Early de-escalation of antibiotic therapy in hospitalized cellular therapy adult patients with febrile neutropenia

Author:

Lucena Mariana1ORCID,Gaffney Kelly J2,Urban Theresa3,Forbes Catherine4,Srinivas Pavithra5,Majhail Navneet S6,Cober Eric3,Mossad Sherif B3,Rybicki Lisa3,Hamilton Betty K3

Affiliation:

1. Incyte (United States)

2. Medical University of South Carolina

3. Cleveland Clinic

4. Roswell Park Cancer Institute

5. Janssen (United States)

6. Sarah Cannon

Abstract

Febrile neutropenia (FN) is an oncologic emergency frequently encountered in hematopoietic cell transplant (HCT) and chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy patients, which requires immediate initiation of broad-spectrum antibiotics. Data regarding antibiotic de-escalation (DE) in neutropenic patients are limited, and guideline recommendations vary. A clinical protocol for antibiotic DE of broad-spectrum agents was implemented if patients were afebrile after 72 hours and had no clinical evidence of infection. The primary endpoint was the difference in the number of antibiotic therapy days between the pre-and post-DE protocol implementation group. Secondary endpoints included rates of subsequent bacteremia during index hospitalization, 30-day mortality, and hospital length of stay. Retrospective chart reviews were conducted to assess outcomes for patients who received allogeneic HCT, autologous HCT, or CAR T-cell therapy under the antibiotic de-escalation protocol (post-DE) compared to those who did not (pre-DE). The pre-DE group underwent HCT/CAR T-cell from February 2018 through September 2018 (n=64), and the post-DE group from February 2019 through September 2019 (n=67). The median duration of antibiotics was significantly lower in the post-DE group (6 days; range 3-60 days) compared to the pre-DE group (8 days; range 3-31 days) (p=0.034). There were no differences in any secondary endpoints. We conclude that antibiotic DE in neutropenic HCT or CAR T-cell therapy patients treated with broad-spectrum antibiotics for at least three days who are afebrile and without documented infection appears to be a safe and effective practice. Adopting it significantly reduces the number of days of antibiotics without compromising patient outcomes.

Publisher

SAABRON PRESS

Reference24 articles.

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3. IDSA/SHEA guidelines for developing an institutional program to enhance antimicrobial stewardship;Timothy H. Dellit;Clin Infect Dis,2007

4. Vital Signs: Improving Antibiotic Use Among Hospitalized Patients;S.K. Fridkin;MMWR Morbidity and mortality weekly report,2014

5. Implementing an Antibiotic Stewardship Program: Guidelines by the Infectious Diseases Society of America and the Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America;Tamar F. Barlam;Clinical Infectious Diseases,2016

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