ID: Infections in Cancer and Transplant Patients Flashcards
List causes of immunocompromise
- Disease related e.g.
- Acute leukaemia
- AIDS following chronic HIV
- Rheumatoid Arthritis
- Diabetes especially during DKA
- Iatrogenic e.g.
- Chemotherapy for cancer
- Therapy with DMARDs
- Steroids for COPD
What does immunocompromise risk depend on?
Defect
Depth
Duration (e.g. breast cancer only brief suppression for chemo, whereas HSCT immunosuppressed for long time)
What are the causes of neutropenia?
Quantitative
- Inherited
- Acquired
- Drug induced
- cytotoxics
- adverse drug reaction
- Bone marrow irradiation
- Cancer related (invading bone marrow)
- Aplastic anaemia
- Drug induced
Qualitative
- Defects in
- chemotaxis
- opsination
- intracellular killing
Explain the phases of opportunistic infections among allogeneic HSCT recipients in relation to engraftment
How is febrile neutropenia defined?
- Single temporature of >38.3 or sustained temperate >38 for 1 hour
- Occuring in pt with neutrophils <500 cells/uL or <1000 cells/uL with predicted nadir of <500 cells/uL
What are the signs (sometimes) or fever in the neutropaenic patient?
Medical emergency! Often no signs; has no neutrophils.
On examination:
- elevated pulse
- low BP
- high temp
- mucositis (?)
- nil to hear in chest
- nil to palpate
What are the guidelines for treatment of fever in neutropaenic patient?
- infections caused 70% of deaths in acute leukaemia patient
- consensus guidelines recommend ALL patient with neutropaenic fever be promptly evaluated
- treated with empiric broad-spectrum antibiotics
- ~10% mortality per hour delay in antibiotic treatment
What are the most common infections in febrile neutropaenia?
- Gram-postive organisms
- MSSA, MSRA
- Staphylococcus epidermidis
- Streptococci (especially viridans group)
- Enterococci (VRE)
- GNB in the 1980s (particular P. aeruginosa)
What antimicrobial management is given to febrile neutropenic patient?
Tazocin 6 hourly
+ Vancomycin if in shock
THEN
Targeted therapy when organism identified
What are the common infections in solid-organ transplant in recipients?
Which fungal infections are we worried about in transplant recipients?
Candida - prophylaxis has reduced morbidity/mortality but increased resistance
Aspergillus, Fusarium, Zygomycetes - “halo sign” surrounding a nodule = small vessel angioinvasion
Explain fever in a post-splenectomy patient
- Spleen maintains normal immune function
- Severe infections in 25% patients
- S pneumoniae (50-90%)
- N meningitidis, Hib
- Greatest risk infection first 6 months
- Management = empiric antibiotics (ceftriazone plus vancomycin)
- Pevention = vaccination, prophylactic antibiotics, education