Literature DB >> 25521519

The epidemiology, clinical course and outcome of febrile cytopenia in children.

Ourania Alexandropoulou1, Lydia Kossiva, Maria Giannaki, Jp Panagiotou, Maria Tsolia, Kyriaki Karavanaki.   

Abstract

AIM: Transient infectious neutropenia of mild-to-moderate severity is common and resolves spontaneously within weeks. This was the first prospective study of the whole spectrum of febrile cytopenia in noncancer patients followed-up for 2 years. It aimed to assess its aetiology, duration and outcome.
METHODS: We evaluated 116 children with febrile cytopenia aged 4 ± 3.8 years, admitted to a paediatric ward over 2 years, using inflammatory markers, cultures and serological tests.
RESULTS: An infectious agent was identified in 74 (63.8%) cases: 44.8% viral, 11.2% bacterial and 7.8% parasitic. One cell line was affected in 26.7% of patients and ≥2 cell lines in 73.3%. Cytopenia was transient in 82.75% of cases and chronic in 17.24%. The transient cytopenia subgroups - exhibited differences in severity (mild in bacterial cases and moderate in viral and parasitic cases, p = 0.018) and the number of affected cell lines, (predominantly two in viral and bacterial cases and pancytopenia in parasitic cases, p = 0.001). Chronic patients had severe cytopenia (p = 0.004) with ≥2 cell lines affected, while transient patients had mild-to-moderate cytopenia, with 1-3 cell lines affected.
CONCLUSION: Childhood febrile cytopenia is usually transient, of mild-to-moderate severity, and resolves spontaneously, but patients with severe cytopenia affecting ≥2 cell lines need further evaluation and follow-up. ©2014 Foundation Acta Paediatrica. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Children; Cytopenia; Fever; Infections

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 25521519     DOI: 10.1111/apa.12903

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acta Paediatr        ISSN: 0803-5253            Impact factor:   2.299


  2 in total

1.  Comparison of the etiologic, microbiologic, clinical and outcome characteristics of febrile vs. non-febrile neutropenia in hospitalized immunocompetent children.

Authors:  Eugene Leibovitz; Joseph Kapelushnik; Sabrin Alsanaa; Dov Tschernin; Ruslan Sergienko; Ron Leibovitz; Julia Mazar; Yariv Fruchtman
Journal:  Eur J Clin Microbiol Infect Dis       Date:  2020-07-27       Impact factor: 3.267

2.  Platelet phagocytosis by leukocytes in a patient with cerebral hemorrhage and thrombocytopenia caused by gram-negative bacterial infection.

Authors:  Xiuji Wu; Youjun Li; Xiaoyang Yang
Journal:  J Int Med Res       Date:  2022-02       Impact factor: 1.671

  2 in total

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