• Presse Med · Jun 2000

    Clinical Trial

    [Microbial infection documented on admission to the intensive care unit for post-chemotherapy neutropenia after empiric antibiotic therapy].

    • E Hazouard, D Ratier, P F Dequin, B Cattier, M Ferrandière, A Legras, C Linassier, and D Perrotin.
    • Service de Pneumologie, CHU Bretonneau, Tours.
    • Presse Med. 2000 Jun 10; 29 (20): 1104-11.

    ObjectiveThe purpose of this study was to determine whether a systematic strategy of multiple microbiological samples for all adult patients with neutropenia admitted to an intensive care unit could document sepsis despite prior empiric antibiotic therapy.Patients And MethodsAll adults admitted to the intensive care unit with chemotherapy-induced neutropenia (WBC < 500/mm3) were included in the study. Microbiological samples were systematically obtained in all patients: 6 blood, 1 stool, 1 urine, 1 nasal swab. Data were analyzed for 54 consecutive patients: 22 men, 32 women, 42 with hematology diseases and 12 with solid tumors, mean age 46.6 +/- 14.4 years. Assessment of disease severity showed: simplified gravity index = 256 +/- 17; organ system failure score on day 1 = 2.42 +/- 1.1; 26 cases of septic shock among 47 cases of sepsis. Mortality was 50%. Within 48 h, bronchioalveolar lavage samples were obtained in 48 patients, and there were 12 spinal taps, 3 laparotomies, 3 skin biopsies and 6 sinus punctures.ResultsA microorganism was isolated in 39 patients (70%): 12 Gram negative, 12 Gram positive, 11 mycoses, 3 cases of herpes. Positive cultures were found for 31 blood, 1 bronchioalveolar lavage, 2 surgical, 5 serous and 22 oral or digestive tract samples. Documented microbial infection did not have prognostic value. Septic shock at admission was predictive of poor outcome.DiscussionDespite prior antibiotic therapy in 46 patients, with a theoretically active drug in 37 cases, a systematic strategy of multiple deep samples increased the number of documented cases of infection in neutropenic patients. Oral and digestive tract infections predominated despite selective decontamination of the digestive tract.

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