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Innovation

Variability in body temperature in healthy adults and in patients receiving chemotherapy: prospective observational cohort study

, , , , , , & show all
Pages 323-333 | Received 10 Mar 2019, Accepted 08 Sep 2019, Published online: 03 Oct 2019
 

Abstract

Between-individual variability of body temperature has been little investigated, but is of clinical importance: for example, in detection of neutropenic sepsis during chemotherapy. We studied within-person and between-person variability in temperature in healthy adults and those receiving chemotherapy using a prospective observational design involving 29 healthy participants and 23 patients undergoing chemotherapy. Primary outcome was oral temperature. We calculated each patient’s mean temperature, standard deviation within each patient (within-person variability), and between patients (between-person variability). Secondary analysis explored temperature changes in the three days before admission for neutropenic sepsis. 1,755 temperature readings were returned by healthy participants and 1,765 by chemotherapy patients. Mean participant temperature was 36.16 C (95% CI 36.07–36.26) in healthy participants and 36.32 C (95% CI 36.18–36.46) in chemotherapy patients. Healthy participant within-person variability was 0.40 C (95% CI 0.36–0.44) and between-person variability was 0.26 C (95% CI 0.16–0.35). Chemotherapy patient within-person variability was 0.39 C (95% CI 0.34–0.44) and between-person variability was 0.34 C (95% CI 0.26–0.48). Thus, use of a population mean rather than personalised baselines is probably sufficient for most clinical purposes as between-person variability is not large compared to within-person variability. Standardised guidance and provision of thermometers to patients might help to improve recording and guide management.

Acknowledgements

We would like to thank David Mant who conceived the idea for the study in chemotherapy patients; Louis Werner for healthy participant data collection; Evie Monaghan for data entry; and the Bosom Friends breast cancer support group for sharing their experiences and their contributions to study design.

Contributorship statement

DM, HFA, SF, and RJS conceived the idea for the study, and designed the study with contributions from EF, VW and TL. LW, HFA, JSF, and GEB acquired the data. SF, RJS, JSF, GEB and HFA analysed the data and drafted the manuscript, with critical revisions from EF, VW and TL. All authors approved the final version to be published.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Data sharing statement

Full anonymised dataset available on request from the corresponding author.

Table A1. patients receiving chemotherapy divided by cancer type

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