Title: FEBRILE NEUTROPENIA
1FEBRILE NEUTROPENIA
- Saima Abbas M.D
- Infectious Diseases
- Fellow-PGY5
2Why is this an Oncologic emergency ??
3Infection ABX Immune system cure
- Normal Gross Anatomy
- Skin Integrity
- Intact mucous membranes
- Intact ciliary function
- Absence of Foreign Bodies
- Innate Immunity
- ( PMN,
- Macrophages, NK cells, Mast cells and basophils)
- Complement
- Adaptive immunity
- T cells CD 4 and CD 8
- B cells
4 Case 1July 10th 2009 - NF 1
- You are paged at 500am by the nurse taking care
of Mr. Thomas on 4 AB - He spiked a fever of 38? C (100.4?F) one hour
ago. - -There is no order for Tylenol.
5- You check your Hem Oncology List .
- Per sign out
- The patient was recently diagnosed with AML is
S/P chemotherapy and is stable. - You can
- Order Tylenol and take the next page.
- OR..
6OR
Am I missing febrile Neutropenia???
- If you are alert, you think
7What are the facts you need to know?
- Does 38 ? C define febrile neutropenia?
- Whats his Absolute Neutrophil Count?
- Any transfusion in the last 6 hours?
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9Definition of Fever in FN
- A single oral temp ? 38.3 ? C
- (101 ? F)
- or
- A temperature of ? 38 ? C
- (100.4 F) on two occasions separated by 1 hour
-
10- You request her to repeat the temperature and she
reports 38. 2? C (100.8 ?F)
11Dont be tricked
- If temperature 37 ? 38? C , repeat temperature in
1 hour to see if the above criteria for treatment
are met - Clinical signs of septicemia
- Good history of fever detected by patient
before admission and afebrile when you evaluate
the patient.
12Definition of Neutropenia
- ANC ? 500/mm3 or
- ? 1000/mm3 and predicted
- decline to ? 500/mm
- Clin Inf Dis, 200234730-51
-
13ANC Mr. Thomas
14 Absolute Neutrophil Count
- (Total of WBC) x ( of Neutrophils) ANC
- Take the percent of neutrophils (may also be
polys or segs) percent bands - Convert percent to a decimal by dividing by 100
(Example 40 40/100 0.40) (move the decimal
2 points to the left) - Multiply this number by the total White Blood
Cells (WBC)
150.7 X 1000 70040 40/1000.40 700 X 0.40
280
16Neutropenia
- Normal ANC 1500 to 8000 cells/mmÂł
- Neutropenia ANC lt 1500 cells / mm3
- Mild Neutropenia 1000-1500 cells / mm3
- Moderate Neutropenia 500-999 cells / mm3
- Severe Neutropenia lt 500 cells / mm3
- Profound Neutropenia lt100 cells/ mmÂł
17When Does Neutropenia Occur?
- Most chemotherapy agents/protocols cause
neutropenia nadir at 10-14 days - But can see anytime from a few days after
chemotherapy to up to 4-6 weeks later depending
on the agents used
18Risk of Infection as Absolute Neutrophil Count
Declines
19Epidemiology
- Up to 60 febrile neutropenia episodes
infection (microbiological or clinical) - 20 patients with ANC lt100 cells/mmÂł with
febrile neutropenia episodes have bacteremias.
