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Neutropenic enterocolitis in pediatric leukemia patients treated with intensive chemotherapy in Upper Egypt

Research Authors
Ereen R. Fouad,
Ahmed Mohammed Morsy,
Hosam Eldein M. Kamel,
Amany M. Ali





Research Department
Research Year
2020
Research Journal
PEDIATRIC INVESTIGATION
Research Publisher
Wiley Online Library © Chinese Medical Association
Research Vol
4 (1)
Research Rank
1
Research_Pages
5-10
Research Website
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7331293/
Research Abstract

Importance:
In low resource countries, there has been scarcity of research on the risk factors associated with neutropenic enterocolitis, a serious complication that commonly develops during treatment of cancer patients.
Objective: To identify the pattern of intestinal complications in pediatric leukemia patients treated with intensive chemotherapy, including those with neutropenic enterocolitis; to assess the outcome; and to evaluate the risk factors associated with the mortality in these patients.
Methods: During the period from June 2015 to December 2016, a prospective study was carried out on pediatric patients diagnosed with acute leukemia who received induction/or re-induction phases of chemotherapy at South Egypt Cancer Institute. Patients with documented episodes of intestinal complications were included in the study. Recovery or death from an episode of intestinal complication was utilized as the primary outcome measure for the study. Using univariable and multivariable methods, potential risk factors associated with mortality were delineated by logistic regression analysis, both for the entire intestinal complications episodes as a whole and for those episodes of neutropenic enterocolitis only.
Results: Out of 88 documented episodes of intestinal complications from 77 patients; 58 episodes were identified as neutropenic enterocolitis from 47 patients. In those patients who were having episodes of neutropenic enterocolitis, the presence of abdominal tenderness (OR 4.529, 95%CI 1.062–19.317, P = 0.041); a longer duration of neutropenia (OR 1.215, 95%CI 1.030–1.434, P = 0.021); and hemodynamic instability (OR 17.023, 95%CI 4.095–70.772, P < 0.001), were found to be independently associated with worse outcome.
Interpretation: In Upper Egypt, the use of intensive systemic chemotherapy during the induction phase of acute leukemia was found to be associated with potentially lethal intestinal complications. A high index of clinical suspicion is warranted.