Nuetropenic fever Flashcards
neutropenic fever is seen when?
in pts taking cancer chemotherapeutics that induce myelosuppression and reduce the GI mucosal barrier
define neutropenic fever
38.5 C (101.4) with an ANC under 500 cell per micro unit
why is neutropenic fever important?
it is an emergency: risk of death approaches 3%/hr that it goes untreated: 100% if untreated for 3 days
infectious agents expected to trigger neutropenic fever
s aureus, s epidermidis, klebsiella, fungal infections: candida the most, aspergillus.
pneumocystitis, toxoplasma can both cause fever, relatively unusual
rectal exams
none performed under 500 neuts because of microtears –> can cause death within 24 hrs
levofloxacine
good against g- bac and pseudomonas, first line drug
fluconazole
fugi- narrow spectrum anti-fungal against candida but not aspergillus, first line
echinocandins
caspo/mica/anidula- fungins: broader spectrum against fungi than fluconazole but more expensive, first line
voriconazole: infection, line, CIs, toxicity profile
for patients with a history of prior fungal infections
first line agent against aspergillus
not given with cytirabine or fludarabine
causes severe neurotoxicity with vincristine
treating neutropenic fever causing infection during chemo
ampho B, echinocandin
empiric tc for suspected infection: how it should be done
IV antibiotics until neutrophil count is > 1000. When pt can handle oral drug without emesis, switch to oral drug. Multiple antibiotics better than monotherapy.
empiric regimen for inpatient w/HIGH RISK
pipercillin+tazobactem, carbapenem, ceftazidime, cefepime
adjusting empiric tx based on existing symptoms
- cellulitis/pneumonia
- gram neg bac
- abdominal discomfort/suspected c difficile
- vancomycin or linezolid
- add aminoglycoside (gentamicin)
- metronidazole
empiric antifungal: added when, and what
if neutropenic fever persists for 5 days from start of treatment, add caspofungin (probably a candida infection)
outpatient oral regiment for low risk pts
ciprofloxacin and amoxacillin/clavulinic acid