| Literature DB >> 19450259 |
Matthias N Witt1, Gerald S Braun, Stephan Ihrler, Holger Schmid.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Herpes simplex virus type-1 (HSV-1) has been described to cause respiratory tract infections in critically ill patients or in individuals that are immunocompromised. It is a continuing matter of debate under which circumstances HSV-1 is a relevant pathogen for pneumonitis. While its role during critical illness has been investigated by prospective interventional studies, comparatively little systematic data is available on the role of HSV-1 for pneumonitis in outpatients with autoimmune disease under a maintenance regimen of immunosuppression.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19450259 PMCID: PMC2705343 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2466-9-22
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pulm Med ISSN: 1471-2466 Impact factor: 3.317
Classification and clinical course of the study population, i.e., 63 patients with rheumatic/vasculitic or connective tissue disease admitted to hospital and diagnosed to have pneumonia/pneumonitis
| 74 | 13 (18%) | 4 | 4 | 2 (cases 3, 5) | 2 | 66 (68) | 3.3 | 2 | |
| 515 | 34 (7%) | 12 | 6 | 2 (cases 1,4) | 5 | 71 (74) | 1.5 | 3 | |
| 22 | 4 (18%) | 3 | 1 | 1 (case 2) | 0 | 63 (64) | 3.5 | 0 | |
| 155 | 12 (8%) | 4 | 3 | 1 (case 6) | 1 | 53 (58) | 1.6 | 1 | |
Absolute numbers or percentages are given, (*) based on 56 of the 63 cases where information on immunosuppressive regimens was reliably available. In order to estimate the degree of immunosuppressive strength in the patient population, an arbitrary score ranging form 0–4 was applied (see methods). Abbreviations: BAL = bronchoalveolar lavage, FOB = fiberoptic bronchoscopy, PNA = pneumonia/pneumonitis, ys = years.
Synopsis of patient data on all cases with a positive HSV-1 result on PCR of bronchoalveolar lavage
| Age at presentation (yrs), gender | 74, f | 74, m | 60, m | 67, m | 72, m | 65, f |
| Rheumatological diagnosis (duration in years) | Rheumatoid arthritis, seronegative | pulmonary microscopic Polyangiitis | Wegener's Granulomatosis | Rheumatoid arthritis, seropositive | Wegener's Granulomatosis | Systemic lupus erythematosus |
| Co-Morbidities | allergic asthma | renal insufficiency | diabetes, septic arthritis | HHT, renal insufficiency | ||
| Immunosuppression (severity score) | Pred 20 mg/d + MTX 15 mg/w + Lefl 20 mg/d (3) | Pred 50 mg/d + Cyclo 150 mg/d p.o. | Pred 20 mg/d +Cyclo 150 mg/d | Pred 20 mg/d + MTX 7.5 mg/w + Anakinra 100 mg/d (3) | Pred 40 mg/d + Cyclo 500 mg/m i.v. | Pred 20 mg/d + Aza 150 mg/d, pancytopenia |
| clinical presentation in the outpatient setting prior to admission | 21 days of cough, fever | 3 days of bloody cough, dysphagia | 3 days of dyspnea, syncope | 7 days of dyspnea, cough | 5 days of dyspnea, cough, weakness | 1 day of dyspnea, non-productive cough |
| Notable findings | HSV-1 positive oral lesion | none | HSV-1 positive oral lesion | none | HSV-1 positive nasal lesion | none |
| Ventilatory support required | CPAP | no | intubation | intubation | no | no |
| Chest-XR | diffuse bilateral ground-glass opacities | interstitial pattern | interstitial pattern | bilateral bronchopneumonic infiltrates with pleural effusions | bilateral bronchopneumonic infiltrates | unilateral infiltrate |
| High-resolution CT-scan | diffuse bilateral ground-glass opacities | right-sided diffuse pleural effusions | diffuse bilateral ground-glass opacities (no granulomas) | extensive bilateral bronchopneumonic infiltrates with pleural effusions, atelectasis, hilar lymphadenopathy | diffuse bilateral granulomas | unilateral bronchopneumonic infiltrate |
| performed on hospital day | 2 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 4 |
| Macroscopic mucosal aspect | Vulnerable, inflammamation | normal | inflammation | acute bronchitis | vulnerable, acute bronchitis | vulnerable |
| BAL cytology: inclusion bodies | Positive | positive | positive | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| Lung biopsy | Non-specific (chronic) bronchitis | n.p. | non-specific fibroelastosis | n.p. | n.p. | n.p. |
| HSV-1 immunohistology of BAL cytology or of lung biopsy | n.p. | positive | n.p. | n.p. | n.p. | n.p. |
| Aspergillus, K. pneumoniae, HSV-1 | MRSA, P. aeruginosa, K. pneumoniae, HSV-1 | S. aureus, P. aeruginosa, Influenza A, HSV-1 | S. aureus (coag neg), P. aeruginosa, Enterococci, HSV-1, M. kansasii | |||
