| Literature DB >> 23412562 |
S Neumann1, S W Krause, G Maschmeyer, X Schiel, M von Lilienfeld-Toal.
Abstract
Bacterial infections are the most common cause for treatment-related mortality in patients with neutropenia after chemotherapy. Here, we discuss the use of antibacterial prophylaxis against bacteria and Pneumocystis pneumonia (PCP) in neutropenic cancer patients and offer guidance towards the choice of drug. A literature search was performed to screen all articles published between September 2000 and January 2012 on antibiotic prophylaxis in neutropenic cancer patients. The authors assembled original reports and meta-analysis from the literature and drew conclusions, which were discussed and approved in a consensus conference of the Infectious Disease Working Party of the German Society of Hematology and Oncology (AGIHO). Antibacterial prophylaxis has led to a reduction of febrile events and infections. A significant reduction of overall mortality could only be shown in a meta-analysis. Fluoroquinolones are preferred for antibacterial and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole for PCP prophylaxis. Due to serious concerns about an increase of resistant pathogens, only patients at high risk of severe infections should be considered for antibiotic prophylaxis. Risk factors of individual patients and local resistance patterns must be taken into account. Risk factors, choice of drug for antibacterial and PCP prophylaxis and concerns regarding the use of prophylactic antibiotics are discussed in the review.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23412562 PMCID: PMC3590398 DOI: 10.1007/s00277-013-1698-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Hematol ISSN: 0939-5555 Impact factor: 3.673
Infectious Diseases Society of America–United States Public Health Service Grading System for ranking recommendations [3]
| Category, grade | Definition |
|---|---|
| Strength of recommendation | |
| A | Good evidence to support a recommendation for use |
| B | Moderate evidence to support a recommendation for use |
| C | Poor evidence to support a recommendation |
| D | Moderate evidence to support a recommendation against use |
| E | Good evidence to support a recommendation against use |
| Quality of evidence | |
| I | Evidence from ≥1 properly randomized, controlled trial |
| II | Evidence from ≥1 well-designed clinical trial, without randomization; from cohort or case-controlled analytic studies (preferably from >1 center); from multiple time-series; or from dramatic results from uncontrolled experiments |
| III | Evidence from opinions of respected authorities, based on clinical experience, descriptive studies, or reports of expert committees |
Patient-related risk factors
| Duration of neutropenia 500/µl |
| Type and stage of underlying malignancy |
| Number of cycles and type of cytotoxic/immunosuppressive pretreatment |
| Concomitant immunosuppressive therapy |
| First cycle of chemotherapy |
| Previous episode of febrile neutropenia |
| Disruption of physiological skin or mucosal barriers |
| Chronic wounds |
| Age |
| Comorbitities (e.g., diabetes mellitus, iron overload, chronic lung disease) |
| Social conditions |
Overview of risk reduction rates in studies on antibacterial prophylaxis in cancer patients
| All-cause mortality | Infection-related mortality | Fever | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study |
| Baseline risk | RR | Baseline risk | RR | Baseline risk | RR |
| Gafter-Gvili et al. [ | 5635 | 8.8 % | 0.66** | 5.6 % | 0.61** | 60.7 % | 0.80 ** |
| Gafter-Gvili et al. [ | 3776 | 5.3 % | 0.54** | 2.9 % | 0.51 ** | 53.8 % | 0.74 ** |
| Bucaneve et al. [ | 760 | 5.0 % | 0.54 ns | 3.9 % | 0.63 ns | 84.8 % | 0.76 ** |
| Cullen et al. [ | 1565 | 0.5 % | 1.00 | 0.71 ** | |||
| - Cumulative | 4.6%a | 0.86 | 15.2 % | 0.44 ** | |||
| - First cycle | 2.3 % | 0.67 | 7.9 % | ||||
| Imran et al. [ | 2721 | 5.3 % | 0.76 ns | 39.7 %2 | 0.76 nsb | ||
N number of patients, RR relative risk, ns not significant
aOverall mortality reported as personal communication in reference [38] and as 30-day mortality in reference [39]
bHeterogeneous data. Only first cycle from Cullen et al. [12] is used for this analysis
**Significant
Recommendations for antibacterial prophylaxis
| Recommendation | Level of evidence |
|---|---|
| Antibiotic prophylaxis is indicated for | |
| Low risk, regarding fever and infection | B-I |
| Low risk, regarding mortalitya | C-II |
| High risk, regarding fever and infection | A-I |
| High risk, regarding mortality | B-II |
| Fluoroquinolone prophylaxis should be preferred to TMP/SMX | A-II |
| Drug of choice: ciprofloxacin (500mg twice daily) or levofloxacin (500mg once daily) (not approved for this indication in Germany) | A-II |
| Addition of a gram-positive active agent to quinolone prophylaxis (discouraged) | E-II |
| Start of prophylaxis with onset of neutropenia in low-risk patients | B-III |
| Start of prophylaxis with start of cytostatic drugs in high-risk patients | B-III |
| Termination of prophylaxis with the start of empirical antibiotics or end of neutropenia | B-III |
| Use of FQ for empirical therapy if used for prophylaxis (discouraged) | E-III |
aConsider in special situations (see text)
Recommendations for Pneumocystis jirovecii prophylaxis
| Infection risk | Disease/therapy | Level of evidence |
|---|---|---|
| Strong evidence for increased riska | TMP/SMX for the duration of therapy or until CD4 > 200/μl | A-I |
| - ALL | ||
| - Prolonged CD4 <200/μl | ||
| - Long-term steroidsb | ||
| Risk status not entirely conclusive | TMP/SMX for the duration of therapy | C-III |
| - R-CHOP; BEACOPPesc | ||
| - Prolonged neutropenia | ||
| - Acute myeloid leukemia | ||
| - High dose cytarabine | ||
| Consider PCP prophylaxis when recommended by the manufacturer (for example temozolamide and radiation) | ||
aIncreased risk: if incidence greater than 3.5 % (NNT 15)
bIncluding patients without neutropenia, e.g., cerebral metastasis from solid tumor