Anemia in Cancer Patients:
Introduction and Overview
Hussain I. Saba, MD, PhD
Introduction
Anemia is a common complication of malignancies. Because its
causes and mechanisms are complex, the term multifactorial has been
applied. Cancer-related anemia may occur as a direct effect of the neoplasm, it may
be due to products of the cancer, or it may develop as a result of the cancer treatment
itself. In the past, anemia occurring in cancer patients was often referred to as
chronic anemia or anemia of chronic disease. These effects
may be reflective of a paraneoplastic syndrome.
Anemia Occurring as a Direct Effect of the Neoplasm
Direct-acting factors due to the effects of the cancer are
summarized in Table 1. Notable among these are solid tumor malignancies, such as
breast and prostate cancer, that invade the marrow. Often overlooked as factors in
inducing anemia, these malignancies produce a desmoid or fibrotic reaction, with increased
marrow fibrosis that results in alteration of marrow space and sinusoidal matrix.
This can affect the orderly release of mature blood cells from bone marrow and can produce
a leukoerythroblastic picture with immature red cells and early myeloid white cells seen
in peripheral blood.
Table 1. -- Anemia of Cancer: Direct
Effects of the Neoplasm |
| Exogenous blood loss (acute or chronic): |
Gastrointestnal malignancies
Head and neck cancer
Genitourinary cancers
Cervical and vaginal cancers |
| Intratumor bleeding: |
Sarcomas
Bulky melanomas
Hepatoma
Ovarian cancer
Adrenocortical tumors |
| Anemia due to erthrophagocytosis: |
Histiocytic medullary reticulosis
Histiocytic lymphomas
Other histiocyctic neoplasms |
| Bone marrow replacement: |
Leukemias
Lymphomas
Myelomas
Carcinomas (breast, prostate) |
Direct causes of anemia in malignancy include known substances or
proteins produced by the cancer (Table 2). The deposits of amyloid in myelomas and
amyloidosis can be extensive enough to replace the bone marrow. The development of
antibodies in chronic lymphocytic leukemia, lymphoma, and sometimes solid tumor
malignancies can lead to immune hemolytic anemias. Furthermore, development of
microangiopathic hemolytic anemia, which is seen in some solid tumor malignancies, may
result from procoagulants released from cancers.
Table 2. -- Anemia Due to Known
Products of Cancer |
| Substance |
Mechanism |
Neoplasm |
| Amyloid |
Marrow replacement |
Plasma cell dyscrasia |
| Antibodies |
Immune hemolytic anemia |
Chronic lymphocytic leukemia, lymphoma, adenocarcinoma |
| Procoagulant proteins |
Microangiopathic hemolytic anemia |
Gastrointestinal malignancies (mucin), prostate cancer |
Anemia of Cancer: Anemia of Chronic Disease or a
Cytokine-Associated Syndrome?
In many cancer patients, the causative mechanism of anemia is
incompletely defined; thus, the term anemia of chronic disease is used.
Defective iron utilization, the hallmark of anemia of chronic disease, is common among
patients suffering from anemia of malignancy.
The concept of anemia of chronic disease was reported 150 years ago
by German investigators Andral and Cavarret. Despite extensive studies by William
Cartwright after World War II, its pathophysiologic mechanism remains unclear.
However, in 1966, Dr Cartwright suggested a conceptual mechanism for the anemia of chronic
disease that could easily be applied to the anemia of malignancy. Cartwrights
three mechanisms include shortened red cell survival, failure of the bone marrow to
increase erythropoiesis to meet the demand and to repair the deficiency (ie, a
hypoproliferative state), and failure of bone marrow to release iron from the senescent
red cells phagocytosed by the bone marrow macrophages (ie, defective iron
reutilization). Each of these mechanisms pertains to the development of the anemia
of malignancy.
New lines of evidence suggest that abnormalities in the production
of erythropoietin (EPO) are involved. The hypoproliferative state in anemia of
cancer appears to be related to either decreased EPO production or impaired bone marrow
response to EPO.
Recent evidence has indicated that recombinant EPO can correct the
anemia of malignancy in many patients. This finding has rekindled interest in
decreased EPO production as an important factor in the anemia of cancer. One concept
states that inappropriate secretion of EPO is related to increased cytokine production by
the tumor. In vitro studies have shown that tumor necrosis factor (TNF) and
interleukin-1 (IL-1) inhibit EPO mRNA synthesis. This indicates that
hypoproliferative response of the marrow in cancer patients could be a cytokine-mediated
phenomenon. Cytokines liberated in cancer patients could cause inhibition of EPO
secretion and possibly EPO responsiveness of the marrow erythroid progenitors.
Impaired Iron Utilization in the Anemia of Cancer
Impairment of iron metabolism and depressed erythropoiesis
constitute primary hallmarks as well as the basis for anemia in cancer patients.
