| Literature DB >> 22207481 |
Shunsuke Mori1, Hitoshi Tokuda, Fumikazu Sakai, Takeshi Johkoh, Akio Mimori, Norihiro Nishimoto, Sadatomo Tasaka, Kazuhiro Hatta, Hidekazu Matsushima, Shunji Kaise, Atsushi Kaneko, Shigeki Makino, Seiji Minota, Takashi Yamada, Shinobu Akagawa, Atsuyuki Kurashima.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: This study was performed to evaluate the radiological features of and therapeutic responses to pulmonary disease caused by nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) in the setting of biological therapy for rheumatoid arthritis (RA).Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 22207481 PMCID: PMC3440561 DOI: 10.1007/s10165-011-0577-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mod Rheumatol ISSN: 1439-7595 Impact factor: 3.023
Clinical and demographic characteristics of patients who developed pulmonary NTM disease during biological therapy for RA
| Case no. | Age (years)/sex | BMI | RA duration (years) | RA activity | Stage | Treatment for RA (duration) a | Lung disease |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 70/F | 21.2 | 21 | Low | IV | IP, BE | |
| 2 | 62/F | 16.7 | 26 | >Moderate | III | IP | |
| 3 | 71/F | 21.1 | 19 | Remission | II | None | |
| 4 | 72/F | 16.4 | 14 | >Moderate | IV | BE | |
| 5 | 66/F | 21.1 | 16 | >Moderate | III | None | |
| 6 | 66/F | 21.5 | 24 | >Moderate | IV | None | |
| 7 | 62/F | 21.5 | 22 | Remission | IV | IP | |
| 8 | 81/F | 16.1 | 8 | Low | IV | BE | |
| 9 | 68/F | 23.7 | 2 | ND | II | IP, BE | |
| 10 | 58/F | 19.4 | 25 | >Moderate | IV | None | |
| 11 | 63/F | 20.8 | 17 | Low | IV | None | |
| 12 | 65/F | 15.2 | 30 | >Moderate | III | NTMb | |
| 13 | 78/M | 17.2 | 10 | Low | III | BE, NTMb |
RA rheumatoid arthritis, NTM nontuberculous mycobacteria, BMI body mass index, TCZ tocilizumab, IFX infliximab, ADM adalimumab, ETN etanercept, MTX methotrexate, SASP salazosulfapyridine, BUC bucillamine, TAC tacrolimus, LEF leflunomide, PSL prednisolone, IP interstitial pneumonia, BE bronchiectasis, ND no data, m months, w weeks
aUnderlines indicate anti-RA drugs that were being used at the time of development of NTM disease, and the duration of therapy with these drugs represents the interval between the development of NTM disease and the introduction of the anti-RA drug(s) being used at that time. The drugs without underlines were no longer used at the time of development of NTM disease, and the duration for these agents represents the duration of their previous use
bThese patients had received appropriate anti-NTM therapy for the previous occurrences of NTM disease
Clinical, microbiological, and radiological characteristics of pulmonary NTM disease occurring in patients receiving biological therapy for RA
| Case no. | Clinical symptoms | NTM species isolated | Preexisting CT abnormalitiesa | CT patterns |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Asymptomatic | Bronchiolitis + bronchiectasis | Nodular/bronchiectatic form | |
| 2 | Asymptomatic | Bronchiolitis | Pulmonary nodules | |
| 3 | Common-cold-like | NA | Cavitary form | |
| 4 | Sputum production | Bronchiolitis + bronchiectasis | Nodular/bronchiectatic form | |
| 5 | Cough | Bronchiolitis | Nodular/bronchiectatic form | |
| 6 | Asymptomatic | Bronchiolitis | Pulmonary nodules | |
| 7 | Asymptomatic | Nodule | Cavitary form | |
| 8 | Cough, hemoptysis | Bronchiolitis + bronchiectasis | Nodular/bronchiectatic form | |
| 9 | Cough | Bronchiolitis + bronchiectasis | Nodular/bronchiectatic form | |
| 10 | Fever | Calcified nodule | Alveolar infiltrate | |
| 11 | Asymptomatic | Bronchiolitis + calcified nodule | Alveolar infiltrate | |
| 12 | Cough, sputum production | Bronchiolitis | Alveolar infiltrate | |
| 13 | Cough, sputum production | Bronchiolitis + bronchiectasis | Nodular/bronchiectatic form |
NTM nontuberculous mycobacteria, RA rheumatoid arthritis, CT computed tomography, NA not available
aPreexisting CT abnormalities represent those in the area from which NTM disease had spread
