Clinical Management of Febrile Neutropenia in Cancer Patients

Autores

  • Lucas Rossetti de Almeida Universidade de Caxias do Sul - UCS
  • Luiz Felipe Rodrigues Silva Universidade de São Paulo - USP

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18750203

Palavras-chave:

Neutropenia Febril, Neoplasias, Avaliação de Risco, Stewardship de Antimicrobianos

Resumo

Febrile neutropenia (FN) is one of the most frequent and potentially life-threatening complications of cancer therapy, associated with significant morbidity, mortality, and healthcare costs. Appropriate management requires accurate risk stratification and therapeutic decisions guided by up-to-date evidence and antimicrobial stewardship principles. To synthesize current evidence on the clinical management of febrile neutropenia (FN) in oncology patients based exclusively on the provided abstracts. This narrative review analyzed seven articles, including clinical guidelines, review articles, and one phase 3 randomized controlled trial. Risk stratification is central to FN management. Updated pediatric guidelines conditionally recommend discontinuing empirical antibiotic therapy in low-risk patients who are clinically stable, afebrile, and have negative blood cultures at 48 hours, as well as implementing pre-emptive antifungal therapy in high-risk patients without mold-active prophylaxis. In adults with hematologic malignancies, antibiotic de-escalation represents a key management focus. A phase 3 trial in IDH1-mutated acute myeloid leukemia demonstrated that ivosidenib plus azacitidine improved survival and reduced the incidence of FN (28% vs. 34%). FN is associated with hospitalizations lasting up to 10 days and costs reaching up to $65,000 per pediatric admission. Prophylactic granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) reduces the incidence of FN. Multidrug-resistant organisms remain a major clinical challenge. The management of FN requires risk-adapted strategies that integrate rapid assessment, evidence-based guidelines, and antimicrobial stewardship.

Biografia do Autor

Lucas Rossetti de Almeida, Universidade de Caxias do Sul - UCS

Graduado em Medicina.

Luiz Felipe Rodrigues Silva, Universidade de São Paulo - USP

Graduado em Odontologia. Formação com ênfase nas disciplinas de Patologia Geral, Radiologia Básica e Patologia Oral e Maxilofacial I. Experiência em projetos de ensino na área de Patologia Geral. Atuação em ações de extensão voltadas à conscientização e prevenção do câncer bucal. Participação em iniciativas de Telessaúde em Odontologia. Estágio no Laboratório de Anatomia Patológica, com experiência em atividades relacionadas ao diagnóstico anatomopatológico.

Referências

1. Cossey J, Cote MCB. Evaluation and management of febrile neutropenia in patients with cancer. JAAPA. 2024 Aug 1;37(8):16-20.

2. Lehrnbecher T, Robinson PD, Ammann RA, Fisher B, Patel P, Phillips R, et al. Guideline for the management of fever and neutropenia in pediatric patients with cancer and hematopoietic cell transplantation recipients: 2023 update. J Clin Oncol. 2023 Mar 20;41(9):1774-1785.

3. Stohs EJ, Abbas A, Freifeld A. Approach to febrile neutropenia in patients undergoing treatments for hematologic malignancies. Transpl Infect Dis. 2024 Apr;26(2):e14236.

4. Montesinos P, Recher C, Vives S, Zarzycka E, Wang J, Bertani G, et al. Ivosidenib and azacitidine in IDH1-mutated acute myeloid leukemia. N Engl J Med. 2022 Apr 21;386(16):1519-1531.

5. Boccia R, Glaspy J, Crawford J, Aapro M. Chemotherapy-induced neutropenia and febrile neutropenia in the US: a beast of burden that needs to be tamed? Oncologist. 2022 Aug 5;27(8):625-636.

6. Nucci M. How I treat febrile neutropenia. Mediterr J Hematol Infect Dis. 2021 Mar 1;13(1):e2021025.

7. Peseski AM, McClean M, Green SD, Beeler C, Konig H. Management of fever and neutropenia in the adult patient with acute myeloid leukemia. Expert Rev Anti Infect Ther. 2021 Mar;19(3):359-378.

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Publicado

2026-02-23

Como Citar

de Almeida, L. R., & Silva, L. F. R. (2026). Clinical Management of Febrile Neutropenia in Cancer Patients. International Journal of Health and Surgical Research, 2(2), 168–174. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18750203