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Screening for the outpatient treatment of febrile neutropenia

Febrile neutropenia is a frequent and potentially fatal adverse event of chemotherapy. Nowadays, febrile neutropenia is considered an emergency and it is known that prompt infusion of antibiotics decreases mortality. Several studies demonstrated that febrile neutropenia is a heterogeneous group of diseases and that factors such as outpatient status, no hypotension, no dehydration, no chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, no symptoms, no previous fungal infection and age < 60 years are protective factors against serious complications as demonstrated by the Multinational Association for Supportive Care in Cancer (MASCC). These data show that outpatient treatment and early discharge is safer and much research has shown lower costs for outpatient treatment in low-risk patients with febrile neutropenia. The aim of this work is to review and discuss tools (in particular the MASCC index) for safe screening of febrile neutropenia for outpatient treatment in addition to demonstrate results of research.

Neutropenia; Fever; Anti-bacterial agents; Ambulatory care; Outcome assessment (health care); Sensivity and specificity; Risk factors; Triage; Review


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