Safety of Early Discharge for Low-Risk Patients With Febrile Neutropenia: A Multicenter Randomized Controlled Trial

Author:

Talcott James A.1,Yeap Beow Y.1,Clark Jack A.1,Siegel Robert D.1,Loggers Elizabeth Trice1,Lu Charles1,Godley Paul A.1

Affiliation:

1. James A. Talcott and Beow Y. Yeap, Massachusetts General Hospital; James A. Talcott, Harvard Medical School; Jack A. Clark, Boston University School of Public Health, Boston; Jack A. Clark, Center for Health Quality, Outcomes, and Economic Research, VA Medical Center, Bedford, MA; Robert D. Siegel, Helen and Harry Gray Cancer Center, Hartford, CT; Elizabeth Trice Loggers, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center and Group Health Research Institute, Seattle, WA; Charles Lu, MD Anderson Cancer Center,...

Abstract

PurposeFebrile neutropenia commonly complicates cancer chemotherapy. Outpatient treatment may reduce costs and improve patient comfort but risk progression of undetected medical problems.Patients and MethodsBy using our validated algorithm, we identified medically stable inpatients admitted for febrile neutropenia (neutrophils < 500/μL) after chemotherapy and randomly assigned them to continued inpatient antibiotic therapy or early discharge to receive identical antibiotic treatment at home. Our primary outcome was the occurrence of any serious medical complication, defined as evidence of medical instability requiring urgent medical attention.ResultsWe enrolled 117 patients with 121 febrile neutropenia episodes before study termination for poor accrual. We excluded five episodes as ineligible and three because of inadequate documentation of the study outcome. Treatment groups were clinically similar, but sociodemographic imbalances occurred because of block randomization. The median presenting absolute neutrophil count was 100/μL. Hematopoietic growth factors were used in 38% of episodes. The median neutropenia duration was 4 days (range, 1 to 15 days). Five outpatients were readmitted to the hospital. Major medical complications occurred in five episodes (8%) in the hospital arm and four (9%) in the home arm (95% CI for the difference, −10% to 13%; P = .56). No study patient died. Patient-reported quality of life was similar on both arms.ConclusionWe found no evidence of adverse medical consequences from home care, despite a protocol designed to detect evidence of clinical deterioration. These results should reassure clinicians who elect to treat rigorously characterized low-risk patients with febrile neutropenia in suitable outpatient settings with appropriate surveillance for unexpected clinical deterioration.

Publisher

American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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