| Literature DB >> 15726101 |
L J Worth1, M J Dooley, J F Seymour, L Mileshkin, M A Slavin, K A Thursky.
Abstract
Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia (PCP) is associated with high mortality in immunocompromised patients without human immunodeficiency virus infection. However, chemoprophylaxis is highly effective. In patients with solid tumours or haematologic malignancy, several risk factors for developing PCP have been identified, predominantly corticosteroid therapy. The aims of this study were to identify the potentially preventable cases of PCP in patients receiving corticosteroid therapy at a tertiary care cancer centre and to estimate the frequency of utilisation of chemoprophylaxis in these patients. Two retrospective reviews were performed. Over a 10-year period, 14 cases of PCP were identified: no cases were attributable to failed chemoprophylaxis, drug allergy or intolerance. During a 6-month period, 73 patients received high-dose corticosteroid therapy (> or =25 mg prednisolone or > or =4 mg dexamethasone daily) for > or =4 weeks. Of these, 22 (30%) had haematologic malignancy, and 51 (70%) had solid tumours. Fewer patients with solid tumours received prophylaxis compared to patients with haematologic malignancy (3.9 vs 63.6%, P<0.0001). Guidelines for PCP chemoprophylaxis in patients with haematologic malignancy or solid tumours who receive corticosteroid therapy are proposed. Successful primary prevention of PCP in this population will require a multifaceted approach targeting the suboptimal prescribing patterns for chemoprophylaxis.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 15726101 PMCID: PMC2361905 DOI: 10.1038/sj.bjc.6602412
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Cases of PCP in patients receiving corticosteroid therapy, PMCC 1/1/1994–31/12/2003
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| 57/M | Thyroid carcinoma | DXM 16 mg | 30 | Y | N | Radioactive iodine | N | Resolved |
| 63/M | GBM | DXM 16 mg | 34 | N | N | N | N | Resolved |
| 76/M | NSCLC | DXM 12 mg | 36 | N | N | Gemcitabine carboplatin | N | Resolved |
| 64/M | SCLC | DXM 16 mg | 28 | N | N | Carboplatin, paclitaxel | N | Died |
| 36/F | Breast carcinoma | PNL 25 mg | 40 | N | Autologous HSCT | EC | Y | Resolved |
| 65/M | NSCLC | DXM 16 mg | 88 | Y | N | Gemcitabine | Y | Resolved |
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| 44/F | NHL | PNL 100 mg | 50 | N | N | CHOP | Y | Resolved |
| 71/M | AML | PNL 25 mg | 45 | N | N | FLAG, hydroxyurea | Y | Resolved |
| 61/F | NHL | DXM 16 mg | 35 | Y | N | CHOP, Mabthera, RICE | N | Resolved |
| 68/F | NHL (cerebral metastases) | DXM 8 mg | 92 | N | N | CHOP, Mabthera, IT MTX, Ara-C | N | Resolved |
| 18/M | Burkitt's lymphoma | DXM 40 mg | 18 | N | N | MTX,Ara-C | Y | Resolved |
| 48/F | Multiple myeloma | DXM 100 mg | — | Y | N | VAD, cyclophosphamide | N | Resolved |
| 41/M | Multiple myeloma | DXM 16 mg | 25 | Y | Autologous HSCT | PCAB, VAD, melphalan | N | Resolved |
| 64/F | CML | PNL 25 mg | 33 | N | N | IFN, hydroxyurea, busulphan, Ara-C, idarubicin, fludarabine | N | Resolved |
Initial daily dose and number of days of corticosteroid therapy prior to onset of PCP symptoms; DXM=dexamethasone; PNL=prednisolone.
Patient commenced corticosteroid therapy at another institution prior to transfer.
GBM=glioblastoma multiforme; NHL=non-Hodgkin's lymphoma; AML=acute myeloid leukaemia; CML=chronic myeloid leukaemia; EC=epirubicin, cyclophosphamide; CHOP=cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, oncovin, prednisolone; FLAG=fludarabine, cytarabine, G-CSF; RICE=rituximab, ifosfamide, carboplatin, etoposide; MTX=methotrexate; Ara-C=cytarabine; IFN=interferon α-2b; PCAB=prednisolone, cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, carmustine; VAD=vincristine, doxorubicin, dexamethasone; HSCT=haematopoietic stem cell transplantation.
At-risk patients receiving high-dose corticosteroid therapy, PMCC 1/6/03–30/11/03
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| Lung (non-small cell) | 13 |
| Genitourinary | 9 |
| Breast | 8 |
| Gastrointestinal | 7 |
| Melanoma | 4 |
| Adenocarcinoma, unknown primary | 4 |
| Central nervous system (primary) | 2 |
| Sarcoma | 2 |
| Adenoid cystic carcinoma | 1 |
| Parotid | 1 |
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| Multiple myeloma | 14 |
| Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma | 6 |
| Chronic lymphocytic leukaemia | 2 |
| Total | 73 |
Figure 1Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia prophylaxis in at-risk patients receiving corticosteroid therapy, PMCC 1/6/03–30/11/03.
Guidelines: PCP prophylaxis for patients with malignancy who receive corticosteroid therapy
| Chemoprophylaxis for | |
| First-line prophylactic agent should be trimethoprim–sulphamethoxazole (one DS | |
| (i) | Myelosuppression due to chemotherapy or radiation likely to be present for >7 days |
| Recommend: second-line prophylactic agent | |
| (ii) | Previous allergy or hypersensitivity to sulpha-drugs |
| Recommend: trimethoprim–sulphamethoxazole desensitisation (unless previous anaphylaxis) | |
| (iii) | Planned methotrexate chemotherapy |
| Recommend: second-line prophylactic agent. | |
| A second-line prophylactic agent should be used if trimethoprim–sulphamethoxazole is contraindicated: | |
| (i) | Dapsone (100 mg daily), OR |
| (ii) | Pentamidine |
| (iii) | Atovaquone |
| Prophylaxis should continue until at least 1 month after steroid cessation. A longer period of prophylaxis may be required if ongoing chemotherapy (e.g. cytarabine, cyclophosphamide, fludarabine, fluorouracil, methotrexate) is planned. Life-long prophylaxis should be considered if the patient has had a previous episode of PCP and persisting immunosuppression. | |
DS=double strength; trimethoprim 160 mg per 800 mg sulphamethoxazole.
Screening antibodies for T. gondii should be checked prior to use following bone marrow transplantation.
No studies of efficacy in patients with malignancy.