No focus
Low risk patients:
- clinically stable
- no comorbidities
- neutropenia expected to be < 7 days
may not require such broad spectrum antibiotic therapy. Refer to local guidelines.
High risk patients:
- Profound neutropenia (ANC < 0.1 x 109/L) anticipated to be > 7 days
- Significant comorbid conditions, including:
- hemodynamic instability
- oral or GI mucositis that impairs swallowing or causes severe diarrhea
- new onset abdominal pain, nausea or vomiting, or diarrhea
- neurologic changes/confusion
- intravascular catheter infection
- pneumonia/hypoxemia/chronic lung disease
- hepatic insufficiency (AST > 5x normal value)
- renal insufficiency (Clcr < 30mL/min).
- Median time to defervescence for high risk patients treated with appropriate empiric antibiotic therapy is 5 days.
- Antifungal therapy: using agent from a different class from that used for prophylaxis should be considered in patients who remain febrile and neutropenic at day 4-7 despite adequate antibiotic coverage.
- Infectious Diseases consult recommended
- Repeat blood cultures plus ultrasound of abdomen recommended, or
- If high risk for mould infections (hematologic malignancy, especially AML: repeat blood cultures including fungal blood cultures and CT chest/abdomen/sinuses.
- Consider switch to oral therapy if:
- non-septic presentation (no chills, hypotension or fluid resuscitation)
- patient stable
- mucositis resolving
- neutrophils > 0.1x109/L.
- adequate GI absorption.