| Literature DB >> 21419994 |
Shahid Husain1, Martha L Mooney, Lara Danziger-Isakov, Frauke Mattner, Nina Singh, Robin Avery, Michael Ison, Atul Humar, Robert F Padera, Leo P Lawler, Andy Fisher, Richard J Drew, Kate F Gould, Amparo Sole, Sean Studer, Patricia Munoz, Lianne G Singer, Margaret Hannan.
Abstract
Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21419994 PMCID: PMC7172457 DOI: 10.1016/j.healun.2011.01.701
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Heart Lung Transplant ISSN: 1053-2498 Impact factor: 10.247
Bacterial Pneumonia and Colonization in CTTX
| Infection | Signs/symptoms | Radiology | Microbiology/pathology | Histopathologic evidence of AR |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proven pneumonia, acute rejection (AR)- associated | At least one of the following: • Fever >38oC or hypothermia <36.5oC with no other recognized cause • Leukopenia (<4,000 WBC/mm3) or leukocytosis (≥15,000 WBC/mm3) And at least two of the following:
• New-onset of purulent sputum
• New-onset or worsening cough, dyspnea, tachypnea, • Worsening gas exchange (O2 desaturations, PaO2/FIO2 ≤240, increased O2 requirements, increased ventilation demands) • Pleural effusion | New/worsening radiographic changes on chest X-ray or CT scan | At least one of the following: • Positive growth in blood culture unrelated to other source • Positive growth in culture of pleural fluid • Positive respiratory culture (sputum, bronchial secretions, BAL, bronchial protected sterile brushing) • ≥5% BAL-obtained cells containing intracellular bacteria on direct microscopic exam | AR may be present or absent or not investigated |
| Probable pneumonia | As for proven | As for proven | Negative microbiology | AR must be excluded |
| Possible pneumonia | As for proven | As for proven | Microbiology negative or not performed | No histopathology performed |
| No pneumonia, proven AR | As for proven | As for proven | Negative microbiology | Histopathologic evidence of AR |
| Colonization | Asymptomatic
• Endobronchial erythema • Purulent secretions | Absent or unchanged | Recovery of pathogen in absence of clinical or radiographic changes | AR present or absent |
Bacterial Tracheobronchitis and Bronchial Anastomotic Infections in Lung Transplant Recipients
Presentations of tracheobronchitis (TrB) and bronchial anastomatic infection (BAI) in lung transplant recipients. (A) Normal bronchoscopy. (B) Bacterial tracheobronchitis. (C) Fungal tracheobronchitis. (D) Bronchial anastomotic infection.
| Infection | Signs/symptoms | Radiology | Microbiology | Histopathologic evidence |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proven tracheobronchitis | At least one of the following:
• New-onset purulent sputum
• New-onset or worsening cough, dyspnea, tachypnea
• One or more endobronchial lesions (erythema, ulceration, necrosis and pseudomembrane formation, including at the site endobronchial stent) without an alternative diagnosis and without evidence of invasive parenchymal disease ( Presentations of tracheobronchitis (TrB) and bronchial anastomatic infection (BAI) in lung transplant recipients. (A) Normal bronchoscopy. (B) Bacterial tracheobronchitis. (C) Fungal tracheobronchitis. (D) Bronchial anastomotic infection. | Negative chest X-ray • New/progressive and persistent infiltrate • Consolidation • Cavitation May be positive if concurrent pneumonia is present | At least one of the following: • Positive respiratory culture (sputum, bronchial secretions or tissue, BAL, bronchial protected sterile brushing) | Histology showing inflammation with organisms or positive culture from the sterile tissue |
| Probable tracheobronchitis | As for proven | As for proven | As for proven | Negative histology |
| Proven bronchial anastomotic infection | At least one of the following: • New-onset purulent sputum OR change in character/quantity of sputum OR increased respiratory secretions suctioned • New-onset or worsening cough, dyspnea, tachypnea
| As for proven tracheobronchitis; may be positive if concurrent pneumonia is present | As for proven tracheobronchitis | As for proven tracheobronchitis |
| Probable bronchial anastomotic infection | As for proven | As for proven | As for proven tracheobronchitis | Negative histopathology |
Figure 1Presentations of tracheobronchitis (TrB) and bronchial anastomatic infection (BAI) in lung transplant recipients. (A) Normal bronchoscopy. (B) Bacterial tracheobronchitis. (C) Fungal tracheobronchitis. (D) Bronchial anastomotic infection.
