Outcomes and Cost of Outpatient or Inpatient Management of 712 Patients With Febrile Neutropenia

Author:

Elting Linda S.1,Lu Charles1,Escalante Carmelita P.1,Giordano Sharon H.1,Trent Jonathan C.1,Cooksley Catherine1,Avritscher Elenir B.C.1,Shih Ya-Chen Tina1,Ensor Joe1,Bekele B. Nebiyou1,Gralla Richard J.1,Talcott James A.1,Rolston Kenneth1

Affiliation:

1. From the Section of Health Services Research, Department of Biostatistics; Departments of Thoracic/Head & Neck Medical Oncology, General Internal Medicine, Ambulatory Treatment and Emergency Care, Breast Medical Oncology, and Sarcoma Medical Oncology; Department of Infectious Diseases and Infection Control, Quantitative Sciences Division, The University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX; New York Lung Cancer Alliance, New York, NY; and Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA

Abstract

Purpose We retrospectively compared the outcomes and costs of outpatient and inpatient management of low-risk outpatients who presented to an emergency department with febrile neutropenia (FN). Patients and Methods A single episode of FN was randomly chosen from each of 712 consecutive, low-risk solid tumor outpatients who had been treated prospectively on a clinical pathway (1997-2003). Their medical records were reviewed retrospectively for overall success (resolution of all signs and symptoms of infection without modification of antibiotics, major medical complications, or intensive care unit admission) and nine secondary outcomes. Outcomes were assessed by physician investigators who were blinded to management strategy. Outcomes and costs (payer's perspective) in 529 low-risk outpatients were compared with 123 low-risk patients who were psychosocially ineligible for outpatient management (no access to caregiver, telephone, or transportation; residence > 30 minutes from treating center; poor compliance with previous outpatient therapy) using univariate statistical tests. Results Overall success was 80% among low-risk outpatients and 79% among low-risk inpatients. Response to initial antibiotics was 81% among outpatients and 80% among inpatients (P = .94); 21% of those initially treated as outpatients subsequently required hospitalization. All patients ultimately responded to antibiotics; there were no deaths. Serious complications were rare (1%) and equally frequent between the groups. The mean cost of therapy among inpatients was double that of outpatients ($15,231 v $7,772; P < .001). Conclusion Outpatient management of low-risk patients with FN is as safe and effective as inpatient management of low-risk patients and is significantly less costly.

Publisher

American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

Reference45 articles.

1. Rolston K, Rubenstein E, Elting L, et al: Ambulatory management of febrile episodes in low-risk neutropenic patients. Presented at the 35th Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial Agents in Chemotherapy, September 17-20, 1995, San Francisco, CA

2. Outpatient treatment of febrile episodes in low-risk neutropenic patients with cancer

3. Escalante CP, Weiser MA, Manzullo E, et al: Outcomes of treatment pathways in outpatient treatment of low risk febrile neutropenic cancer patients. Support Care Cancer 12:657,2004-662,

4. Febrile neutropenia: a prospective study to validate the Multinational Association of Supportive Care of Cancer (MASCC) risk-index score

5. The Multinational Association for Supportive Care in Cancer Risk Index: A Multinational Scoring System for Identifying Low-Risk Febrile Neutropenic Cancer Patients

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