Management of the Febrile Infant
Theodore C. Sectish, MD
Director, Residency Training Program in Pediatrics
Assistant Professor in Pediatrics
Stanford University School of Medicine
Fever in Infants
Learning Objectives:
* Fever in infants and outcomes of fever
* Evaluation of the febrile infant
* Modified Clinical Practice Guideline
* Guidelines and Practice
* New considerations
* Management of Fever without Source - 2001
Historical Perspective
* 1967 Occult bacteremia
* 1970s Hospitalization of febrile infants
* 1980s Outpatient management
* 1985 HIB Vaccine
* 1993 Clinical Practice Guideline
* 2000 PCV7 Vaccine
Fever in Practice
Diagnoses: Febrile Infants < 3 months
* URI 35.0%
* Otitis media 16.1%
* Bronchiolitis 8.4%
* Gastroenteritis 7.8%
* Urinary tract infection 4.7%
* Viral meningitis 2.7%
* Bacteremia 1.5%
* Bacterial meningitis 0.3%
* Cellulitis 0.2%
* Osteomyelitis 0.04%
Fever without Source (FWS)
* 20% of all infants <3 years with fever have FWS
* 3% have occult pneumococcal bacteremia
o Of bacteremic infants, 3% have meningitis
o 1 out of 1000!
* Risks of pneumococcal bacteremia in a PCV7 immunized infant is unknown
* Risk reduction estimate once immunized: 90%
Definition of Fever
* 38.00 C
* Rectal measurement
* Unbundled infant
* No recent antipyretics
* No recent immunizations
Bundling and Fever
* Experimental design with controls
* Bundling = 5 blankets and a hat
* 20 bundled infants: mean change + 0.560 C
* 20 infant controls: mean change - 0.040 C
* 2 infants reached 38.0 C, not higher
Febrile Infants: Outcomes of Interest
Serious Bacterial Infection (SBI)
* Urinary tract infection
* Sepsis or bacteremia
* Meningitis
* Bacterial enteritis
* Bone and joint infections
* Pneumonia
Probability of Bacterial Infection in Febrile Infants, <90 Days of Age
Probability of Occult Bacteremia: Febrile Infants, 3 - 36 months
Outcomes of Occult Bacteremia in the Age of Hemophilus
Occult Bacteremia in the Post-HIB Vaccine Era: 3-36 months
* Streptococcus pneumoniae 92%
* Others: 8%
o Salmonella sp
o N meningitidis
o Group A Streptococcus
o Group B Streptococcus
Outcomes of Outpatients with Pneumococcal Bacteremia
* 548 episodes in an ER population
* Treatment strategies varied:
o No antibiotics (N = 73)
o Oral antibiotics (N = 239)
o Parenteral antibiotics (N = 236)
Reevaluation of Outpatients with Pneumococcal Bacteremia
Conclusions
How Do Clinicians Evaluate Febrile Infants?
Evaluation of the Febrile Infant
* Careful history
* Physical examination
* Selected laboratory tests
Evaluation of the Febrile Infant
* Age
* Toxicity
* Decisions to test, to treat, to admit
* Evaluate:
o Vital signs
o Skin color
o Behavior
o State of hydration
* Document carefully and convey a clear picture of the overall clinical appearance of the patient.
* Perform a complete physical exam with particular attention to:
o Skin: for petechiae / purpura, rashes
o Oropharynx: for signs of gingivostomatitis/herpangina
o Pulmonary examination: for occult pneumonia
o Bones, joints and soft tissues: for infection
* Consider the history of fever as correct in all reported measured temperatures
What is “Toxic”?
It is a very difficult task to define “toxic”; the closest I can come to a definition is to say that if to an experienced physician he looks and acts damned sick, he’s toxic.
Definition: “Toxic” Infant
* Lethargy
o poor or absent eye contact
o failure to recognize parents
o poor interaction with persons / environment
* Signs of poor perfusion
* Marked hypoventilation / apnea
* Hyperventilation
* Cyanosis
1993 Clinical Practice Guideline
* Review of literature
* Evidence based
* Outcomes driven
* Consensus opinion
Important Clinical Questions
* Which young infants are at low risk for serious bacterial infection?
* Which older infants deserve empiric antibiotic therapy?
Clinical Practice Guideline
Low Risk Criteria: Clinical Appearance
* Nontoxic appearance
* Previously healthy
* No focal bacterial infection on exam
Otitis media is not considered a focal infection
Clinical Practice Guideline Low Risk Criteria: Laboratory Tests
Guideline: 0 - 28 days
Guideline: 29 - 90 days
Follow-up
Modified Guideline: 3 - 36 months
Modifications to the Guideline
Modified Guideline: 3 - 36 months Options
* Urinalysis or Urine leukocyte esterase + nitrite
* Send urine culture:
o All males <6 months + uncircumcised males <1yr
o Females <1 yr
* Send urine culture if positive urine screening
o Circumcised males 6-12 months
o Females 1-2 yrs
Modified Guideline: 3 - 36 months Options
Follow-up
Guidelines and Practice
Data Support Departures from the Guideline
Adherence Rates with Guideline
Otitis Media Influences Management
Data from Pediatric Practice:the PROS Fever Study
PROS Fever Study: Laboratory Tests
PROS Fever Study: Management
Adherence Rates to Guideline
New Considerations
* Automated Blood Culture Systems
* Band counts - out?
* Importance of UTI
* Fever with Source
o Recognizable Viral Syndromes
Automated Blood Culture Systems
Band Count: Not Discriminatory
Importance of UTI
Recognizable Viral Syndromes
Why Do Clinicians not Adhere to the Clinical Practice Guideline?
Many clinicians disagree with:
* Definition of fever
* Age thresholds
* Applying study data to their practices in which there is better compliance and follow-up
Caveat
Management of Fever Without Source
* Guideline is a place to start
* Need to know IZ status
* UTI: most frequent infection
* Recognize the “toxic” infant
* If you treat, obtain cultures
* Document carefully
* Arrange follow-up
Charles Prober’s Golden Rules
* The younger the infant, the greater the uncertainty
* A toxic appearance demands immediate action
* A non-toxic appearance fuels controversy
* Careful follow-up must be assured
* Recommendations continue to evolve
* No rules are golden
Management of the Febrile Infant.ppt
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