20 Epidemiology --NEJM, 19712841061
- Retrospective data have shown that
- 50 of Pseudomonas Aeruginosa Bacteremia
result in death within 72 hours when ANC is lt
1000 - Early trials aimed at Pseudomonas showed that
Carbapenicillin /Gentamicin decreased Mortality
by 33 - Journal of
Infectious diseases, 197814714 -
21Epidemiology
Viscoli et al, Clin Inf Dis40S240-5
- Changing etiology of bacteremia
- IATG-EORTC 1973-2000 trials of febrile
neutropenia
- Gram positive dominant since mid 1980s
- 1) More intensive chemoTx
- Mucositis
- 2) In-dwelling catheters
- Cutaneous-IV portal
- 3) Selective antiBx pressure
- Fluoroquinolones
- Co-trimoxazole
- 4) Antacids
- Promote oro-oesophageal colonisation with GPC
Gram negative resurgence
22Duration of Neutropenia
- lt 7 days LOW risk
- 7 to 14 days INTERMEDIATE RISK
- gt 14 days HIGH RISK
23Duration Of Neutropenia
1988,Rubin and colleagues
- lt 7 days of neutropenia
- response rates to initial antimicrobial
therapy was 95, compared to only 32 in patients
with more than 14 days of neutropenia ( lt.001) - patients with intermediate durations of
neutropenia between 7 and - 14 days had response rates of 79
24Common Microbes
- Gram-negative
- bacilli and cocci
- Escherichia coli
- Klebsiella species
- Pseudomonas aeruginosa
- FUNGI
- Candida- Non albicans emerging
- Aspergillus gtgt in HSCT
- Gram-positive cocci and bacilli
- Staph. aureus
- Staphylococcus epidermidis
- Enterococcus faecalis/faecium
- Corynebacterium species
25Initial evaluation
- Ensure Hemodynamic Stability and No NEW ORGAN
DYSFUNCTION - History
- Underlying disease, remission and transplant
status- spleen /- - Chemotherapy
- Drug history (steroids, any previous antibiotics)
- Allergies
- Focused Review of systems
- Transfusions
- Can cause fevers
- Lines or in-dwelling hardware
26 THINK Strep. Pneumoniae Neisseria
meningitidis Hemophilus Influenzae
27Exam (be prepared to find no signs of
inflammation)
- HEENT Look in the mouth any oral sores
periodontium, the pharynx - Lungs
- Abdomen for tenderness- RLQ (signs of
Typhilitis) - Perineum including the anus -No rectal exam !
28Skin Exam- Ask the patient for any area of
tenderness?
- Skin
- Bone marrow aspirations sites,
- vascular catheter access sites
- and tissue around the nails
- Rashes (Drug eruptions/herpes zoster reactivation
/ Petechial rashes all are common in these
patients)
29Febrile neutropeniaInvestigation
- Complete Blood Count (with Differential)
- -White cells, haemoglobin, platelets
- Biochemistry
- -Electrolytes, urea, creatinine, Liver function
- Microbiology
- -Blood cultures (peripheral and all central line
lumens) - -Oral ulcers or sores send swabs ( Viral Cx and
fungal Cx ) - -Exit site swabs
- -Wound swabs
- -Urine Cultures (SSx/Foley Catheter) - pyuria ??
UA - -Stool Cultures and CDiff Toxin/PCR
- Radiology
- -Chest Xray /- CT abdomen/pelvis
30Lumbar puncture-
- Examination of CSF specimens is not recommended
as a routine procedure but should be considered
if a CNS - infection is suspected and thrombocytopenia is
absent or manageable.
31Skin lesions
- Aspiration or biopsy of skin lesions suspected of
being infected should be - performed for cytologic testing, Gram staining,
and culture
32IMAGING in FN
- CXR if Symptomatic or if out pt Rx considered
- High resolution CT Chest Indicated ONLY if
persistent fevers with pulmonary symptoms after
initiation of empiric Abx - CTA if suspect PE
- CT abdomen for Necrotizing Enterocolitis or
Typhilitis - CT brain R/o ICH / MRI of the spine or brain -
more for evaluation of metastatic disease than FN
33Stratify risk of complications
- 1. Neutropenia
- ? with severity of neutropenia (lt 50/mm3)
- ? with duration of neutropenia (gt7 days)
- 2.Bacteremia
- Gram negative gt gram positive
- 3.Underlying malignancy and status
- Acute Leukemia
- Relapsed disease
- Solid malignancies Local effects eg obstruction,
invasion - 4.Co-morbidities, age gt60
34HIGH risk Patients
- Prolonged Neutropenia (gt14 days)
- Haematological malignancy/ Allogenic HSCT
- Myelosuppresive chemotherapy
- Concurrent chemotherapy and radiotherapy
- Age gt60
- Co-morbidities eg. Diabetes, poor nutritional
status. - Bone marrow involvement of cancer
- Delayed surgical healing or open wounds
- Significant mucositis
- Unstable (eg hypotensive, oliguric)
- On steroid dose gt20mg prednisone daily
- Recent hospitalization for infection
35a Concomitant condition of significance
(e.g.,shock, hypoxia, pneumonia, or other deep
organ infection, vomiting, or diarrhea).
