|
POEMs |
POEMs and Tips from Other Journals
Evaluating Fever of Unknown Origin in Adults
Clinical Question: What is the best approach to evaluating fever of unknown origin that lasts at least three weeks in adults?
Setting: Various (meta-analysis)
Study Design: Systematic review
Synopsis: Fever of unknown origin in adults is defined as a temperature higher than 38.3°C (100.9°F) lasting at least three weeks. Investigators conducted a systematic review of the English language literature through the year 2000 by searching MEDLINE and the Cochrane Library, as well as the references of selected articles, after which they summarized the results and arrived at a set of recommendations.
Infection was identified as a cause of fever in only 28 percent of cases. Other identified causes included inflammatory diseases (21 percent), malignancies (17 percent), temporal arteritis (16 percent), and deep venous thrombosis (3 percent) in the elderly. Nineteen percent of patients will never be given a diagnosis; fortunately, 51 to 100 percent in this group will recover spontaneously.
For the initial work-up, patients should record their temperature daily. All medications should be discontinued for 72 hours, when possible, to rule out drug-induced fever. According to one study, computed tomography of the abdomen, which has a 19 percent diagnostic yield, should be one of the first tests performed. Using the Duke criteria (Hoen B, et al. The Duke criteria for diagnosing infective endocarditis are specific: analysis of 100 patients with acute fever or fever of unknown origin. Clin Infect Dis August 1996; 23:298-302.) to diagnose endocarditis will allow physicians to rule in (specificity: 99 percent) and rule out (sensitivity: 82 percent) this disease. Nuclear imaging using technetium is specific (93 to 94 percent) but not particularly sensitive (40 to 75 percent). Liver biopsy has a high diagnostic yield (14 to 17 percent) but is associated with harm. Empiric bone cultures rarely yield anything of value and should not be used.
Bottom Line: After ruling out endocarditis, using computed tomography of the abdomen, performing a nuclear scan using technetium, and perhaps doing a liver biopsy, physicians may arrive at a diagnosis for patients with fever of unknown origin. However, there will be no diagnosis for approximately one in five patients, although most fevers in this group (50 to 100 percent) will resolve spontaneously. (Level of Evidence: 3a)
ALLEN SHAUGHNESSY, PHARM.D.
STUDY REFERENCE: Mourad O, et al. A comprehensive evidence-based approach to fever of unknown origin. Arch Intern Med March 2003;163:545-51.
Used with permission from Shaughnessy A. Working up fever of unknown origin in adults. Retrieved April 21, 2003, from: InfoPOEMs.com.
Copyright © 2003 by the American Academy of
Family Physicians.
This content is owned by the AAFP. A person viewing it
online may make one printout of the material and may use that printout only for
his or her personal, non-commercial reference. This material may not otherwise
be downloaded, copied, printed, stored, transmitted or reproduced in any
medium, whether now known or later invented, except as authorized in writing by
the AAFP. Contact afpserv@aafp.org for
copyright questions and/or permission requests.









