학술논문

Discrepancies between national and local guidelines for the management of paediatric oncology patients with fever and neutropenia (FN): A need for alignment?
Document Type
article
Source
EJC Paediatric Oncology, Vol 2, Iss , Pp 100030- (2023)
Subject
Febrile neutropenia
Paediatric oncology
Children with cancer
Internal guidelines
Guideline adherence
Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens
RC254-282
Language
English
ISSN
2772-610X
Abstract
Background: We previously demonstrated in a large multicentre point prevalence study (PPS) a marked variability across German and Austrian centres regarding the management of fever and neutropenia (FN) in children, and a high rate of inappropriate treatments compared to recommendations in the German national FN guidelines. Methods: We analysed local FN standard operating procedures (SOPs) of participating centres and rated their concordance with the German national FN guidelines. To this end, we defined items derived from the German national FN guidelines that we considered essential for any local FN SOP, and assigned points per items. The items comprised “basic requirements of a SOP”; “risk analysis”; “diagnostic approach”; and “use of antibiotics including dosing recommendations”, including sub-categories. Results: Of the 30 participating centres’ SOPs, 29 were of sufficient granularity for detailed analysis. Only 19/29 (66%) and 20/29 (69%) of the SOPs provided a definition of fever and of neutropenia, respectively. The top scoring sub-categories were “empiric treatment” (mean percentage 69%), “laboratory investigations” (62.4%), and “SOP basics” (59.7%). The worst scoring sub-categories were “definitions” (37.7%), “risk analysis” (32.3%), and “outpatient treatment” (15.7%). Conclusions: The majority of the local FN SOPs demonstrated a lack of concordance with the German national guidelines on the management of paediatric FN. These discrepancies may explain the high rate of inappropriate antimicrobial treatments in our previous PPS. Our data indicate that local SOPs should be better adapted to national guidelines, and national guidelines should be conceived with the feedback of end-users, thereby anticipating barriers and facilitating acceptance.