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A New Ciprofloxacin Stepdown Program in the Treatment of High‐Risk Febrile Neutropenia: A Clinical and Economic Analysis
Author(s) -
Marra Carlo A.,
Frighetto Luciana,
Quaia Carlo B.,
Lemos Mario L.,
Warkentin Dawn, I.,
Marra Fawziah.,
Jewesson Peter J.
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
pharmacotherapy: the journal of human pharmacology and drug therapy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.227
H-Index - 109
eISSN - 1875-9114
pISSN - 0277-0008
DOI - 10.1592/phco.20.11.931.35258
Subject(s) - febrile neutropenia , medicine , neutropenia , intensive care medicine , ciprofloxacin , antibiotics , chemotherapy , microbiology and biotechnology , biology
Study Objective. To determine treatment outcomes and economic impact of a ciprofloxacin stepdown program for high‐risk febrile neutropenic adults from the hospital's perspective. Design. Unblinded, two‐phase, single‐center study. Setting. Adult leukemia and stem cell transplant unit. Patients. High‐risk adults with febrile neutropenia. Intervention. Two conditions were analyzed: a multidisciplinary ciprofloxacin stepdown program involving a reduction in parenteral ciprofloxacin dose from 400 to 200 mg (i.v.‐i.v.) and conversion to oral ciprofloxacin (i.v.‐p.o.) when criteria were met; and no i.v.‐i.v. stepdown program. Measurements and Main Results. Forty‐six sequential treatment courses were compared with 42 treatment course from 6‐month periods in preintervention (P1) and postintervention (P2) phases. Assessed parameters were clinical and microbiologic outcomes, adverse drug reactions (ADRs), and direct medical resource use and costs (1998 $Canadian) for the episode of febrile neutropenia. A decision analytic model was used to map probabilities and costs and to conduct sensitivity analyses. To supplement standard statistical testing, 1000 bootstrap samples were created, and the mean cost difference was calculated between phases for each sample. Patient demographics, percentage i.v.‐p.o. stepdown, and duration of therapy were similar between phases. Clinical success (83% P1, 81% P2), microbiologic eradication (15% P1, 24% P2), and possible ADRs (6% P1, 9% P2) did not differ. Intravenous‐to‐intravenous dose stepdown occurred in 33% of P2 and no P1 treatment courses (p<0.001). Resource use and costs were similar between phases, although a reduction was seen in the drug's mean total cost/day ($58 P1, $52 P2, p=0.04). There was also a trend toward a decrease in mean total treatment costs ($4843 P1, $3493 P2, p=0.08). In 1000 bootstrap samples, 99.8% showed a cost advantage for P2. The model was robust to sensitivity analyses. Conclusion. This intervention influenced administration of ciprofloxacin without apparent compromise of patient outcomes and resulted in a reduction in total costs of treating febrile neutropenia.