Introduction: Immediate empirical antibiotic therapy is mandatory in febrile chemotherapy-induced neutropenia, but its optimal duration is unclear, especially in patients with fever of unknown origin ...(FUO).
Objectives: The primary objective of this 20-month prospective observational study was to evaluate the feasibility and safety of short-term antibiotic treatment in afebrile or febrile patients exhibiting FUO, irrespective of their neutrophil count. The secondary objective was to describe the epidemiology of all episodes of febrile neutropenia.
Methods: In the first phase of the study, empirical antibiotic therapy in FUO patients was stopped after 48 h of apyrexia, in accordance with European Conference on Infections in Leukaemia guidelines (n = 45). In the second phase of the study, antibiotics were stopped no later than day 5 for all FUO patients, regardless of body temperature or leukocyte count (n = 37).
Results: Two hundred and thirty-eight cases of febrile neutropenia in 123 patients were included. Neither the composite endpoint (p = .11), nor each component (in-hospital mortality (p = .80), intensive care unit admission (p = 0.48), relapse of infection ≤48 h after discontinuation of antibiotics (p = .82)) differed between the two FUO groups. Violation of protocol occurred in 17/82 episodes of FUO without any major impact on statistical results. Twenty-six (57.3%) and 22 (59.5%) FUO episodes did not relapse during hospital-stay (p = 1), and nine (20%) and five (13.5%) presented another FUO, respectively. One hundred and fifty-six episodes of febrile neutropenia (65.5%) were clinically or microbiologically documented, including 85 bacteremia.
Conclusions: These results suggest that early discontinuation of empirical antibiotics in FUO is safe for afebrile neutropenic patients.
Summary
Despite a moderate prevalence in low‐risk myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) and chronic myelomonocytic leukaemia (CMML), thrombocytopenia remains a risk of severe bleeding and therapeutic ...options are still limited. There are only a few studies with eltrombopag (ELT), a thrombopoietin receptor agonist, in those patients. In this retrospective multicentre study, ELT was used in 50 patients with MDS and 11 with CMML, with no excess of marrow blasts and platelet counts of <50 × 109/l in a ‘real‐life’ situation. Platelet response occurred in 47 (77%) patients. The median (range) duration of response was 8 (0–69) months. None of the eight still responders who discontinued ELT had relapsed, at a median (range) of 16 (6–23) months after ELT discontinuation. Although 36% of the patients were anti‐coagulated or anti‐aggregated only 10% of patients had Grade ≥3 bleeding events. Thrombotic events were observed in six (10%) patients, who all but one had a medical history of arterial or venous thrombosis. Progression to acute myeloid leukaemia occurred in four (7%) patients. In this first ‘real‐life’ study, ELT was effective and generally well tolerated in patients with MDS/CMML without excess blasts.
Direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs) have recently proven their efficacy and safety, as primary and secondary prevention agents for thrombosis in cancer patients. We aimed to determine if DOACs might ...be a suitable choice to reduce the thrombotic risk in myeloproliferative neoplasm (MPN) patients.
We analysed a large multicentric cohort of MPN patients treated with rivaroxaban or apixaban after atrial fibrillation (AF) or thrombotic events.
We included 135 MPN patients with a median follow-up of 23.8 months since DOAC initiation. Twenty patients (14.8 %) developed 30 thrombotic events (28 arterial thromboses in 19 patients) for a global incidence of 6.5 % patient-years. No difference was highlighted between apixaban and rivaroxaban in terms of thrombosis risk, but the incidence of arterial thrombosis was significantly higher on low-dose DOACs (11.9 vs. 4.5 % patient-years, p = 0.04). Bleeding events were more frequent in the full-dose group (41.2 vs. 15.2 %, p = 0.006). However, major and clinically relevant non major (CRNM) bleeding events occurred in 18 patients (13.3 %), with no difference between the groups. Age was the only identified thrombotic risk factor, whereas risk factors for major or CRNM bleeding were a full-dose treatment regimen and a combination of DOAC/low-dose aspirin.
DOACs seem effective in preventing venous thrombosis in MPN patients with AF or VTE. For these high-risk patients, low-dose DOACs exposed patients to more arterial thrombosis but fewer bleeding events. Prospective studies are needed to evaluate and compare DOACs to the currently recommended antithrombotic drugs for high-risk MPN patients.
