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Canadian supportive care recommendations for the management of neutropenia in patients with cancer

Hematologic toxicities of cancer chemotherapy are common and often limit the ability to provide treatment in a timely and dose-intensive manner. These limitations may be of utmost importance in the adjuvant and curative intent settings. Hematologic toxicities may result in febrile neutropenia, infec...

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Autores principales: Kouroukis, C.T., Chia, S., Verma, S., Robson, D., Desbiens, C., Cripps, C., Mikhael, J.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Multimed Inc. 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2259432/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18317581
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author Kouroukis, C.T.
Chia, S.
Verma, S.
Robson, D.
Desbiens, C.
Cripps, C.
Mikhael, J.
author_facet Kouroukis, C.T.
Chia, S.
Verma, S.
Robson, D.
Desbiens, C.
Cripps, C.
Mikhael, J.
author_sort Kouroukis, C.T.
collection PubMed
description Hematologic toxicities of cancer chemotherapy are common and often limit the ability to provide treatment in a timely and dose-intensive manner. These limitations may be of utmost importance in the adjuvant and curative intent settings. Hematologic toxicities may result in febrile neutropenia, infections, fatigue, and bleeding, all of which may lead to additional complications and prolonged hospitalization. The older cancer patient and patients with significant comorbidities may be at highest risk of neutropenic complications. Colony-stimulating factors (csfs) such as filgrastim and pegfilgrastim can effectively attenuate most of the neutropenic consequences of chemotherapy, improve the ability to continue chemotherapy on the planned schedule, and minimize the risk of febrile neutropenia and infectious morbidity and mortality. The present consensus statement reviews the use of csfs in the management of neutropenia in patients with cancer and sets out specific recommendations based on published international guidelines tailored to the specifics of the Canadian practice landscape. We review existing international guidelines, the indications for primary and secondary prophylaxis, the importance of maintaining dose intensity, and the use of csfs in leukemia, stem-cell transplantation, and radiotherapy. Specific disease-related recommendations are provided related to breast cancer, non-Hodgkin lymphoma, lung cancer, and gastrointestinal cancer. Finally, csf dosing and schedules, duration of therapy, and associated acute and potential chronic toxicities are examined.
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spelling pubmed-22594322008-03-03 Canadian supportive care recommendations for the management of neutropenia in patients with cancer Kouroukis, C.T. Chia, S. Verma, S. Robson, D. Desbiens, C. Cripps, C. Mikhael, J. Curr Oncol Practice Guideline Series Hematologic toxicities of cancer chemotherapy are common and often limit the ability to provide treatment in a timely and dose-intensive manner. These limitations may be of utmost importance in the adjuvant and curative intent settings. Hematologic toxicities may result in febrile neutropenia, infections, fatigue, and bleeding, all of which may lead to additional complications and prolonged hospitalization. The older cancer patient and patients with significant comorbidities may be at highest risk of neutropenic complications. Colony-stimulating factors (csfs) such as filgrastim and pegfilgrastim can effectively attenuate most of the neutropenic consequences of chemotherapy, improve the ability to continue chemotherapy on the planned schedule, and minimize the risk of febrile neutropenia and infectious morbidity and mortality. The present consensus statement reviews the use of csfs in the management of neutropenia in patients with cancer and sets out specific recommendations based on published international guidelines tailored to the specifics of the Canadian practice landscape. We review existing international guidelines, the indications for primary and secondary prophylaxis, the importance of maintaining dose intensity, and the use of csfs in leukemia, stem-cell transplantation, and radiotherapy. Specific disease-related recommendations are provided related to breast cancer, non-Hodgkin lymphoma, lung cancer, and gastrointestinal cancer. Finally, csf dosing and schedules, duration of therapy, and associated acute and potential chronic toxicities are examined. Multimed Inc. 2008-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2259432/ /pubmed/18317581 Text en 2008 Multimed Inc.
spellingShingle Practice Guideline Series
Kouroukis, C.T.
Chia, S.
Verma, S.
Robson, D.
Desbiens, C.
Cripps, C.
Mikhael, J.
Canadian supportive care recommendations for the management of neutropenia in patients with cancer
title Canadian supportive care recommendations for the management of neutropenia in patients with cancer
title_full Canadian supportive care recommendations for the management of neutropenia in patients with cancer
title_fullStr Canadian supportive care recommendations for the management of neutropenia in patients with cancer
title_full_unstemmed Canadian supportive care recommendations for the management of neutropenia in patients with cancer
title_short Canadian supportive care recommendations for the management of neutropenia in patients with cancer
title_sort canadian supportive care recommendations for the management of neutropenia in patients with cancer
topic Practice Guideline Series
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2259432/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18317581
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