Infections Associated With Ventilation or Endobronchial Stents
| Infection | Signs/symptoms | Radiology | Microbiology | Histopathologic evidence |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ventilator-associated pneumonia (non-invasive or invasive ventilation); patient on ventilator for at least 48 hours continuously | At least one of the following: • Fever >38oC or hypothermia <36.5oC with no other recognized cause • Leukopenia (<4,000 WBC/mm3) or leukocytosis (≥11,000 WBC/mm3) And at least two of the following:
• New-onset purulent sputum
• New-onset or worsening pleural rub, rales • Worsening gas exchange (O2 desaturations, PaO2/FIO2 ≤240, increased O2 requirements, increased ventilation demands) | Two or more serial chest radiographs showing new/progressive infiltrate or consolidation • New/progressive and persistent infiltrate • Consolidation • Cavitation | At least one of the following: • Positive respiratory culture (sputum, bronchial secretions, BAL, bronchial protected sterile brushing). • ≥5% BAL-obtained cells containing intracellular bacteria on direct microscopic exam. | Histology (biopsy showing histologic evidence of pneumonia |
Endobronchial stent associated: • Tracheobronchitis • Bronchial anastomotic infection • Pneumonia | At least one of the following:
• New-onset purulent sputum
• New-onset or worsening cough, dyspnea, tachypnea
| Chest radiograph without: • New or progressive and persistent infiltrate • Consolidation • Cavitation • Nodules
• New or progressive and persistent infiltrate • Consolidation • Cavitation • Nodules | • Positive respiratory culture (sputum, bronchial secretions, BAL, bronchial protected sterile brushing) • ≥5% BAL-obtained cells containing intracellular bacteria on direct microscopic exam • Positive culture for mold/yeast
• • OR positive GM in the BAL
| Not applicable |
Respiratory Viral Infection in CTTX
| Infection | Signs/symptoms | Radiology | Virology |
|---|---|---|---|
| Respiratory viral infections (RVIs) | |||
| Asymptomatic RVI | None | No changes | Recovery of virus from nasopharynx or bronchoalveolar lavage |
| Clinical RVI | Two or more of the following: • Fever >38oC • Rhinorrhea • Nasal congestion • Sore throat • Sneezing • Chills/rigors • Myalgia • Headache
| Chest radiograph or CT scan not performed | Lack of confirmatory testing for respiratory viral pathogen (not performed or negative assay) |
| Upper respiratory tract infection | As for clinical RVI | No evidence of lower respiratory tract Infection | Confirmation of a respiratory viral pathogen |
| Lower respiratory tract infection | Clinical symptoms (two or more of those listed above for URI) • Cough • Dyspnea Physical findings (one or more of the following): • Hypoxia (new onset or increasing) • New or increased O2 requirement • New crackles, rales or wheezing Acute respiratory distress syndrome | New/worsening radiographic changes on chest X-ray or CT scan | Confirmation of a respiratory viral pathogen |
Respiratory viral infection diagnostic tools: nucleic acid amplification (including PCR methods); tissue (cell) culture, both conventional and rapid; culture (shell-vial/R-mix); indirect and direct immunofluorescence antibody (IFA/DFA) tests; and enzyme immunoassays (EIAs).
Cytomegalovirus (CMV) in CTTX
| CMV infection | Without clinical symptoms | CMV detection in | |
|---|---|---|---|
| CMV pneumonitis (proven) | Including but not limited to: • Fever >38oC not attributable to extrapulmonary source • Hypothermia( <36.5°C) • Leucopenia (<4,000 WBC/mm3) • Cough • Dyspnea • Hypoxia (new-onset or increasing) • New or increased O2 requirement New crackles, rales or wheezing | New/worsening radiographic changes on chest X-ray or CT scan | Detection of CMV in |
| CMV pneumonitis (probable) | As in proven CMV pneumonitis | New/worsening radiographic changes on chest X-ray or CT scan | CMV detection in |
| CMV replication without clinical pneumonitis | Without clinical symptoms | No changes to chest X-ray or CT | CMV detection in |
Figure 2Common radiologic manifestations of proven invasive aspergillosis in lung transplant recipients. (A) Fungal ball. (B) Solitary pulmonary nodule. (C) Cavitary lesion. (D) Multiple consolidation.
