Definition:

Common Nephrotoxic Agents in Oncology

Drug/Class Mechanism of Nephrotoxicity Pharmacist Pearls
Cisplatin Direct tubular epithelial cell damage → acute tubular necrosis Hydration with saline ± mannitol, monitor Cr, Mg, K; cumulative dose limitation
Carboplatin Less nephrotoxic than cisplatin, can still cause renal impairment Dose adjustment based on CrCl / Calvert formula
Ifosfamide Acrolein metabolite → tubular damage, Fanconi syndrome Use MESNA + hydration, monitor electrolytes, Cr
Methotrexate (high-dose) Precipitates in renal tubules → acute kidney injury Hydration + alkalinization of urine, monitor MTX levels, leucovorin rescue
Aminoglycosides (supportive therapy) Nephrotoxicity during febrile neutropenia Monitor renal function, trough levels
Targeted therapy (VEGF inhibitors, e.g., Bevacizumab) Proteinuria, hypertension → chronic kidney injury Monitor urinalysis, BP, adjust dose or hold therapy

Pathophysiology

  • Acute tubular necrosis (ATN) → most common
  • Interstitial nephritis → immune-mediated (e.g., checkpoint inhibitors)
  • Glomerular injury → proteinuria, thrombotic microangiopathy (e.g., VEGF inhibitors)

Clinical Features

  • Acute kidney injury: ↑ serum creatinine, ↓ urine output
  • Electrolyte disturbances: hypomagnesemia, hypokalemia, hypophosphatemia
  • Chronic kidney disease: long-term exposure to nephrotoxic agents
  • Proteinuria / hematuria with glomerular injury

Monitoring & Pharmacist Role

  1. Baseline assessment:

    • Serum creatinine, BUN, electrolytes, urinalysis
    • Calculate CrCl / eGFR for dose adjustments
  2. During therapy:
    • Serial renal function monitoring
    • Monitor electrolytes for tubular dysfunction
    • Track cumulative doses for nephrotoxic drugs
  3. Prevention & supportive care:
  4. Dose adjustment:
    • Reduce or delay nephrotoxic drugs based on CrCl / eGFR

High-Yield Pharmacist Pearls

  • Cisplatin: classic nephrotoxic chemo → always hydrate + monitor Mg, K, Na
  • Methotrexate: AKI due to precipitation → hydration + urine alkalinization + leucovorin rescue
  • Ifosfamide: chronic tubular dysfunction possible → monitor electrolytes, Cr
  • VEGF inhibitors: proteinuria and hypertension → may need dose hold or discontinuation
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