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Pediatric blood & cancer · Jul 2019
Clinical TrialOutcomes of a clinical pathway for primary outpatient management of pediatric patients with low-risk febrile neutropenia.
- Jonathan Paolino, Juliana Mariani, Alexandra Lucas, Jeremy Rupon, Howard Weinstein, Annah Abrams, and Alison Friedmann.
- Department of Pediatrics, Massachusetts General Hospital for Children, Boston, Massachusetts.
- Pediatr Blood Cancer. 2019 Jul 1; 66 (7): e27679.
BackgroundFever and neutropenia is a common reason for nonelective hospitalization of pediatric oncology patients. Herein we report nearly five years of experience with a clinical pathway designed to guide outpatient management for patients who had low-risk features.ProceduresThrough a multidisciplinary collaboration, we implemented a clinical pathway at our institution using established low-risk criteria to guide outpatient management of pediatric oncology patients. Comprehensive chart review of all febrile neutropenia episodes was conducted to characterize outcomes of patients with low-risk febrile neutropenia following clinical pathway implementation.ResultsBetween April 1, 2013, and October 1, 2017, there were 169 cases of febrile neutropenia managed in our Pediatric Oncology Unit. Sixty-seven (40%) of these episodes were defined as low risk and managed either entirely in the outpatient setting (41 episodes, 24%) or with a step-down strategy involving a very brief inpatient stay (26 episodes, 15%). There were no intensive care unit admissions or deaths among the low-risk patients. Of those identified as low risk, seven patients (10%) required subsequent hospitalization during the follow-up period, two for inadequate oral intake, two for persistent fevers, one for cellulitis, one for seizure unrelated to the febrile episode, and one for a positive blood culture.ConclusionsFollowing implementation of a clinical pathway, the majority of patients designated as low risk were managed primarily in the outpatient setting without major morbidity or mortality, suggesting that carefully selected low-risk patients can be successfully treated with outpatient management and subsequent admission if warranted.© 2019 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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