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The Medical Course of Cancer Patients With Fever and Neutropenia

350

Citations

46

References

1988

Year

TLDR

The study aimed to determine whether cancer patients with fever and neutropenia differ in medical stability based on presenting clinical characteristics. The authors reviewed 261 medical records of 184 hospitalized cancer patients with fever and neutropenia treated with conventional antibiotics to assess how initial clinical features predicted subsequent urgent medical events. Overall 21% of patient courses had serious complications, with high‑risk subgroups experiencing 34–55% major events, while low‑risk outpatients had only 2%, indicating that presenting clinical features may predict medical stability. Arch Intern Med 1988;148:2561‑2568.

Abstract

• To determine whether cancer patients with fever and neutropenia differ in their medical stability, 261 medical records of 184 cancer patients who were hospitalized with fever and neutropenia and treated with conventional antibiotic therapy were studied to determine whether their presenting clinical characteristics influenced the likelihood of subsequent clinical events thought to require urgent medical attention. Overall, serious medical complications, including those without an obvious relationship to infection, occurred in 56 patient courses (21%). We distinguished three clinically determined subgroups of our study population at significantly higher risk than the remaining patient group, which seemed to be at low risk. Major complications occurred in 34 (34%) of 101 inpatients, 12 (55%) of 22 outpatients with concurrent comorbidity requiring inpatient care, and eight (31%) of 26 outpatients without concurrent comorbidity requiring inpatient care but with uncontrolled cancer. However, the remaining patients, who presented as outpatients without significant comorbidity or uncontrolled cancer, had major complications in only 2% of 112 hospitalizations. These results suggest that it may be possible to assess the medical stability of patients with fever and neutropenia based on presenting clinical features. If confirmed prospectively, these results may enable clinicians to identify groups of medically stable patients for whom conventional supportive care, including appropriately administered antibiotics, may be given safely under medical supervision of less intensity or of shorter duration than conventional treatment in the acute-care hospital setting. (<i>Arch Intern Med</i>1988;148:2561-2568)

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