| - day 1: ceftriax+ery (for 7 days; overlap with acyclo 5 days) | - day 1: moxi (for 2 days) | - day 1: mero + ery + fluc | sequential: | sequential: | sequential: | |
| recovery after 7 days | recovery after 11 days | lethal after 28 days (ARDS) | lethal after 33 days (ARDS) | Initial recovery after 28 days, but lethal after 110 days (ARDS) with persistant high HSV-1 viral load on BAL | recovery after 38 days | |
| most likely isolated HSV-1 pneumonitis | most likely isolated HSV-1 pneumonitis | Bacterial, fungal and HSV-1 pneumonia/pneumonits | Bacterial bronchopneumonia with HSV-1 reactivation | Bacterial pneumonia with untreated HSV-1 reactivation. A second BAL PCR showed an increasing viral load | Mycobacteriosis due to M. kansasii (responsive to treatment). HSV-1 reactivation without radiographic signs of pneumonitis that was not treated antivirally. | |
| Blood cultures | negative | negative | negative | negative | negative | negative |
| Mycobacteria culture/PCR BAL | negative | negative | negative | negative | negative | |
| Aspergillus | negative | negative | negative | n.p. | negative (serum AG) | |
| P. jirovecii BAL | negative | negative | negative | negative | negative | negative |
| MRSA culture Sputum | negative | negative | negative | negative | negative | |
| P. aeruginosa culture BAL | negative | negative | negative | |||
| K. pneumoniae culture BAL | negative | negative | negative | negative | ||
| M. pneumoniae | negative (PCR BAL) | negative (serology) | negative (serology) | negative (PCR BAL) | negative (PCR BAL) | n.p. |
| C. trachomatis/pneumoniae | negative (serology) | n.p. | negative (PCR BAL) | negative (PCR BAL) | negative (PCR BAL) | negative (PCR BAL) |
| Legionella-Ag (Urine) | negative | negative | negative | negative | negative | n.p. |
| Complete virological work-up | ||||||
| HSV-1 PCR BAL, Geq/ml | 9.750.000 | 284.000 | 700.000 | 850.000 | 10.250.000 | 310.000 |
| CMV-PCR BAL | negative | Negative | negative | negative | negative | negative |
| Influenza A PCR BAL* (season of presentation) | n.p. (May) | n.p. (April) | negative (January) | n.p. (September) | n.p. (June) | |
| Adenovirus PCR BAL** | Negative | negative | negative | n.p. | n.p. | n.p. |
| HIV-1/2-Ag ELISA | n.p. | n.p. | negative | n.p. | Negative | n.p. |
Abbreviations used are: acyclo = acyclovir, Ag = antigen, amphoB = amphotericin B, ARDS = adult respiratory distress syndrome, Aza = azathioprine, BAL = bronchoalveolar lavage, ceftaz = ceftazidime, ceftriax = ceftriaxone, cipro = ciprofloxacin, clari = clarithromycin, CPAP = continuous positive airway pressure, CT = computed tomography, coag neg = coagulase negative, cyclo = cyclophosphamide, d = day, ery = erythromycin, fluc = fluconazole, genta = gentamycin, Geq/ml = genome equivalents/ml; HHT = hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia (Osler-Weber-Rendu syndrome), INH = isoniazid, Lefl = leflunomide, linez = linezolid, mero = meropenem, metro = metronidazole, moxi = moxifloxacin, MTX = methotrexate, Pred = prednisone, tazo = piperacillin/tazobactam, tobra = tobramycin, vanco = vancomycin, w = week. *testing was seasonal during winter only. **testing was at the discretion of the physician performing bronchoscopy.
Figure 1Imaging study from Case 1. A: Conventional chest radiograph with diffuse interstital pattern. B: High-resolution-CT (HRCT) featuring small pleural effusions and partial atelectasis of the right lower lobe in addition to distinctive ground-glass opacities. C: Fiberoptic bronchoscopy image showing a vulnerable tracheobronchial mucosa with multiple spontaneous bleeding stigmata, consistent with generalized tracheobronchial inflammation.
Figure 2Immunohistochemical staining for HSV-1 in a fixated cyotspun obtained from BAL from Case 2 identifying a positive cell (dark brown colour). Bottom and left: alveolar macrophages and lymphocytes with degenerative changes.
Figure 3A: Detected primary responsible (leading) infectious agents in 63 patients with ambulatory-acquired pneumonia/pneumonitis and autoimmune disease. RSV = respiratoy syncytial virus. B: Immunosuppression scores were significantly more severe in the 6 patients with HSV-1 detection in BAL than in those subjects without clinical or laboratory evidence for HSV-1 (as assessed for 56/63 patients with reliable information on immunosuppressive regimens available; ** p < 0.01, Mann-Whitney two-sided test).