http://www.journalagent.com/z4/download_fulltext.asp?pdir=tjh&plng=eng&un=TJH-16056

Abstract

Objective: Febrile neutropenia (FN) is a major toxic responseto chemotherapy requiring prompt medical attention. There are a limited number of reports on clinical outcome in patients with FN that present to emergency departments.Materials and Methods: We retrospectively evaluated clinical manifestations, therapeutic outcomes, and risk factors for FN in 102 adult patients that presented to the emergency department between 1 January 2006 and 31 March 2009. FN was defined as a body temperature>38°C and a neutrophil count >0.5×109/L on the day of fever onset or the day after.Results: Mean age of the patients was 57 years. Mean absolute neutrophil count (ANC) was 436.8/mm3 (range: 0-1000/mm3). In all, 23 of the patients (22.5%) died due to complications related to FN. There were not a statistical difference in therapeutic outcome among tumor types, performance status, sex, depth of neutropenia, or time from emergency department presentationto initiation of antibiotic therapy.Age was an important prognostic factor for therapeutic outcome. Mean age of fatal cases was 65 years versus 56 years for non-fatal cases (p=0.016). Bacteremia was noted in 19 patients, 10 (53%) of which died. The mortality rate was significantly higher in thepatients with blood culture-proven bacteria than in those whose blood culture yielded no organism (p=0.013).Conclusion: FN patients that presented to the emergency department had a high mortality rate thatincreased with age. Given the increasing age of patients diagnosed with cancer as well as therapeuticinterventions, the high mortality rate associated withchemotherapy-induced FN in elderly patientsrequires further study in order to reduce the risk of death

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