Abstract

e19510 Background: Over 40% of newly diagnosed acute leukemia patients receiving induction therapy develop acute respiratory failure. Bronchoscopy is a valuable tool for evaluating airway disease, but its diagnostic yield in this setting has not been fully explored. Methods: We performed a retrospective chart review of 75 newly diagnosed acute leukemia patients who had bronchoscopies. Data recorded prior to bronchoscopy included age, diagnosis, induction treatment regimen, chest imaging, assisted ventilation, duration of neutropenia and antibiotic therapy and microbiological studies. Bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) cultures were sorted by organism, as well as by other pathologic findings. The primary outcome was antibiotic change supported by culture data. Results: The study population is summarized in the table. Induction regimen backbones included 7+3 (51), 7+4+ATRA (2), decitabine (12), hyperCVAD (2), AYA (3), other (1) and none (4); 18 patients were treated on clinical trial. Average days of neutropenia was 10.92 and average days of antibiotic therapy was 10.57. Thirty-eight patients had chest infiltrates, 11 received NIPPV, and 17 were mechanically ventilated. We identified 24 patients with +BAL studies. Of these, 37.5% (9) had + blood, urine or sputum studies before bronchoscopy, but only 3 had cultures positive for the same organism as the BAL. Of 51 patients with –BAL studies, 33.3% (17) had prior negative cultures. Infections were most commonly bacterial (15, 62.5%), followed by viral (5, 20.8%) and fungal (4, 16.7%). The most common organisms were rhinovirus, vancomycin sensitive Enterococcus (4, 16.7% each) followed by VRE, Candida albicans and MRSA (2, 8.3% each). Five patients (6.7%) had alveolar hemorrhage. Of the 24 patients with +BAL cultures, bronchoscopy findings supported changing antibiotics in 18. In contrast, antibiotics were changed in 16 patients without +BAL cultures. Conclusions: We investigated the utility of bronchoscopy on AL patients during their initial admission. BAL cultures were positive in 32% of newly diagnosed AL patients undergoing bronchoscopy. However, +BAL cultures identified a new organism in 87.5% and guided antibiotic therapy in 75% of these patients. Further studies will be needed to establish predictors of bronchoscopy findings in this patient population. [Table: see text]

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