in blast crisis (blast cells are larger and stickier than mature WBCs)
    • Brain and lungs are most commonly affected organs
  • 20-40% of patients with leukostasis die within first week of presentation
  • Key distinction: WBC count alone does not predict leukostasis — CLL patients may have WBC >200K without leukostasis because mature lymphocytes are small and deformable

Clinical Features

Differential Diagnosis

Oncologic Emergencies

Related to Local Tumor Effects

Related to Biochemical Derangement

Related to Hematologic Derangement

Related to Therapy

Evaluation

  • CBC with differential and peripheral smear
  • DIC labs: PT/INR, PTT, fibrinogen, D-dimer, FDP (DIC in up to 40%)
  • Tumor lysis syndrome labs: BMP (potassium, calcium, phosphate), uric acid, LDH (TLS in up to 10%)
  • CXR: interstitial or alveolar infiltrates
  • CT head if CNS symptoms (hemorrhage or infarction)
  • Blood and urine cultures if febrile
  • Avoid transfusing RBCs before cytoreduction — may worsen viscosity and leukostasis symptoms

Management

  • Hyperleukocytosis (asymptomatic): Hydroxyurea for cytoreduction may suffice
  • Leukostasis (symptomatic):
    • Aggressive IV hydration — prevent dehydration which worsens viscosity
    • Chemotherapy — only treatment proven to improve survival; hematology consult immediately
    • Hydroxyurea 50-100 mg/kg/day for urgent cytoreduction while awaiting chemotherapy
    • Leukapheresis — temporizing measure to rapidly reduce WBC count; use if chemotherapy will be delayed
  • TLS prophylaxis: Allopurinol or rasburicase, aggressive IV hydration
  • Broad-spectrum antibiotics — leading cause of death in blast crisis is infection (patients are functionally neutropenic)
  • Do NOT transfuse RBCs to Hgb >10 until WBC is reduced (increases viscosity)

Disposition

  • Admit to ICU for symptomatic leukostasis
  • Immediate hematology/oncology consult for all cases

See Also

References