Infection associated mortality during induction chemotherapy in group B intermediate-risk pediatric Burkitt's Lymphoma
Author
Ibne Ali Jaffari, Syed MuhammadHashmi, Masooma
Hashmi, Abdul Wasey
Nisar, Samaha
Ashraf, Hafsa
Tariq, Ghufran
Farooq, Arslan
Awan, Javeria
Zaidi, Syed Muhammad Jawad
Kaneez, Mehwish
Affiliation
Shalamar Medical and Dental College; Walsall Healthcare NHS Trust; Arif Memorial Teaching Hospital; Combined Military Hospital; Rawalpindi Medical University; Holy Family Hospital; Shaukat Khanum Memorial Cancer Hospital and Research CentrePublication date
2023-06-13Subject
CardiologyDiseases & disorders of systemic, metabolic or environmental origin
Communicable diseases
Microbiology. Immunology
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Background Burkitt's lymphoma (BL) in the pediatric population has significant burden in developing countries. Infection-related complications during the induction chemotherapy phase pose a major challenge and contribute to high mortality rates due to a severely immunocompromised state. However, there is scarce data on the etiologies and optimal management strategies for infection-related mortality in pediatric BL patients, especially in developing countries like Pakistan. Methods This is a cross-sectional study that included a total of 116 pediatric patients with intermediate-risk BL. All patients were treated based on the Children's Cancer and Leukaemia Group (CCLG) 2020 guidelines. Data on patient demographics, presenting symptoms, diagnosis, infectious etiologies, and outcomes were collected. Infection-related complications and mortality were monitored during the induction chemotherapy period. The results of relevant culture reports were tabulated and data were analyzed. Results Among the 116 included patients, 61.1% were males with a mean age of 4.83 ± 2.12 years. Abdominal BL was the most common anatomical location. During the induction period, 66 patients (56.9%) had culture-proven infections, resulting in 33 deaths (28.4%). Fever was the predominant presenting symptom in all patients, followed by vomiting (57.6%), loose stools (42.4%), and cough (18.2%). Neutropenic colitis, sepsis, pneumonia, and meningitis were among the diagnosed infections. Hospital-acquired bacterial infections, including multi-drug resistant gram-negative and gram-positive organisms, were the main cause of mortality, with fungal infections and cytomegalovirus viremia also identified in a few patients. Conclusions This study highlights the urgent need for improved management strategies in pediatric BL patients in Pakistan to reduce infection-related complications and mortality rates, emphasizing the importance of context-specific approaches for infection prevention and management.Citation
Ibne Ali Jaffari SM, Hashmi M, Hashmi AW, Nisar S, Ashraf H, Tariq G, Farooq A, Awan J, Zaidi SMJ, Kaneez M. Infection-Associated Mortality During Induction Chemotherapy in Group B Intermediate-Risk Pediatric Burkitt's Lymphoma. Cureus. 2023 Jun 13;15(6):e40365Type
ArticlePMID
37456486Journal
CureusPublisher
Springerae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.7759/cureus.40365