Catherine O Brien
St James’s Hospital, Ireland
Title: Febrile Neutropenia Risk Assessment- An Irish Perspective
Biography
Biography: Catherine O Brien
Abstract
Purpose/ Objectives: To develop, implement and evaluate the effectiveness of a nurse-led risk assessment tool to reduce the incidence of febrile neutropenia (FN) in adult cancer patients receiving myelosuppresive chemotherapy. Design: A comparative prospective observational study was conducted in a hospital-based oncology unit. Sample: Clinical data was collected from 459 patients' charts; 233 patients (50.8%) in phase one had no intervention and 226 patients (49.2%) in phase two had a risk assessment carried out by the nurse, prior to each cycle of chemotherapy. The main outcomes captured were febrile neutropenia, dose reductions, treatment delays and hospitalisation days. Methods: International evidence-based guidelines and published nursing studies were used to develop and implement a risk assessment tool. The tool assessed the risk associated with the chemotherapy regimen and 25 patients-, treatment- and disease-related FN risk factors. Identification of one or more risk factors indicated that patients were at risk of developing FN and Growth Colony Stimulating Factor (G-CSF) should be considered. Clinical outcomes pre and post implementation were used to evaluate the risk assessment tool. Findings: There were significant reductions in the incidence of FN (15.5% vs. 7.5%) and the number of hospital days (267 vs. 131) following the introduction of the risk assessment tool. Incidence of dose reduction and treatment delays resulting from FN were lower in the second phase. There was an increase of 12.5% in the use of G-CSF in phase one (40%) versus phase two (45%). Social factors were found to have no impact on the risk of developing FN. Conclusions: Through consistent risk assessment, nurses could determine which patients were at higher risk of developing FN, leading to the more appropriate proactive use of prophylactic G-CSF use in a target population. This led to a significant reduction in life-threatening infections, hospitalisations, dose reductions and delays.