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Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS
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Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

Dec 31, 2015

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Page 1: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines

Chadi ELtaha, MD

PGY II - PEDS

Page 2: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

Fever and Neutropenia

Page 3: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

Muy Importante!

Fever in a patient with cancer or on chemotherapy is a medical emergency

Mortality is 1-5%

Page 4: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

Definitions

Fever: Single oral T>101oF (38.3oC)

OR T=100.4oF (38oC) on two separate readings

one hour apartOral is best; take axillary if oral temp impossible

No conversion needed

AVOID rectal temperature in any oncology patient at any time

Page 5: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

Definitions

Neutropenia:ANC < 1500

Mild 1500-1000Moderate 1000-500Severe <500Profound <200

Risk of infection in cancer patients is high if ANC<1000

Page 6: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

Definitions

Calculating the ANC:Total WBC count x (% neutrophils + % bands)

WBC= 3.1, neutrophils 30%, bands 4%What is the ANC?

WBC= 2.4, neutrophils 0%, bands 0%What is the ANC?

Page 7: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

Risk

Infection risk increases with:Any break in the skin barrierAny foreign body: central lines, indwelling ports,

Foley catheters, NG tubes, shunts, rods, prostheses

Prolonged neutropenia

Page 8: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

History

Duration of fever? Accompanied by chills?Fatigue?Rhinorrhea?Cough?Abdominal pain or GI symptoms?Dysuria?Central line?

Page 9: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

Physical Exam

Thorough exam, including:Oral exam for ulcerationsPerirectal exam for lesionsNares for lesions, especially if NGT feedsSkin examCentral line for phlebitis, cellulitis

Page 10: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

Admission Investigations

CBC with diff, CRP, blood cultures from periphery x 1, blood cultures from all lumens of all central lines, CP14 (most chemo patients will have abnormalities)

urinalysis and culture (must be clean catch--catheterization contraindicated in neutropenia)

viral respiratory culture and rapid flu and RSV if indicated

If diarrhea, C. diff toxin, fecal WBCs, stool culture

Page 11: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

Admission Investigations

Radiologic StudiesCXR (debatable if no pulmonary symptoms)Sinus CT if symptoms or if all other workup

negativeAbdominal CT if significant abdominal pain

(worry about neutropenic colitis, aka acute typhilitis)

Page 12: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

Beware…

CXR may not have an infiltrate apparent during neutropenia—may change after counts recover

Urinalysis may not have WBCs or leukocyte esterase during neutropenia—send a culture

Page 13: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

Daily Labs

CBC with differential to follow ANCCRP if previously elevatedCP14 if indicated (if needs supplements or

on TPN)Blood cultures while febrile (can be from

central line, don’t have to have peripheral)

Page 14: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

Medications

Ceftazadime or Cefepime 50 mg/kg/dose IV Q8 hours, max 2g/dose

Add Vancomycin 15 mg/kg/dose IV Q6 hours if signs of line infection.

Add Gentamicin 5 mg/kg/day IV Q24 hours if hypotension and chills

Add Amphotericin B if persistent neutropenia and fever >4-5 days despite antibiotics

* Both Cefepime and Ceftazadime can cause neutropenia, even in healthy people!

Page 15: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

To culture or not?

Recollect blood cultures in these cases:Before adding or changing an antibioticPersistent fever (get one culture per day while

febrile, best to get when actually febrile, don’t always have to have a peripheral)

During times of clinical deteriorationIf you are called with a positive culture

You don’t need 8 million cultures in a day!

Page 16: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

What if something grows?

Order another cultureLook at your antibiotics and see if you

should have coverageFollow-up on the sensitivities; should be

available the next dayTailor antibiotics if possibleIf a true infection, ECHO

Page 17: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

Contaminant or Not?

Unlikely to be true pathogens: Corynebacterium, non-anthracis Bacillus,

Propionibacterium acnesUncertain significance:

Coagulase negative staphIf your patient was unstable, has a CVL, or this

grows in multiple cultures, maybe so!Probably so:

S. aureus, S. pneumo, Enterobacter, P. aeruginosa, C. albicans, Aspergillus

Page 18: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

Consider…

If multiple positive blood cultures, likelihood of true bacteremia increases

If cultures are repeatedly positive for coag neg staph or if peripheral and CVL cultures are positive at the same time, likelihood of true bacteremia increases

Page 19: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

How long do you treat?

Depends on the organism and if they have a central line that you want to keep

Depends on initial clinical appearanceUsually minimum of 14 days for CVL,

sometimes longer; ask your friendly ID expert!

Start counting your days of antibiotics from the date the first negative cx was drawn, not from first day of antibiotics

Page 20: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

What if nothing grows?

This will happen more often than not.You can stop antibiotics when

Afebrile for 48 hoursCounts recovered (ANC >500)All cultures negative for 48-72 hours, and any

positive cultures treated fullyClinically stableYour attending says so!

Page 21: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

Fever and Central Lines in the Absence of Neutropenia

Page 22: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

Types of Central Lines

Hickman catheter:Seen more in infants and toddlersPlaced surgically in the chest wall; needs

surginetBenefits: always accessed, no needle

stick to draw blood or infuseDrawbacks: always accessed, increasing

risk of infection, hanging on chest, gets pulled by frisky kids

Page 23: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.
Page 24: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

0100…

RN calls you because Ricky, a 3 yo with ALL, was found running in the hall with his IV pole behind him attached to his Hickman catheter. She thinks he might have pulled out the line some.

What do you want to do?

