14 - Oncological Emergencies Flashcards
What are some oncological emergencies?
- Neutropenic sepsis
- Metastatic spinal cord compression
- Hypercalcaemia
- VTE
- SVC
- Tumour lysis syndrome
What is the definition of neutropenic sepsis?
Fever > 38° or features of sepsis in a patient with an absolute neutrophil count of < 0.5 x 109/L
It is a medical emergency!!!!!!!! Should contact 24h number if any chemo patient unwell
What are some causes of neutropenia?
- Genetic
- Cytotoxic related (as targets bone marrow)
- Intrinsic disease of bone marrow
- Infections (e.g malaria, HHV 4/5)
- Immune mediated (e.g RA, Crohn’s)
- Folate and Vit B12 deficiency
What patients are at high risk of neutropenic sepsis?
- Have sustained, significant neutropenia that is expected to last more than 7 days.
- Are clinically unstable
- Have an underlying malignancy and are being treated with high-intensity chemo
- Have significant co-morbidities (e.g DM, COPD)
What are the most common causative organisms of neutropenic sepsis?
BACTERIA but cultures often negative
-
Gram-negative
- Escherichia coli
- Klebsiella spp
- Pseudomonas aeruginosa
-
Gram-positive bacteria
- Coagulase-negative staphylococci (e.g. S. epidermidis)
- Staphylococcus aureus
- Streptococcus pneumoniae
-
Other
- Clostridium difficile
Viruses and Fungi in high risk patients
How may neutropenic sepsis present?
Impaired immune system may have a blunted response with subtle signs so high index of suspicion
Patients may present with the signs and symptoms of a specific infection. For example a purulent cough indicating pneumonia or dysuria indicating a UTI
Often however patients simply present with a fever or (often non-specific) signs of systemic infection such as malaise and fatigue
What time frame after chemotherapy does neutropenic sepsis tend to occur?
7-14 days after
If you are about to start chemo for somebody and predict their neutrophil count could fall below 0.5 what should you do?
Start prophylactic fluoroquinolone
If you suspect neutropenic sepsis (e.g temp of >38 in someone receiving chemo), what should you immediately do?
- Take FBC and two sets of blood cultures and other bloods
- Take blood gas for serum lactate
- Antibiotics must be started immediately, do not wait for the WBC (Piperacillin with tazobactam/Tazocin)
- High flow oxygen
- IV fluids should be started, often 500ml of crystalloid over 15 minutes
- Measure urine output with catheter
What investigations should you do in neutropenic sepsis to try to locate the source of infection?
Do systems based exam to guide investigations e.g dysuria do urine sample
- 2 sets of blood cultures including one from CVAD if there is one
- Swabs from any indwelling lines
- FBC, WCC, CRP, U+Es , LFTs, Albumin
- CXR if clinically indicated
- Serology and PCR for viruses e.g. CMV
- Sputum, urine, stool samples, CT scans etc. where clinically indicated
How can the level of risk of a patient with suspected neutropenic sepsis be stratified once the initial sepsis 6 has been completed?
MASCC Risk Index
(Multinational Association for Supportive Care in Cancer Risk Index)
Looks at patients disease burden, co-morbidities, status at onset of fever and age
A high score is a patient at lower risk of severe infection that may be suitable for outpatient care
When can a patient with suspected neutropenic sepsis be treated as an outpatient?
What are some signs of severe neutropenic sepsis/signs that sepsis has progressed to late stage sepsis?
May consider G-CSF treatment
After sepsis 6 and MASCC score has been calculated what other management needs to be done for suspected neutropenic sepsis?
Daily measures of fever and baseline bloods until the patient is apyrexial and neutrophil count above 0.5x109
- NEWS every 15 minutes initially
- Discontinue chemotherapy on admission
- Consider Vancomycin for MRSA if CVAD
- Ask oncology if need to remove CVAD
- Aggressive fluid replacement in dehydration.
- Hourly urine output measurement
- Early critical care if deterioration, severe sepsis (any evidence of organ failure) or suspected invasive fungal infection
When can antibiotics in neutropenic sepsis be stopped?
When neutrophil count is normal, has been afebrile for 48 hours and blood tests have normalised
Always do daily FBC and U+Es
What should be done if neutropenic sepsis fever is unresponsive to antibiotics after 48 hours?
- Consider fungal cause and do investigations e.g HRCT
- Discuss with microbiology what to switch to
- Should discuss with micro every 48 hours regardless
What does a low MASCC score mean?
Higher morbidity and mortality
Mortality of 2 to 21%
How can we prevent neutropenic sepsis?
- Patient advice
- Lower dose of chemotherapy
- Prophylactic antibiotics
What is Malignant Spinal Cord Compression (MSCC)?
Dural sac and it’s contents of the cord/cauda equina are compressed by cancer
Which cancers have a high chance of spinal metastases and MSCC?
(important card)
BLP and Myeloma!
20% of cancer presentations are MSCC
Pancreatic has lowest
What are the causes of MSCC?
- 80% due to collapse of vertebral body due to metastatic arterial seeding
- 10% by direct tumour invasion
What part of the spine do metastases tend to occur?
Usually thoracic
How may MSCC present if the cord is compressed?
- Severe back pain is first sign before any neurology
- Symmetrical lower limb weakness
- UMN signs e.g Babinski reflex, hypereflexia
- Paraesthesia with sensory level
How may MSCC present if the cauda equina (below L2) is being compressed?
- LMN signs
- Usually unilateral
- Saddle anaesthesia
- Reduced anal tone
- Painless urinary retention (and overflow incontinence)
- Back pain
- Impotence
- Absent ankle jerk
What is the back pain in MSCC like?
- First symptom
- Unresponsive to analgesia
- Band-like
- Radicular
- Exacerbated by coughing, sneezing, straining, neck flexion
How is suspected MSCC investigated?
Urgent whole spine MRI if symptoms within 24 hours of presentation
How is MSCC managed?
Surgical Emergency
General
- Adequate analgesia
- VTE prophylaxis: LMWH and TED stockings
- Catheter
Definitive
- High dose dexamethasone with PPI
- Surgical decompression and reconstruction within 24h of diagnosis
- OR External Beam or Stereotactic radiotherapy
What patients would be eligible for surgery in a case of MSCC? (only have 48h from neurological signs to paraplegia)
- Fit and prognosis >3/12
- Good motor function at presentation
- Good performance status
- Limited co-morbidity
- Single level spinal disease
When would you use radiotherapy for MSCC and what are the two different options for this?
- External beam radiotherapy
- Stereotactic body radiotherapy: higher doses of radiotherapy to be targeted more directly at the tumour while minimising exposure to adjacent tissue 10-15% risk of vertebral collapse with this type of radiotherapy
What is some supportive care that needs to be done in the management of MSCC?
What is the prognosis with MSCC?
No recover of mobility: 1-3/12
Walking: 5-8/12
Loss of sphincter function is poor prognostic sign