Leukostasis and hyperleukocytosis
Background
- Hyperleukocytosis: WBC >100,000/μL (some define as >50,000)
- Leukostasis: Symptomatic hyperleukocytosis — a hematologic emergency
- 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
- Fever — present in ~80%; may be from leukostasis-related inflammation or concurrent infection
- CNS leukostasis: headache, dizziness, tinnitus, visual disturbances, confusion, ataxia, stupor, coma, intracranial hemorrhage
- Pulmonary leukostasis: Respiratory distress, hypoxemia, respiratory failure
- Pearl: ABG may show falsely decreased PaO2 (leukocytes consume O2 in vitro); pulse oximetry is more accurate
- Other: Priapism, renal insufficiency, limb ischemia, DIC
Differential Diagnosis
Oncologic Emergencies
Related to Local Tumor Effects
- Malignant airway obstruction
- Bone metastases and pathologic fractures
- Malignant spinal cord compression
- Malignant Pericardial Effusion and Tamponade
- Superior vena cava syndrome
Related to Biochemical Derangement
- Hypercalcemia of malignancy
- Hyponatremia due to SIADH
- Adrenal insufficiency
- Tumor lysis syndrome
- Carcinoid syndrome
Related to Hematologic Derangement
Related to Therapy
- Chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting
- Cytokine release syndrome
- Chemotherapeutic drug extravasation
- Differentiation syndrome (retinoic acid syndrome) in APML
- Stem cell transplant complications
- Catheter-related complications
- Tunnel infection
- Exit site infection
- CVC obstruction (intraluminal or catheter tip thrombosis)
- Catheter-related venous thrombosis
- Fracture of catheter lumen
- Oncologic therapy related adverse events
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