Page 25: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

Other than installing a lock…

Inspect the chest for any changesBe sure that he has surginet over his trunk to

secure lineSee if there is still blood returnGet a CXR and compare it to previous

placementIf displaced, notify surgery team and discontinue

use until repairedDon’t keep kids hooked up if not necessary

Page 26: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

Types of Central Lines

Port A Cath:Seen more in older children and

adolescentsSurgically placed in the chest wallBenefits: cannot be pulled on because it’s

subcutaneous, theoretically less infectionDrawbacks: requires needle stick to

access or draw labs, can flip and make access difficult

Page 27: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.
Page 28: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

2200…

You are called because 10 yo Heaven’s port is not drawing back blood or flushing. She says that it hurts her.

What do you want to do?

Page 29: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

Try…

Deaccessing the port (need to flush with heparin before deaccessing in general)

Applying EMLA cream for comfort with needle sticks

Reaccessing the port If you can’t get blood return, you can’t use

it unless you have a radiology dye study to verify placement (considered bad form to infuse chemo or most anything subcutaneously!)

Page 30: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

Types of Central Lines

PICC Lines (Peripherally Inserted Central Catheter)

Placed by specially trained team of RNsBenefits: OR not required for placement, allows

for IVF, TPN, and prolonged antibiotics, allows for frequent blood draws

Drawbacks: Infection, bleeding, DVT, air embolism, breakage, requires weekly CXR for placement, not usually used for chemo

Page 31: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

By the way..

PICC handout and doctor consent form in PICU

Consent for deep sedationSocial service consult for OPAT

(outpatient parental antimicrobial therapy)

Page 32: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

1400…

You need a CBC on a patient with a PICC line. Can the nurse draw it off the PICC line or do they have to stick the patient?

Look at the original orders for the PICC line (in the order section). They tell you if you can draw off it or not. If you can’t find them, ask the PICC team or use these general guidelines…

Page 33: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

PICC Guidelines

Can draw labs off 3 Fr and biggerCan transfuse blood through 3 Fr and bigger

(risk of clotting off)No contrast administered unless by specially

trained RN (makes radiology techs nervous)1.9 Fr get heparin flushes Q4 hours and after

use (unless really tenuous, then may get continuous heparin)

3 Fr and bigger get NS flushes onlyDressing changes Q week and PRN nasty

Page 34: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

Muy importante!

Fever in a child with a central line is bacteremia until proven otherwise

Page 35: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

History

Why do they have a central line? Are they already on antibiotics at home? Which ones, what doses?

Other sources of fever?Line care, any problems with lines, any

rash, cellulitis, pain associated with line?Fever, chills, nausea, fatigue?

Page 36: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

Physical Examination

Look at the line and look proximal to the line for any streaking, phlebitis

Look for any other sources

Listen for a murmur!

Page 37: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

Labs

CBC with diff, CRP, blood culture from periphery and from all lumens of the central line

Any applicable drug levelsCP14 depending on the drugs that they

are onOther investigations for fever as indicated

Page 38: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

Other studies

CXR for placement if needed

ECHO if murmur or a true positive blood culture to rule out endocarditis

Page 39: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

WARNING

NEVER try to push fluids or put Cath-Flo in a central line that you think might be infected, you can release a septic emboli!

NEVER treat any CVL infection with PO antibiotics

ALWAYS give antibiotics through the CVL if functioning

Page 40: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

Medications

Ceftazadime or Cefepime 150 mg/kg/day IV Q8 hours (covers Pseudomonas, Gram negatives and MSSA)

Vancomycin 15 mg/kg/dose IV Q6 hours (covers MRSA and coag neg staph)

What do you write after your Vanc order?

Page 41: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

When should a line come out?

For sure when there is a fungal infectionProbably when there is a gram neg bacillus, s

aureus, or enterococci infectionOtherwise, consult with ID regarding safety of

treating lineIf patient unstable with a Gram negative

infection, line has to come out, otherwise, may be able to treat

Should complete treatment before another line is placed

Page 42: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

A 12-year-old boy who has acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is undergoing reinduction chemotherapy and has an indwelling Broviac catheter. He has received multiple courses of antibiotics for episodes of fever and neutropenia. He recently completed a 6-week course of vancomycin for persistent coagulase-negative staphylococcal bacteremia. He is admitted to the hospital with a temperature of 39.5°C and a white blood cell count of 0.2x103/mcL (0.2x109/L) (0% neutrophils). Blood culture grows gram-positive cocci that are resistant to vancomycin.

Page 43: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

Of the following, the MOST likely pathogen on the blood culture is        

A.group B StreptococcusB.Klebsiella pneumoniaeC.Listeria monocytogenesD.methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureusE.vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus

Page 44: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

A 4-year-old boy who has acute myelogenous leukemia is admitted for the treatment of fever and neutropenia. He has a Broviac catheter in place. His temperature on admission is 39.3°C and absolute neutrophil count (ANC) is less than 0.1x103/mcL (0.1x109/L). No focus of infection is apparent on physical examination. After blood cultures are obtained, he is begun on treatment with piperacillin/tazobactam and gentamicin. Five days later, the cultures remain negative, ANC continues to be less than 0.1x103/mcL (0.1x109/L), and his daily maximum temperature continues to be greater than 39.3°C.

Page 45: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

Of the following, the MOST appropriate management at this point is to

A.add amphotericin B to the antibiotic regimenB.administer granulocyte transfusionsC.change the antibiotic regimen to meropenem and amikacinD.continue the present antibiotic regimenE.stop the antibiotics and obtain another culture

Page 46: Managing Fever in the Presence of Neutropenia or Central Lines Chadi ELtaha, MD PGY II - PEDS.

THANK YOU