36Risk model
- Model 2
- (Klatersky et al MASCC 2000 J Clin Onc)
- No or Mild symptoms 5
- Moderate symptoms 3
- No Hypotension 5
- No COPD 4
- Solid tumour / 4
- Haem malignancy
- (no fungal infection)
- Outpatient 3
- No dehydration 3
- Age lt60 yrs 2
- LOW RISKscoregt20
37ORAL vs IV
- For patients who are low risk for developing
infection-related complications during the course
of neutropenia, - Oral ciprofloxacin plus amoxicillin/clavulana
te - Oral ciprofloxacin plus clindamycin
- for PCN allergy
38If inpatient and high risk
- EMPIRIC ANTIMICROBIAL THERAPY after Blood
Cultures.Must be initiated within 1 hour
39THREE approaches for IV EMPIRIC therapy
- IV MONO THERAPY
- IV DUAL THERAPY
- COMBINATION THERAPY
- Mono or dual therapy VANCOMYCIN
40- Monotherapy IV
- Extended spectrum Antipseudomonal Cephalosporins
- Cefepime
- Ceftazidime
- Carbapenem
- Imipenem Cilastatin
- Meropenem
- Anti Pseudomonal PCN
- Piperacillin- Tazobactam
- Ticarcillin- Clavulanic acid
41DUAL therapy
- 1. an aminoglycoside
- plus
- an antipseudomonal penicillin
- (with or without a beta-lactamase
inhibitor) - or
- an extended-spectrum
- antipseudomonal cephalosporin,
-
42Dual therapy
- (2) ciprofloxacin plus an
- antipseudomonal penicillin.
- Indications
- Unstable patient
- H/O P. aeruginosa colonization or Invasive
disease
43 5 Indications for Vancomycin
- 1. clinically suspected serious catheter-related
infections - 2. known colonization with penicillin- and
- cephalosporin-resistant pneumococci or MRSA,
- 3. positive results of blood culture for
gram-positive - hypotension or other evidence of cardiovascular
impairment - 5. H/O ciprofloxacin or trimethoprim-sulfamethoxaz
ole
44 vancomycin resistant enterococcus
- Linezolid
- Daptomycin (avoid for pneumonia)
- Quinopristin- Dalfopristin
45PCN allergy
- NON ANAPHYLACTIC
- If not allergic to cephalosporins
- Cefepime
- ANAPHYLACTIC and allergic to cephalosporins-
- Aztreonam /- Aminoglycoside or a FQ
- /- Vancomycin if indicated
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47MAINTAIN BROAD SPECTRUM ACTIVITY FOR A MINIMUM OF
7 DAYS OR UNTIL ANC gt500
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50Antibiotic stopping guideIDSA, Clin Infect
Disease, 2002
- Minimum 1 week of therapy if
- Afebrile by day 3
- Neutrophils gt500/mm3 (2 consecutive days)
- Cultures negative
- Low risk patient, uncomplicated course
- gt 1 week of therapy based if
- Temps slow to settle (gt3 days)
- Continue for 4-5 days after neutrophil recovery
(gt500/mm3 ) - Minimum 2 weeks
- Bacteraemia, deep tissue infection
- After 2 weeks if remains neutropenic (lt
500/mm3), BUT afebrile, no disease focus, mucous
membranes, skin intact, no catheter site
infection, no invasive procedures or ablative
therapy plannedcease antibiotics and observe
51When temperatures do not go away
- Non-bacterial infection (eg fungal, viral)
- Bacterial resistance to first line therapy (MRSA,
VRE) - Slow response to drug in use
- Superinfection
- Inadequate dose
- Drug fever
- Cell wall deficient bacteria (eg Mycoplasma,
Chlamydia) - Infection at an avascular site (abscess or
catheter) - Disease-related fever
52Antifungals
- Easy to Initiate/ Difficult to stop
- Aggressive search for Fungal Infections
- Pulmonary Aspergillosis/Sinusitis / Hepatic
Candidiasis - CT Chest and Abdomen
- CT Sinuses
- Cultures of suspicious skin lesions
53ANTI FUNGALS
- AMPHO B IV drug of choice for high risk patients
- Alternative options
- FLUCONAZOLE
- ITRACONAZOLE
- ECHINOCANDINS
- Voriconazole is NOT FDA approved for empiric
therapy for persistent fevers in FN
54 Fluconazole candida
- Fluconazole acceptable if NO
- Moulds and Resistant Candida
- ( C. Krusei and C. glabrata )
- Uncommon.
-
- Low risk patients
- DO NOT Use Fluconazole if
- Evidence of Sinusitis or
- Radiographic evidence of Evidence of Pulmonary
disease - If patient has received Fluconazole prophylaxis
before.
