Abstract

PurposeThe Japanese Society of Medical Oncology published a guideline (GL) on febrile neutropenia (FN) in 2017. The study’s purpose is to reveal how widely GL penetrated among physicians and surgeons providing chemotherapy.MethodsA questionnaire survey was conducted with SurveyMonkey™ for members of the Japanese Association of Supportive Care in Cancer and relevant academic organizations. Each question had four options (always do, do in more than half of patients, do in less than half, do not at all) and a free description form. Responses were analyzed with statistical text-analytics.ResultA total of 800 responses were retrieved. Major respondents were experts with more than 10-year experience, physicians 54%, and surgeons 46%. Eighty-seven percent of respondents knew and used GL. Forty-eight percent assessed FN with Multinational Association of Supportive Care in Cancer (MASCC) score “always” or “more than half.” Eighty-one percent chose beta-lactam monotherapy as primary treatment in high-risk patients. Seventy-seven percent did oral antibacterial therapy in low-risk patients ambulatorily. Seventy-eight percent administered primary prophylactic G-CSF (ppG-CSF) in FN frequency ≥ 20% regimen. Fifty-nine percent did ppG-CSF for high-risk patients in FN frequency 10–20% regimen. Ninety-seven percent did not use ppG-CSF in FN frequency < 10% regimen. The medians of complete and complete plus partial compliance rates were 46.4% (range 7.0–92.8) and 77.8% (range 35.4–98.7). The complete compliance rates were less than 30% in seven recommendations, including the MASCC score assessment.ConclusionGL is estimated to be widely utilized, but some recommendations were not followed, presumably due to a mismatch with actual clinical practices in Japan.

Highlights

  • Febrile neutropenia (FN) is a potentially fatal infectious complication in cancer chemotherapy

  • This study aims to determine how widely GL is known and followed among physicians and surgeons involved in chemotherapy and identify the causes of gaps between GL recommendations and actual clinical practice

  • A questionnaire consisting of 21 questions on GL and seven on attributes of respondents was surveyed through SurveyMonkeyTM for the members of the Japanese Association of Supportive Care in Cancer, the Japanese Society of Medical Oncology, the Japanese Society of Hematology, and the

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Summary

Introduction

Febrile neutropenia (FN) is a potentially fatal infectious complication in cancer chemotherapy. Various guidelines were published abroad [1,2,3,4,5], some of which were evaluated for compliance with guideline recommendations and clinical outcomes [6,7,8,9]. The Japanese guideline (GL) on FN, developed by a multidisciplinary expert panel based on evidence from other guidelines, meta-analyses, and systematic reviews, was published in 2014 and revised in 2017 by the Japanese Society. This study aims to determine how widely GL is known and followed among physicians and surgeons involved in chemotherapy and identify the causes of gaps between GL recommendations and actual clinical practice. In Japan, surgeons traditionally provide chemotherapy in their specialties

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