Fever of unknown origin

This page is for adult patients. For pediatric patients, see: fever of unknown origin (peds)

Background

Clinical Features

Differential Diagnosis

Infections (~30%)

Malignancy (~20%)

  • Hematologic (most common malignant cause of FUO)
    • Lymphoma (Hodgkin and non-Hodgkin)
    • Leukemia (especially acute leukemia)
    • Multiple myeloma
    • Myelodysplastic syndrome
    • Castleman disease
  • Solid Tumors
    • Renal cell carcinoma
    • Hepatocellular carcinoma
    • Colon cancer
    • Pancreatic cancer
    • Atrial myxoma
    • Pheochromocytoma

Autoimmune/Inflammatory (~20%)

Drug Fever

Endocrine/Metabolic

Thromboembolic/Vascular

Factitious/Habitual

  • Factitious fever (self-induced)
  • Munchausen syndrome / Munchausen by proxy (pediatric)

Miscellaneous

  • Post-surgical/post-procedural inflammation
  • Gout/pseudogout (crystal arthropathy)
  • Cirrhosis / alcoholic hepatitis
  • Hemolytic anemia
  • Transfusion reaction
  • Tissue necrosis (rhabdomyolysis, large hematoma, pancreatitis)
  • Hypothalamic dysfunction (central fever)
  • Periodic fever of unknown cause (~10-15% of FUO never diagnosed)

Evaluation

Workup

Phase 1

Phase 2

Phase 3

  • Abd ultrasound
  • Abd CT
  • Gallium/Indium scanning
  • UGI series with sbft
  • Bone marrow
  • Technetium bone scan

Management

Disposition

See Also

References