Pathophysiology
- TLS results from rapid destruction of malignant cells (often after chemotherapy, steroids, or even spontaneously in highly proliferative tumors).
- Release of intracellular contents → metabolic derangements:
- Hyperkalemia → arrhythmias, sudden death
- Hyperphosphatemia → binds calcium → hypocalcemia → seizures, tetany, QT prolongation
- Hyperurecemia → crystal nephropathy, acute kidney injury
- Hypocalcemia (secondary to phosphate) → neuromuscular and cardiac complications
Risk Stratification (pharmacist role: guide prophylaxis)
- High Risk: Burkitt lymphoma, T-ALL, WBC >100 × 109/L, bulky disease, LDH >2× ULN, baseline renal dysfunction.
- Intermediate Risk: DLBCL, AML with WBC 25–100 × 109/L, other aggressive lymphomas.
- Low Risk: Indolent NHL, CLL (unless high WBC + venetoclax), most solid tumors.
For clinical classification, TLS is divided into two categories:
- Laboratory TLS (LTLS): The presence of two or more metabolic abnormalities occurring within three days before or seven days after the initiation of therapy
- Clinical TLS (CTLS): Laboratory TLS accompanied by significant clinical symptoms, such as cardiac dysrhythmias, seizures, or a 1.5x increase in serum creatinine
Prevention (before chemo or tumor-lysis trigger)
1. Hydration (cornerstone)
- 2–3 L/m2/day IV fluids (start 24–48h before therapy).
- Goal urine output: 80–100 mL/m2/hr.
- Avoid potassium-containing fluids.
- Loop diuretics only if fluid overload.
2. Hypouricemic agents
- Allopurinol:
- Rasburicase:
- Dose: 0.1–0.2 mg/kg IV x 1 (fixed doses 3–6 mg often used).
- Rapidly lowers uric acid (within 4h).
- Contraindicated in G6PD deficiency.
- Monitor uric acid with iced, heparinized tubes (avoids ex vivo breakdown).
- Used for high-risk or established TLS.
3. Monitoring
- Labs q6–8h in high-risk: K+, phosphate, calcium, uric acid, creatinine, LDH.
- Continuous ECG for K⁺ abnormalities.
Treatment of Established TLS
- Fluids: Maintain high urine output.
- Rasburicase: Drug of choice if uric acid >8 mg/dL or if clinical TLS.
- Electrolyte management:
- Hyperkalemia → insulin/dextrose, β-agonists, binders, dialysis if refractory.
- Hyperphosphatemia → phosphate binders, dialysis if severe.
- Hypocalcemia → treat only if symptomatic (IV calcium can worsen Ca–PO₄ precipitation).
- Dialysis: For refractory hyperkalemia, severe hyperphosphatemia, or persistent oligo-anuric renal failure.
Practical Pharmacist Pearls
- Allopurinol is prophylactic, not therapeutic. If uric acid is already high, rasburicase is required.
- Dose adjust allopurinol in renal impairment; avoid with azathioprine/6-MP.
- One dose of rasburicase is often enough; reassess before redosing (cost-saving strategy).
- Avoid alkalinization of urine (historical practice) — increases risk of calcium phosphate precipitation.
- Always screen for G6PD deficiency before rasburicase.
- Monitor closely: pharmacists should ensure TLS labs are ordered frequently and results acted upon promptly.
Summary for the oncology pharmacist:
- Hydration + monitoring = universal cornerstone.
- Allopurinol = prophylaxis in low/intermediate risk.
- Rasburicase = treatment of established TLS or prophylaxis in high-risk.
- Pharmacist role = risk stratification, selecting correct prophylaxis, adjusting doses, recognizing drug interactions, ensuring labs/monitoring, and guiding electrolyte management.

