Yes, a fever during cancer treatment can come from the drugs, but infection is the bigger concern and needs same-day medical advice.
Yes, chemotherapy can cause a fever. The hard part is that fever can also be the first sign of infection when white blood cells are low. That’s why cancer teams treat a new fever during chemo as urgent.
Chemotherapy Fever During Treatment: Why It Happens
A fever during chemotherapy can come from more than one source. In many patients, infection is the main worry because chemo can lower neutrophils, the white blood cells that help fight germs. When neutrophils drop, fever may be the only clue.
The treatment itself can also raise your temperature. Some drugs trigger a medicine reaction. Some IV cancer drugs can cause an infusion reaction with fever or chills during the dose or soon after. Less often, fever may come from inflammation or the cancer itself.
That split matters. A fever from a drug reaction still needs prompt care. A fever from infection can turn dangerous fast when counts are low. So the safe rule is simple: don’t try to sort it out on your own first.
When Infection Is The Main Worry
Low neutrophils change the way infections show up. You may not get thick mucus, a bad sore throat, or other obvious signs. You may just feel shaky, cold, washed out, or “off.” If your chemo was recent, that feeling deserves action.
The National Cancer Institute says infections during cancer treatment can be life-threatening and need urgent medical attention. The American Cancer Society also notes that infection is the most common cause of fever in people with cancer, and that fever may be the first or only sign when neutrophils are low. Its page on infection and neutropenia during cancer treatment explains why teams act fast.
When The Treatment Itself Can Raise Temperature
Some chemotherapy drugs can trigger fever as part of a medicine reaction. With IV treatment, fever or chills can also show up during an infusion reaction. This often starts during the first minutes to hours of the dose, though it can also happen later.
Timing Clues
If fever starts while the drug is running or soon after it ends, the team will think about an infusion reaction sooner. If it starts days later, infection may move higher on the list.
Clues that lean more toward an infusion reaction include flushing, itching, rash, shortness of breath, chest discomfort, belly or back pain, dizziness, or a fast heartbeat that starts during the drip or soon after. The American Cancer Society’s page on infusion or immune reactions lists those patterns.
Signs That Change What A Fever May Mean
Fever is not all the same. A low-grade rise with no other symptoms can still matter on chemo. A fever with rigors, confusion, a new cough, or trouble breathing needs even faster care.
These clues help your team judge the next step:
- Recent chemo: Risk is often higher in the days after treatment, when blood counts may fall.
- Low neutrophils: If you’ve been told your counts are down, a fever carries more weight.
- Shaking chills: These can point to a blood-stream infection.
- Mouth sores or a sore throat: Chemo can injure the lining of the mouth, which gives germs an opening.
- Burning when you pee: This can point to a urine infection.
- Cough or shortness of breath: These raise concern for a chest infection or a reaction.
- Redness around a line or port: Skin change near an IV site, PICC, or port needs a call.
| Pattern | What it can point to | What to do |
|---|---|---|
| Fever after recent chemo with no other symptoms | Early neutropenic infection | Call your cancer team the same day |
| Fever with shaking chills | Blood-stream infection | Call right away; don’t wait for it to pass |
| Fever during an IV infusion | Infusion reaction | Tell the nurse at once |
| Fever with cough or shortness of breath | Chest infection or reaction | Urgent call; ER may be needed |
| Fever with burning urine | Urine infection | Call for advice the same day |
| Fever with mouth ulcers or white patches | Mouth infection after chemo | Call the team and keep drinking if you can |
| Fever with rash, flushing, or itching | Medicine reaction | Call promptly; mention the drug and timing |
| Fever with confusion, faintness, or blue lips | Severe infection or severe reaction | Emergency care now |
What Counts As A Fever On Chemo
Cancer units do not all use the exact same trigger. The American Cancer Society notes that 100.4°F (38°C) is often used, while the National Cancer Institute lists fever of 100.5°F (38°C) or higher as one sign of infection during treatment. Your own unit may use a lower number if you feel unwell.
Follow your team’s written rule. If you don’t have it in front of you, call for any new fever while on chemotherapy, especially if you’ve had treatment in the last couple of weeks, you’ve been told your white count is low, or you also have chills, cough, pain, rash, or trouble breathing. The American Cancer Society page on fevers in people with cancer explains why 100.4°F is a common cut point and why teams may adjust it.
- Use an oral thermometer unless your team told you another method.
- Don’t use a rectal thermometer if you’re neutropenic.
- Write down the time and the exact reading.
- Don’t take acetaminophen, ibuprofen, or aspirin before you call unless your team already told you to.
What To Do If A Fever Starts Tonight
When a fever hits at home, the goal is speed and clean information. Don’t wait to see if it settles by morning. Don’t recheck for hours and hope it fades. Don’t talk yourself out of calling because you “only” have one symptom.
- Check your temperature once, then note the number and time.
- Look for other symptoms. Chills, cough, sore throat, mouth pain, urine pain, diarrhea, rash, line redness, or trouble breathing all matter.
- Call your cancer team’s 24-hour line. Use the number from your chemo packet, clinic card, or discharge sheet.
- Say when your last chemo was. That detail changes the level of concern fast.
- Ask before taking fever-reducing medicine.
- Go where they tell you to go. Some people need blood work and IV antibiotics right away.
If you feel faint, confused, short of breath, or too weak to walk safely, get emergency help.
| Have this ready | Why the team asks for it | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Exact temperature and time | Shows how high it is and whether it’s rising | 38.1°C at 9:40 p.m. |
| Date of last chemo | Helps judge low-count risk | Cycle 2, day 8 |
| Other symptoms | Points toward the source | Chills, sore throat, new cough |
| Your line or port status | Redness or pain can matter | Port site sore and warm |
| Medicines taken | Shows whether the fever was masked | No Tylenol taken |
When The ER Makes Sense
Some fever calls end with home advice and close follow-up. Others turn into a straight trip to the ER. Go sooner if your team told you you’re neutropenic, if the fever starts after hours and you cannot reach the oncology line, or if the fever comes with red-flag symptoms.
- Trouble breathing
- Chest pain
- New confusion
- Severe shaking chills
- Blue lips or gray skin
- Fainting or near-fainting
- Rapid worsening over minutes to hours
In the ER, staff may check blood counts, blood cultures, urine, a chest X-ray, and your oxygen level. If neutropenic fever is suspected, antibiotics often start before every test is back.
How Cancer Teams Lower The Risk In Later Cycles
If a fever happens once, your team may change the plan for the next cycle. That can mean closer blood count checks, growth-factor shots, changes to the chemo dose or schedule, or more detailed home instructions.
You can also help by watching for small changes early. Check your temperature when your team tells you to. Wash hands well. Stay away from people who are sick. Watch your mouth, skin, and catheter or port sites. If something feels off, call early.
The plain answer is yes: chemotherapy can cause a fever. Still, the safer mindset is to treat every new fever during chemo as a medical call, not a wait-and-see problem. That’s the step that protects you while the team sorts out whether the fever came from infection, low counts, or a reaction to the drug itself.
References & Sources
- National Cancer Institute.“Infection and Neutropenia during Cancer Treatment”Explains that infections during cancer treatment can be life-threatening, lists warning signs, and warns against taking fever-lowering drugs before checking with the care team.
- American Cancer Society.“Infusion or Immune Reactions”Lists fever, chills, rash, flushing, breathing trouble, and timing clues that can fit an infusion reaction from IV cancer treatment.
- American Cancer Society.“Fevers”Defines fever in people with cancer, notes that infection is the most common cause, and explains that neutropenic fever may be the first or only sign of infection.
