Neutropenic fever

Revision as of 03:02, 23 October 2011 by Jswartz (talk | contribs) (→‎Treatment)

Background

  • ANC = (total WBC) x (%segs + %bands)
  • Nadir usually occurs 5-10d after chemo
  • Duration of neutropenia depends on type of cancer treatment
    • Solid tumor Rx: <5d
    • Hematologic malignancies: 14d or longer
  • (Leukemia or lymphoma) + chemo most commonly associated with neutropenia

Definition

  1. ANC <500 OR <1000 w/ predicted nadir of <500 in 48h AND
  2. Fever ≥ 38.3˚C (100.9˚F) once OR sustained temp ≥38 (100.4) for >1hr
    1. Oral temp (do not obtain rectal temp)

Common Causes

  • Definitive cause only found in 30%
  1. Endogenous flora 80%
    1. E Coli, Enterobacter, anaerobes
  2. Skin
    1. Staph, strep
  3. Respiratory tract
    1. Step pneumo, klebsiella, corynebacterium, pseudomonas
  4. Other
    1. C. diff, mycobacterium, candida, aspergillus

Diagnosis

  1. Classic manifestations of infection are frequently NOT seen
  2. Check skin, oral cavity, perianal area, entry sites of indwelling cath sites

DDx

  1. Transfusion reaction
  2. Medication allergies and toxicities
  3. Tumor-related fever

Work-Up

  1. AVOID rectal temp
  2. CBC
  3. Chemistry
  4. LFTs
  5. UA/UCx
    1. May not show WBCs or leuk esterase given neutropenia
  6. Sputum studies
    1. Gram stain
    2. Cx
  7. BCx x 2
    1. 20-30cc blood (adult); 3-9cc (child)
    2. May take both samples from CVC (if present)
  8. Cx any indwelling catheters
  9. LP
    1. If neuro abnl or suspicious
  10. Site-specific specimens
    1. Nasopharyngeal wash (in pts with URI)
      1. RSV, influenza
  11. Stool (if indicated)
    1. C dif
    2. O&P
    3. Cx
  12. CXR
  13. CT (if necessary)
    1. Sinuses
    2. Chest
    3. A/P

High-Risk/Special Infections

  1. Neutropenic Enterocolitis (Typhlitis)
  2. Mucormycosis)
  3. Hepatosplenic Candidiasis
    1. After neutropenic fever resolves and ANC has come up allowing abcess formation
    2. Treat w/ amphotericin B

Treatment

Inpatient

  1. Monotherapy appears to be as good as dual-drug therapy
    1. Cefepime 2g IV q8hr or ceftazidime 2g IV q8hr OR
    2. Imipenem/cilastatin 1gm IV q8hr or meropenem 1gm IV q8hr OR
    3. Piperacillin/tazobactam 4.5gm IV q 6hr
  2. Consider adding vancomycin to above regimen for:
    1. Severe mucositis
    2. Signs of catheter site infection
    3. Fluoroquinolone prophylaxis was recently used against gram-negative bacteremia
    4. Hypotension is present
    5. Institutions with hospital-associated MRSA
    6. Pt has known colonization with resistant gram-positive organisms

Outpatient

  1. Ciprofloxacin 500mg PO q8hr AND amoxicillin/clavulanate 500mg PO q8hr x7d

Disposition

  • Low risk patients
    • Consider discharge it pt scores ≥21 using the MASCC risk index scoring system

Patient Clinical Factor Score

Patient Clinical Factor Score

Severity of illness:

no symptoms or mild symptoms

moderate symptoms

5

3

No hypotension
5
No chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
4
Solid tumor or no fungal infxn
4
No dehydration
3
Outpt at onset of fever
3
Age < 60yo
2

≥21 pt = low risk for SBI

Source

  • LLSA 2009
  • Halfdanarson, Onc Emergencies Mayo Clin Proc June 2006
  • Tintinalli