Fever and neutropenia hospital discharges in children with cancer: A 2012 update

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Date
2016
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English
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Taylor & Francis
Abstract

Fever and neutropenia (FN) is a common precipitant for hospitalization among children with cancer, but hospital utilization trends are not well described. This study describes national trends for hospital discharges for FN among children with cancer for the year 2012, compared with the authors’ previous analysis from 2009. Data were analyzed from the Kids’ Inpatient Database (KID), an all-payer US hospital database, for 2012. Pediatric patients with cancer who had a discharge for FN were identified using age ≤19 years, urgent or emergent admit type, nontransferred, and a combination of International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD-9-CM) codes for fever and neutropenia. The authors evaluated factors associated with a “short length of stay” (SLOS). Sampling weights were used to permit national inferences. In 2012, children with cancer accounted for 1.8% of pediatric hospital discharges (n = 120,675), with 12.2% (n = 13,456) of cancer-related discharges meeting FN criteria. Two fifths of FN discharges had a SLOS, which accounted for 91million(2015US) in hospital charges. The majority had no serious infections; most common infections were viral infection (9.6%) or upper respiratory infection (9.6%). Factors significantly associated with SLOS included having a diagnosis of ear infection (odds ratio [OR] = 1.54, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.16–2.03), soft tissue sarcoma (OR = 1.47, CI: 1.10–1.95), and Hodgkin lymphoma (OR = 1.51, CI: 1.09–2.10), as compared with not having those diagnoses. SLOS admissions continue to be rarely associated with serious infections, but contribute substantially to the burden of hospitalization for pediatric FN. Implementation of risk stratification schemas to identify patients who meet low-risk criteria may decrease financial burden.

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Mueller, E. L., Croop, J., & Carroll, A. E. (2016). Fever and neutropenia hospital discharges in children with cancer: A 2012 update. Pediatric Hematology and Oncology, 33(1), 39–48. http://doi.org/10.3109/08880018.2015.1102998
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Pediatric Hematology and Oncology
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