Invasive aspergillosis (IA) is the most prevalent invasive fungal disease (IFD) in neutropenic patients. Environment is the main source of Aspergillus spores aerosolization especially during building ...construction. International guidelines recommend mechanical protection during hospital building works; otherwise the use of antifungal prophylaxis is not clearly indicated.
Our objective was to determine the efficacy of antifungal prophylaxis by posaconazole on IA incidence in acute myeloid leukemia population and to analyse the benefit of this prophylaxis and HEPA-filters during hospital buildings works.
We included patients treated for acute myeloid leukemia at Brest teaching hospital from January 2009 to December 2015. We compared incidence of IA in the group treated by posaconazole from 2012 to 2015 to the incidence of IA in the first group who did not receive antifungal prophylaxis (from 2009 to 2011). The one-year overall survival was also analyzed using the Kaplan–Meier method.
245 patients were enrolled including 151 treated with posaconazole. 23 IA were diagnosed between 2009 and 2011 (without antifungal prophylaxis), then 31 between 2012 and 2015 (with posaconazole) without statistical difference between the incidence densities (0.34 per 100 hospitalization-days vs. 0.30 per 100 hospitalization-days, p = 0.71). Incidence density of IA increased during building works (2.40 per 100 hospitalization-days vs. 0.28 per 100 hospitalization-days, p < 0.0001). The incidence density of IA significantly decreased during construction periods when posaconazole prophylaxis was used (1.59 per 100 hospitalization-days vs. 4.87 per 100 hospitalization-days p < 0.0001).
Our study suggests, for the first time, the interest of antifungal prophylaxis in addition to HEPA filtration in prevention of IA during hospital building works.
Many case reports have indicated the occurrence of monoclonal gammopathy of uncertain significance (MGUS) or multiple myeloma (MM) in patients with Ph-negative myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPN), but ...few cohorts of patients have been published. This study concerns 667 patients newly diagnosed with polycythemia vera (PV) or essential thrombocythemia (ET) who were tested for monoclonal (M) protein at diagnosis (13.9% of patients). The overall survival of patients with M protein was dramatically lower than that of patients without M protein (12.7 versus 22.4 years; p = .0132). Univariate analysis identified the presence of M protein as a potential risk factor for the secondary occurrence of myelofibrosis (p = .02), myelodysplastic syndrome (p = .043), and MM/Waldenstrom macroglobulinemia (p < .0001). Our cohort shows that the presence of M proteins in patients with PV or ET leads to a poor prognosis. We believe that testing for M protein could help practicians to identify such patients.
Myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) and chronic myelomonocytic leukemia (CMML) are associated with systemic inflammatory or autoimmune diseases in 10-20 % of cases. Among them, immune thrombocytopenia ...(ITP) has been reported but large studies assessing this association are missing. Whether such patients have a particular phenotype and require particular management is unclear. This study analyzes the clinical spectrum, outcome and therapeutic management of patients with ITP associated with MDS or CMML, in comparison (i) to patients with primary ITP without MDS/CMML and (ii) to patients with MDS/CMML without ITP. Forty-one MDS/CMML-associated ITP patients were included, with chronic ITP in 26 (63%) patients, low-risk myelodysplasia in 30 (73%) patients and CMML in 24 (59%) patients. An associated autoimmune disease was noted in 10 (24%) patients. In comparison to primary ITP patients, MDS/CMML-associated ITP patients had a higher occurrence of severe bleeding despite similar platelet counts at diagnosis. First-line treatment consisted of glucocorticoids (98%) and intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIg) (56%). Response achievement with IVIg was more frequent in primary ITP than in MDS/CMML-associated ITP patients. Response rates to second-line therapies were not statistically different between primary ITP and MDS/CMMLassociated ITP patients. Ten percent (n=4) of patients with MDS/CMML-associated ITP had multirefractory ITP versus none in primary ITP controls. After a median follow-up of 60 months, there was no difference in overall survival between MDS/CMML-associated ITP and primary ITP patients. Leukemia-free-survival was significantly better in MDS/CMMLassociated ITP patients than in MDS/CMML without ITP MDS/CMML-associated ITP have a particular outcome with more severe bleeding and multirefractory profile than primary ITP, similar response profile to primary ITP therapy except for IVIg, and less progression toward acute myeloid leukemia than MDS/CMML without ITP.