Fungal Pneumonia in CTTX
| Syndrome | Signs/symptoms | Radiology | Laboratory |
|---|---|---|---|
Pneumonia
Histology (biopsy showing histologic evidence of parenchymal invasion by fungal hyphae or pseudohyphae) or positive culture from sterile tissue
Sign/symptoms + radiology + laboratory + negative histology | At least one of the following:
• Fever >38°C
• Leukopenia (<4,000 WBC/mm3)
• New onset of purulent sputum
• Change in character • New-onset or worsening cough, dyspnea, tachypnea, or pleural rub, rales or bronchial breath sounds • Worsening gas exchange (O2 desaturation, PaO2/FIO2 ≤240, increased oxygen requirements or increased ventilation demand) • Pleural effusion | Chest radiograph with: • New or progressive and persistent infiltrate • Consolidation • Cavitation • Nodules
• New or progressive and persistent infiltrate • Consolidation • Cavitation • Nodules | Single positive culture for mold BAL/blood |
In the absence of biopsy categorize as probable: In the presence of histologic findings of both acute rejection and fungal invasion it should be classified as acute rejection with proven fungal infection.
The presence of mosaic appearance and ground-glass opacity may represent development of bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome or obliterative bronchiolitis.
Isolation of non-pathogenic molds in culture (e.g., Cladosporium spp, Phialemonium, Chaetomium, Cunninghamella, Syncephalastrum, Curvularia, Dactylaria, Graphium or Phialophora) or other non-pathogenic fungi [e.g., Penicillium (non-Marnefii), Paecilomyces or basidiomyctes] do not qualify for the “probable” category. They should only be considered in the “proven” category.
Fungal Tracheobronchitis in CTTX
| Syndrome | Signs/symptoms | Radiology | Laboratory |
|---|---|---|---|
Tracheobronchitis
Histology (biopsy showing histologic evidence of invasion by fungal hyphae or pseudohyphae) or positive culture from the sterile tissue
Sign/symptoms + radiology + laboratory + negative histology | At least one of the following:
• New-onset of purulent sputum • New-onset or worsening cough, dyspnea, tachypnea or bronchial breath sounds
| Chest radiograph without: • New or progressive and persistent infiltrate • Consolidation • Cavitation • Nodules
• New or progressive and persistent infiltrate • Consolidation • Cavitation • Nodules | Single positive culture for mold BAL |
The presence of mosaic appearance and ground-glass opacity may represent development of bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome or obliterative bronchiolitis.
In the absence of biopsy categorized as probable: In the presence of histologic findings of both acute rejection and fungal invasion it should be classified as acute rejection with proven fungal infection.
Isolation of non-pathogenic molds in culture (e.g., Cladosporium spp, Phialemonium, Chaetomium, Cunninghamella, Syncephalastrum, Curvularia, Dactylaria, Graphium or Phialophora) or other non-pathogenic fungi [e.g., Penicillium (non-Marnefii), Paecilomyces or basidiomyctes] do not qualify for the “probable” category. They should only be considered in the “proven” category.
Fungal Bronchial Anastomotic Infection in Lung Transplant Recipients
| Syndrome | Signs/symptoms | Radiology | Laboratory |
|---|---|---|---|
Bronchial anastomotic infection
Histology (biopsy showing histologic evidence of invasion by fungal hyphae or pseudohyphae) or positive culture from the sterile tissue
Sign/symptoms + radiology + laboratory + negative histology | At least one of the following:
• New onset of purulent sputum • New-onset or worsening cough, dyspnea, tachypnea, or bronchial breath sounds
| Chest radiograph without: • New or progressive and persistent infiltrate • Consolidation • Cavitation • Nodules
• New or progressive and persistent infiltrate • Consolidation • Cavitation • Nodules | Single positive culture for mold in BAL |
In the absence of biopsy categorize as probable: In the presence of histologic findings of both acute rejection and fungal invasion it should be classified as acute rejection with proven fungal infection.
Fungal Colonization in CTTX
| Syndrome | Signs/symptoms | Radiology | Laboratory |
|---|---|---|---|
| Colonization |
• Fever >38°C
• New-onset of purulent sputum • New-onset or worsening cough, dyspnea, tachypnea, or pleural rub, rales or bronchial breath sounds
| Chest radiograph • New or progressive and persistent infiltrate • Consolidation • Cavitation • Nodules
• New or progressive and persistent infiltrate • Consolidation • Cavitation • Nodules | Single positive culture for mold BAL/yeast |