Abstract
1. The total course of acute leukemia in 55 patients managed in one clinic disclosed 149 febrile episodes.
2. Fever occurred virtually only when the leukemia was in relapse.
3. Infection was the cause of fever in 102 of the 149 episodes of fever.
4. With survival after the onset of symptoms of acute leukemia beyond the mean duration of life characteristic of that kind of acute leukemia, infection appeared to be more often the cause of fever than when survival was less than the mean for that kind of leukemia.
5. Fever due to infection could not be reliably differentiated from fever not due to infection by either the height or character of the fever curve, or by counting the absolute number of mature polymorphonuclear leukocytes in the blood.
6. Infection causing febrile episodes was most successfully detected by means of history, physical examination, chest roentgenogram, blood culture and other cultures as indicated by the preceding maneuvers.
7. Consideration of the fever of acute leukemia from the point of view of present day studies of the pathogenesis of fever did not clearly implicate known mechanisms of pyrogenesis.
8. The interplay of state of leukemia, nature of infecting microorganism and anti-infectious and antileukemic therapies is related to outcome in febrile episodes due to infections. The management of febrile episodes is discussed.
9. Increased survival time in children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia has not been accompanied by increased morbidity.