e19501 Background: Cytotoxic chemotherapy for hematologic malignancies may adversely affect myelopoiesis, resulting in profound neutropenia that predisposes patients to severe infections. Patients undergoing hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) are at particularly increased risk. Neutropenia is defined by an absolute neutrophil count (ANC) <500 cells/μL per complete blood count with differential. Neutropenic fever is a critical event with one-time temperature ≥101ºF or ≥100.4ºF sustained over one hour. Current standard-of-care is to initiate broad-spectrum antibacterial therapy within 30-60 minutes of presentation. MetroHealth Medical Center in Cleveland, Ohio launched a new Blood and Marrow Transplant program in 2023 in the state-of-the-art Glick Center. This retrospective study explores time to blood culture draw and initiation of antibiotics in HSCT patients with neutropenic fever. Methods: The MetroHealth HSCT database was used to identify hematologic malignancy patients status-post HSCT treated in the Blood and Marrow Transplant program. Tumor type and staging, chemo history, and infection prophylaxis (PPx) were recorded from chart review. Neutropenic fever episodes were identified by review of vitals history. Time to blood culture draw and antibiotic administration was then calculated from the medication administration record (MAR). Results: N = 11 hematologic malignancy patients status-post HSCT and chemotherapy were identified in the MetroHealth database. 8 presented with multiple myeloma (RISS stage II – IV), 2 with Hodgkin lymphoma, and 1 with mantle cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma. All patients were on Valtrex or acyclovir PPx, 10 on levofloxacin PPx, and 9 on fluconazole PPx. 6 of 11 patients had one documented episode of neutropenic fever each. ANC levels ranged from unidentifiable to 420 cells/μL. Half of the episodes saw blood culture draw within 1 hour and initiation of antibiotics in 60-90 minutes. The other 3 episodes saw culture draw at 2:13, 3:09, and 10:10 hours from fever and antibiotic administration at 12:00, 2:53, and 10:23 hours, respectively. Infectious disease (ID) specialists were consulted in each of the latter 3 cases. Conclusions: No patient at MetroHealth with neutropenic fever has seen appropriate initiation of antimicrobials within 30 to 60 minutes of presentation. Hypotheses for this delay include improper chart documentation, nurse training (delay in physician notification), and provider comfort (antimicrobials deferred to day team, ID consults). The latter is of particular concern given incidents of >10 hour delay to antibiotic initiation. Fortunately, there have not been any severe morbidity or mortality outcomes yet. Next steps are to deploy a quality improvement initiative to increase speed to fever identification, blood culture draw, and empiric antimicrobial delivery.