55Itraconazole
- In a recent controlled study of 384 neutropenic
patients with cancer, itraconazole and
amphotericin B were equivalent in efficacy as
empirical antifungal therapy. - FOR BOARDS use AmphoB OR Itraconazole- hopefully
should not ask you to choose between Itraconazole
and Ampho B
56Antibiotic Prophylaxis for Afebrile Neutropenic
Patients
- Use of antibiotic prophylaxis is not routine
because of emerging antibiotic resistance ,
except for - Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole to prevent
Pneumocystis carinii pneumonitis. - Antifungal prophylaxis with fluconazole
- Antiviral prophylaxis with acyclovir or
ganciclovir are warranted for patients undergoing
allogenic hematopoietic stem cell
transplantation. -
CID 4010871094,2005 -
NEJM 353977,9881052,20
05
57Use of Antiviral Drugs
- Antiviral drugs are not recommended for routine
use unless clinical or laboratory evidence of
viral infection is evident.
58- Granulocyte TransfusionsGranulocyte transfusions
are not recommended for routine use. - Use of Colony-Stimulating FactorsUse of
colony-stimulating factors is not routine but
should beconsidered in certain cases with
predicted worsening of course.
59Role of G-CSF
- Studies of G-CSF used in febrile neutropenia
show - ? Length of neutropenia but generally not
hospitalization - No mortality advantage
- Generally not recommended
- Exception may be those in high risk group esp. if
unstable
60Updates not for BOARDS but for clinical practice
- JAC 57176,2006
- A meta analysis of 33 RCTs until Feb 2005 on
Antipseudomonal B lactams as MONOtherapies showed
that CEFEPIME increases 30 day all cause
mortality - Carbapenems were associated with increased
Pseudomembranous colitis.
61Special Situations
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63Neutropenic Enterocolitis or Typhilitis
- Inflammatory process involving colon and/or small
bowel - ischemia, necrosis, bacteremia
- ( translocation from gut) hemorrhage, and
perforation. - Fever and abdominal pain ( typically RLQ).
- Bowel wall thickening on ultrasonography or CT
imaging.
64Treatment ( 50-70 mortality)
- Initial conservative management
- bowel rest,
- intravenous fluids,
- TPN,
- broad-spectrum antibiotics
- and normalization of neutrophil counts.
- Surgical intervention
- obstruction, perforation, persistent
gastrointestinal bleeding despite correction of
thrombocytopenia and coagulopathy, and clinical
deterioration.
65 Consider Pseudomonal and Clostridial coverage
in Empiric therapy
- Clostridium SepticumClostridium SordelliCover
with PEN G ,AMP, ClindamycinBroad Spectrum Abx
( carbapenem )include Metronidazole if unsure
of Cdiff resistance of Clostridia to
clindamycin reported.
66H/O leukemia and prolonged antibiotic therapy
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68Angioinvasive Aspergillosis
- Confirm with Biopsy
- Aggressive Antifungal Therapy
- Voriconazole (Drug of Choice)
- Caspofungin FDA approved for Ampho and
Voriconazole refractory Aspergillus.
69 Case 1- Mr. Thomas
- June 20th 2009 diagnosed AML
- June 21st 2009 R subclavian
- Hickman placed and Chemotherapy initiated
- Remission Induction S/P 7 3 regimen Cytarabine
(Ara C) and Daunorubicin - June 28th 2009 - last dose of chemotherapy.
- July 10th 2009 - Febrile Neutropenia
- ANC 280 ANC lt 500 last 2 days
70- Experiences chills with CVC flushing and
erythema and tenderness is noted over the
hickman exit site. - Allergies NKDA
- Labs Pancytopenic
- LFTS ok Creatinine 1.0
71What is the best next step?
- 1- Cefepime or Zosyn IV stat
- 2- Vancomycin IV stat
- 3- CXR
- 4- Blood cultures-central and peripheral
- 5- Fluconazole IV stat
72Cefepime and Vancomycin are initiated
- Blood cultures are for MRSE 2/2.
- Pt becomes afebrile day 4 of ABX.
- Surveillance Blood cultures are Negative. Patient
is stable. - ANC 300 by DAY 4
- What will you do next?
- A Stop Cefepime
- B Add G- CSF
- C Continue Cepepime until ANC gt 500 or a
minimum of 7 days. - D Continue Vancomycin for a total of 7 days.
73Remember for boards
- Do not order CT scan in a neutropenic patient
with a normal CXR. - In clinical practice if patient remains febrile
for 3 to 5 days then the next step is HRCT. ( 50
of patients with imaging have a normal CXR)
74Conclusions
- Febrile Neutropenia is a serious complication of
chemotherapy - Be vigilant for febrile neutropenia in
chemotherapy patients - Be vigilant for infection even when no fever
- Initiate EMPIRIC antibiotics immediately.
- Several treatment options depending on risk
stratification.