| Literature DB >> 30881552 |
Sarah Klemencic1, Jack Perkins1.
Abstract
Oncologic emergencies may be seen in any emergency department and will become more frequent as our population ages and more patients receive chemotherapy. Life-saving interventions are available for certain oncologic emergencies if the diagnosis is made in a timely fashion. In this article we will cover neutropenic fever, tumor lysis syndrome, hypercalcemia of malignancy, and hyperviscosity syndrome. After reading this article the reader should be much more confident in the diagnosis, evaluation, and management of these oncologic emergencies.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30881552 PMCID: PMC6404710 DOI: 10.5811/westjem.2018.12.37335
Source DB: PubMed Journal: West J Emerg Med ISSN: 1936-900X
Degree of neutropenia.
| Mild neutropenia | ANC 1000–1500 |
| Moderate neutropenia | ANC 500–999 |
| Severe neutropenia | ANC 100–499 |
| Profound neutropenia | ANC < 100 |
ANC, absolute neutrophil count.
Common empiric antibiotic selections for neutropenic fever.
| Cefepime | Meropenem | Piperacillin-tazobactam | Ceftazidime |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2 grams IV Q8 | 1 gram IV Q8 | 4.5 grams IV Q6–8 | 2 grams IV Q8 |
IV, intravenous; Q8, every 8 hours; Q6–8, every 6–8 hours.
Multinational Association for Supportive Care in Cancer (MASCC) scoring tool.
| Characteristic | Weight (points) |
|---|---|
| Burden of febrile neutropenia with no or mild symptoms | 5 |
| No hypotension (systolic blood pressure > 90 mmHg) | 5 |
| No chronic obstructive pulmonary disease | 4 |
| Solid tumor or hematological malignancy with no previous fungal infection | 4 |
| No dehydration requiring parenteral fluids | 3 |
| Burden of febrile neutropenia with moderate symptoms | 3 |
| Outpatient status | 3 |
| Age > 60 years | 2 |
mmHg, millimeters of mercury.
Clinical index of stable febrile neutropenia (CISNE).
| Characteristic | Score (points in parentheses) |
|---|---|
| Eastern cooperative oncology group performance status | < 2(0) or ≥ 2 (+2) |
| Stress-induced hyperglycemia (blood glucose ≥ 121 mg/dl) | No (0) or Yes (+2) |
| COPD | No (0) or Yes (+1) |
| Cardiovascular disease history (valvular disease, cardiomyopathy, cor pulmonale) | No (0) or Yes (+1) |
| NCI mucositis grade ≥ 2 | No (0) or Yes (+1) |
| Monocytes | ≥ 200 μL (0) or < 200 μL (+1) |
mg/dl, milligrams per deciliter; COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; NCI, National Cancer Institute; μL, microliters.
Used in adult outpatients with solid tumor, fever, and ANC δ 500.
Cairo-Bishop criteria for clinical and laboratory tumor lysis syndrome.
| Two or more of the following criteria either three days prior to or seven days after chemotherapy:
Uric acid: ≥ 8mg/dL or 25% increase from baseline Potassium: ≥ 6 mEq/L or 25% increase from baseline Phosphorous: ≥ 6.5 mg/dL for children or ≥ 4.5mg/dL for adults or 25% of increase from baseline Calcium: ≤ 7mg/dL or 25% decrease from baseline |
| Clinical tumor lysis syndrome
Laboratory tumor lysis syndrome plus one or more of the following: Creatinine > 1.5 times the upper limit of age-adjusted reference range Cardiac dysrhythmia or sudden death Seizure |
mg/dl, milligrams per deciliter; mEq/L, milliequivalents per liter.