Although most studies were conducted in chronic inflammatory states such as rheumatoid
arthritis rather than the anemia of cancer, it is now clear that several cytokines
produced in cancer patients (eg, TNF, IL-1, IL-6, transforming growth factor-beta,
interferon-gamma, and EPO) are responsible for suppressed erythropoiesis and impaired iron
metabolism.
It is not yet known whether different cytokines or different
sequences of cytokine release are critical to specific lesions. TNF increases in
patients with cancer. In the animal model, TNF administration has resulted in
changes of iron metabolism characteristic of the anemia of malignancy. Furthermore,
injection of TNF in human patients with metastatic cancer has resulted in the expression
of all of the features of impaired iron utilization. IL-1 has been implicated in
suppression of erythropoiesis in inflammatory lesions, like rheumatoid arthritis, but its
role in anemia of malignancy in humans has not yet been delineated. Other cytokines
such as IL-6 and transforming growth factor-beta also suppress erythropoiesis and iron
metabolism, but their exact roles have not yet been determined.
Thus, it appears that anemia in cancer patients can be defined as a
cytokine-associated syndrome in which multiple cytokines interact to produce
suppression of erythropoiesis and derangement of iron metabolism. Some scientists
have suggested that the term anemia of malignancy should be replaced with the
term cytokine associated anemia and the primary involved cytokine should be
delineated by an appropriate subscript. More studies are underway to understand the
critical interaction of these cytokines, their production, their release, and their
temporal relationship with each other in cancer patients. It is not known whether
specific cytokines are related to specific neoplasms. With this information, the
true mechanism of anemia in cancer patients will be clearly understood and appropriate
management strategies can be developed.
Therapy of Anemia of Malignancy
Although therapy for the anemia of malignancy has been focused on
treating the underlying malignancy, there have been reports of improved red cell mass with
EPO administration in cancer patients undergoing radiation therapy and chemotherapy, such
as cisplatin and carboplatin. Investigators have also reported improvements in the
quality of life associated with EPO administration. The Ludwig group reported
experience with EPO in 63 patients with myelodysplastic syndrome and multiple
myeloma. Response, as measured by raising hemoglobin to 2 g/dL above the baseline,
was seen in 43% of patients. Experience with patients with nonmyeloid malignancies
receiving cancer chemotherapy in community oncology practice in the United States
demonstrates that responses occur in 50% to 60% of EPO-treated patients, and the response
rate is over 75% in patients with > or = to 1 g/dL decrease in hemoglobin.
In a Japanese study, head and neck cancer patients undergoing
radiation therapy exhibited increased hemoglobin levels with successive EPO injections.
Two sequential trials in ovarian cancer patients treated with carboplatin and etoposide,
with and without EPO, showed improvement in hemoglobin levels in the EPO-treated
group. Preliminary analyses of randomized open-label trials of EPO with radiation
therapy in patients with lung, breast, and prostate cancer also have shown increases in
mean hemoglobin levels during treatment. Additional randomized, controlled studies
are needed to clearly define the efficacy of EPO in the management of anemia in cancer
patients.
Conclusions
Anemia, a common occurrence in malignant disease, can be the first
diagnostic clue to suggest a malignant disease. It also can create a disabling
burden for patients already coping with cancer. Because a number of underlying
mechanisms may contribute to the anemia of cancer, it is important to define causes that
are treatable. As our understanding of this phenomenon increases, researchers are
beginning to appreciate the role played by tumor-associated cytokine production in the
development of anemia of malignancy.
The availability of recombinant EPO is a significant addition to the
therapeutic armamentarium. Many of these issues are further described in this
supplement, which distills the proceedings of a roundtable discussion of experts held in
Key West, Florida, in October 1997.
Suggested Readings
Glaspy J, Bukowski R, Steinberg D, et al. Impact of therapy with epoetin alfa on
clinical outcomes in patients with nonmyeloid malignancies during cancer chemotherapy in
community oncology practice: Procrit Study Group. J Clin Oncol. 1997;15:1218-1234.
Moliterno AR, Spivak JL. Anemia of cancer. Hematol Oncol Clin North
Am. 1996;10:345-363.
Frenkel EP, Bick RL, Rutherford CJ. Anemia of malignancy. Hematol Oncol
Clin North Am. 1996;10:861-873.
Spivak JL. Cancer-related anemia: its causes and characteristics. Semin
Oncol. 1994;21(suppl 3):3-8.
Henry D. Recombinant human erythropoietin for treatment of anemia in patients
with advanced cancer. Semin Hematol. 1993;30 (suppl 6):12-16.
Hyman GA. Studies of anemia of disseminated malignant neoplastic
disease. 1. The hemolytic factor. Blood. 1954;9:911.
From the Department of Medical Oncology/Hematology at the H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center
Research Institute, University of South Florida School of Medicine, Tampa, Fla.
Address reprint requests to Hussain I. Saba, MD, PhD, Hematologic
Malignancy Program, H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center & Research Institute, 12902 Magnolia
Dr, Tampa, FL 33612
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