| Literature DB >> 28954408 |
Emmanuel Andrès1, Rachel Mourot-Cottet2, Frédéric Maloisel3, Olivier Keller4, Thomas Vogel5, François Séverac6, Martine Tebacher7, Jacques-Eric Gottenberg8, Jean-Christophe Weber9, Georges Kaltenbach10, Bernard Goichot11, Jean Sibilia12, Anne-Sophie Korganow13, Raoul Herbrecht14.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite major advances in its prevention and treatment, febrile neutropenia remains a most concerning complication of cancer chemotherapy. Outside the oncology setting, however, only few data are currently available on febrile neutropenia related to non-chemotherapy drugs. We report here data on 76 patients with febrile neutropenia related to non-chemotherapy drugs, followed up in a referral center within a university hospital. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Data from 76 patients with idiosyncratic drug-induced febrile neutropenia were retrospectively reviewed. All cases were extracted from a cohort study on agranulocytosis conducted at the Strasbourg University Hospital (Strasbourg, France).Entities:
Keywords: agranulocytosis; drug; fever; hematopoietic growth factor; infection; neutropenia
Year: 2017 PMID: 28954408 PMCID: PMC5664007 DOI: 10.3390/jcm6100092
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Criteria for inclusion in and exclusion from the study (adapted from [6]).
| Inclusion Criteria |
|---|
| - Neutrophil count < 0.5 × 10(9)/L |
| - Presence of fever, clinical infection, and/or signs of septic shock (chills, sweating, collapse, and confusion) |
| - Fulfilled standardized criteria by Benichou et al.: agranulocytosis onset within 7 days of treatment in the event of previous intake of the same drug, no clinical features, and >1.5 × 10(9)/L neutrophils in blood cell count 1 month after drug interruption [ |
| - History of congenital neutropenia or immune neutropenia |
| - No recent viral infection ** |
| - Recent chemotherapy, radiotherapy, and/or immunotherapy |
| - Existence or development of underlying hematological disease |
* For enrolment, patients had to be hospitalized (conventional hospitalization); ** All patients had negative serological tests (IgM) for human immunodeficiency virus, hepatitis B and C virus, Epstein-Barr virus, cytomegalovirus, and parvovirus B19.
Drugs incriminated in febrile neutropenia related to non-chemotherapy drugs.
| Drug Class | Drug |
|---|---|
| Antibiotics ( | amoxicillin ± clavulanic acid ( |
| Antithyroid drugs ( | carbimazole ( |
| Neuroleptics and anticonvulsants ( | cyamemazine ( |
| Platelet aggregation inhibitors ( | ticlopidine ( |
| Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory agents and analgesics ( | ibuprofen ( |
| Other molecules ( | valganciclovir ( |
* In 12 cases, more than two drugs were suspected to be responsible for IDIA. ** Dose < 300 mg/day.
Clinical manifestations upon hospitalization for the 76 patients.
| Clinical Manifestations | |
|---|---|
| Isolated fever (unknown origin) | 23 (30%) |
| Sore throat, acute tonsillitis, and maxillary infection | 14 (18.4%) |
| Documented pneumonia | 14 (18.4%) |
| Septicemia | 11 (14.5%) |
| Septic shock | 5 (6.5%) |
| Deep abdominal or pelvic abscess | 3 (39%) |
| Cutaneous infection | 2 (2.6%) |
| Meningites | 2 (2.6%) |
| Cholecystitis | 1 (1.3%) |
| Infectious arthritis or osteonecrosis | 1 (1.3%) |
Microbial infections documented in 21 patients (data available for 66 patients).
| Microbes | |
|---|---|
| 12 (18.2%) | |
| | 5 |
| Other | 2 |
| | 4 |
| | 1 |
| 8 (12.1%) | |
| | 3 |
| | 2 |
| | 1 |
| Other Gram-negative bacilli (like | 2 * |
| 2 (3%) | |
| | 1 |
| | 1 |
| 45 (68.2%) |
* evidence of multiple bacteria in various samples.
Death causes of patients with non-chemotherapy drug-induced agranulocytosis.
| Sex | Age | Clinical Picture at Diagnosis | Absolute Number of Neutrophils at Diagnosis (× 10(9)/L) | Therapeutic Management | Cause of Death |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| F | 17 | Septicemia ( | 0.42 | Immediate broad-spectrum IV antibiotics + GCSF | Septic shock |
| M | 47 | Pneumonia | 0 | Immediate broad-spectrum IV antibiotics + amphotericin + GCSF | Septic shock |
| F | 71 | Pelvic abscess | 0 | Immediate broad-spectrum IV antibiotics + GCSF | Septic shock |
| F | 73 | Abdominal abscess | 0.01 | Immediate broad-spectrum IV antibiotics + GCSF | Septic shock |
| M | 81 | Septicaemia ( | 0 | Immediate broad-spectrum IV antibiotics | Septicemia and worsening of associated comorbidities |
| F | 87 | Septicemia ( | 0.24 | Immediate broad-spectrum IV antibiotics | Cerebral hematoma |
| F | 84 | Isolated fever | 0.08 | Immediate broad-spectrum IV antibiotics | Worsening of associated comorbidities |
| M | 72 | Septic shock | 0.5 | Immediate broad-spectrum IV antibiotics + GCSF | Septic shock |
Protocol for febrile neutropenia management in non-cancer patients.
| Immediate arrest of any suspected drugs |
| Immediate hospitalization |
| Initial assessment of circulatory and respiratory function, with vigorous resuscitation where necessary, followed by careful search for potential infection source |
| Systematic multiple microbiological samples (blood, urine, stool, and throat) |
| Immediate broad-spectrum antibacterial therapy (<1 h after admission) with first-line piperacilline (12 g/day) or cefotaxime (3 g/day), in association with netromycine (5 mg/kg/day) or amikacine (15 mg/kg/day) in sepsis cases, except for β-lactam allergy or β-lactam-induced agranulocytosis. In a second step, the antimicrobial therapy is to be adapted according to microbes and antibiogram results, using mainly glycopeptide antibiotics and penems, in association with amphotericin or voriconazole in fungal infection cases. |
| Hematopoietic growth factor (GCSF: 300 μg/day) |
| Daily monitoring of clinical presentation and blood count |
| Data to be registered in the French national database of drug side-effects |