Infection Risk and Neutropenia

Last updated: January 2025 | Medical Reviewer: Oncol.net Editorial Board

MEDICAL EMERGENCY: Fever ≥100.4°F (38°C) during cancer treatment requires immediate medical attention, especially if you have low white blood cell counts. Call your oncology team immediately or go to the emergency room. Do NOT wait until morning or your next appointment. Neutropenic fever can be life-threatening without prompt treatment.

Overview

Infection is one of the most serious complications of cancer treatment. Many chemotherapy drugs, targeted therapies, and cancer itself can weaken the immune system, making it harder to fight off bacteria, viruses, and fungi. The main problem is low white blood cell counts, particularly neutrophils - the cells that fight bacterial infections.

Understanding your infection risk, taking preventive measures, and recognizing warning signs early can prevent serious complications and potentially life-threatening situations. While this information may seem frightening, remember that most infections can be successfully treated when caught early, and many can be prevented with proper precautions.

Understanding Neutropenia

What Are Neutrophils?

Neutropenia Defined

How Cancer Treatment Causes Neutropenia

Risk Factors for Severe Neutropenia

Signs and Symptoms of Infection

Important: When neutropenic, you may NOT have typical infection symptoms. Fever may be the ONLY sign. Pus formation, swelling, and redness require neutrophils - with severe neutropenia, infections can progress rapidly without obvious local signs.

Fever - The Most Important Sign

Other Infection Symptoms

Infection Prevention Strategies

Hand Hygiene (Most Important)

Food Safety

Avoiding Exposure to Illness

Personal Hygiene

Environmental Precautions

Growth Factor Support (G-CSF)

What is G-CSF?

When G-CSF is Used

How G-CSF is Given

Side Effects of G-CSF

Neutropenic Fever Management

Neutropenic Fever is a Medical Emergency

If you have fever ≥100.4°F (38°C) during cancer treatment:

  1. Take your temperature to confirm
  2. Call your oncology team IMMEDIATELY (use emergency number if after hours)
  3. Go to emergency room if instructed or if you cannot reach your team
  4. Bring list of medications and recent lab results if available
  5. Do NOT take fever-reducing medications before being evaluated (can mask fever)

What Happens in the Emergency Room

Risk Stratification (MASCC Score)

Used to identify low-risk vs high-risk febrile neutropenia:

Hospital Course

Antimicrobial Prophylaxis

When Prophylactic Antibiotics/Antivirals Are Used

Monitoring and Communication

Know Your Numbers

Have a Plan

When to Call Your Healthcare Team

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I still go to work during chemotherapy?

It depends on your job, treatment schedule, how you feel, and your blood counts. Office jobs are generally safer than jobs with high public contact or physical labor. Avoid work during nadir week if possible. Talk with your employer about flexible schedules or working from home options. Some patients work throughout treatment, others take disability.

Do I need to wear a mask all the time?

Not necessarily. Mask recommendations depend on your neutrophil counts, local disease activity (flu season, COVID), and where you're going. Masks are most important in crowded indoor spaces, healthcare settings, and during your nadir week. Discuss with your team - some recommend masks anytime in public during treatment, others are more selective.

Can my family get vaccinated while I'm in treatment?

Yes, family members should get vaccinated - this protects both them and you. However, they should avoid LIVE vaccines (MMR, varicella, nasal flu vaccine, oral polio - rare in US). Inactivated vaccines (flu shot, COVID, Tdap, etc.) are safe and encouraged. There's a 2-week period after live vaccines where family members should avoid close contact with you.

Should I take my temperature every day?

Not necessarily every day, but check your temperature if you feel warm, have chills, or generally don't feel well. Some oncologists recommend daily temperature checks during nadir week. Know how to properly use your thermometer. Oral or temporal artery (forehead) thermometers are fine. Avoid rectal thermometers (can cause rectal injury).

What if I have a fever but feel fine?

Call anyway. You may feel fine initially but deteriorate rapidly. Neutropenic fever is defined by temperature, not by how you feel. Don't wait to see if the fever goes away - that delay could be dangerous. Always err on the side of caution and contact your healthcare team.

Can I take Tylenol or ibuprofen for fever?

DO NOT take fever-reducing medications before calling your oncology team or going to the ER. Fever is the warning sign we need to detect infection. Once you've been evaluated and antibiotics started, then fever reducers can be used. Ibuprofen/NSAIDs should be avoided if your platelets are low (bleeding risk).

Is it safe to be around children?

Generally yes, with precautions. Children often carry infections without obvious symptoms. Avoid children who are actively sick, recently vaccinated with live vaccines, or in daycare (frequent illnesses). Your own children at home are usually fine - teach them good hand hygiene. Newborns/infants are safer than toddlers/preschoolers who are in daycare.

Can I eat at restaurants?

Most oncologists say yes, with caution. Choose restaurants with good food safety practices. Avoid buffets, salad bars (food sitting out). Order well-cooked foods. Avoid high-risk items (raw seafood, undercooked eggs). Fast food is generally safe. Use judgment based on your counts - maybe avoid restaurants during nadir week.

Do probiotics help prevent infections?

Evidence is mixed. Some studies suggest probiotics may reduce certain infections, others show no benefit. If you want to try probiotics, choose refrigerated products from reputable manufacturers. However, there have been rare cases of serious infections from probiotics in severely immunocompromised patients. Discuss with your oncology team first.

How long does it take for neutrophils to recover after chemotherapy?

Typically 2-3 weeks. Counts usually drop to their lowest point (nadir) around days 7-14 after chemotherapy, then begin recovering. Most regimens are scheduled every 2-3 weeks to allow count recovery. With G-CSF support, recovery may be faster. Some regimens cause more prolonged neutropenia requiring longer breaks between cycles.

Medical Disclaimer: This information is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or qualified health provider with questions regarding a medical condition. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of information you have read on this website.

Sources and References