Fig. 1a A computed tomography (CT) scan of case 2 before the development of nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) disease. Centrilobular small nodules and tree-in-bud sign are seen in the right middle lobe (S4, arrow). b After 12 months of adalimumab therapy, nodules and consolidation have appeared in the same segment (S4)
Fig. 2a A CT scan of case 7 before the development of pulmonary NTM disease. Several nodules were observed in the right upper lobe (S2). b, c After 28 months of anti-tumor necrosis factor-α (TNFα) therapy (etanercept for 23 months and infliximab for 5 months), a thick-walled cavity has appeared in the right upper lobe (S1). Bronchiolectasis and tree-in-bud opacities are observed in the same segment (S1). Consolidation is also prominent in this lobe (S1 and S2). In addition, diffuse ground-glass opacities have appeared in both lungs, especially in the right upper lobe. These findings may represent additional foci of infection. d A chest radiograph after 5 months of anti-NTM treatment shows a good response
Fig. 3a A CT scan of case 8 before the development of NTM disease. Centrilobular small nodules, tree-in-bud sign, and bronchiectasis are seen in the right middle lobe and the lingula. A thick-walled cavity is present in the right middle lobe (S5). b After 10 months of etanercept therapy, bilateral centrilobular small nodules, tree-in-bud structures, and multifocal bronchiectasis are prominent in the right middle and lower lobes and the lingula. Ground-glass opacities and mild consolidation are seen in the whole right lung. The cavitary lesions are increased in size. c CT imaging taken after 18 months of anti-NTM therapy shows disappearance of consolidation
Fig. 4a, b CT scans of case 10 before the development of pulmonary NTM disease (the soft tissue window and the mediastinal window, respectively). A calcified large nodule is observed in the left lower lobe (S10). c After infliximab therapy (30 months) followed by adalimumab therapy (3 months), consolidation and patchy ground-glass infiltrates have appeared in the left lower lobe (S10). d CT imaging taken after 14 months of anti-NTM therapy shows complete resolution
Fig. 5a, b CT scans of case 11 before the development of pulmonary NTM disease. Ground-glass opacities, centrilobular small nodules, and tree-in-bud sign are observed in the right middle lobe. In the right lower lobe, centrilobular small nodules and a calcified nodule are noted (S8). c, d After 2 months of etanercept therapy, diffuse ground-glass attenuation and centrilobular small nodules have appeared in the right middle and lower lobes, the lingula, and the left lower lobe. Consolidation is expanded in the right lower lobe. Thick-walled cavities have appeared in the right lower lobe (S8 and S9). e, f CT imaging after 2 years of anti-NTM treatment shows a satisfactory response
Fig. 6a CT imaging of case 13 before the introduction of anti-TNFα therapy. Bronchiectasis is prominent. b After 15 months of anti-TNFα therapy (infliximab for 9 months and etanercept for 6 months), centrilobular small nodules, tree-in-bud sign, bronchiectasis/bronchiolectasis, and ground-glass opacities have developed in both lungs. c A CT scan taken after 10 months of anti-NTM therapy. d Abnormal findings indicative of the nodular/bronchiectatic form have appeared after tocilizumab was introduced for 3 months. e A CT scan taken after 7 months of anti-NTM therapy. Architectural distortion was not evident at any point in the clinical course
Treatment regimens and outcomes of patients who developed pulmonary NTM disease during biological therapy for RA
| Case no. | Treatment of NTM disease (duration)a | RA therapy after NTM development | Cultures | Radiology | RA control |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | CAM, RFP, EB (16 m) | MTX, BUC | Negative | Improved | Well |
| 2 | None (19 m) | TAC, PSL | No change | No change | Well |
| 3 | CAM, RFP, EB (13 m) → none (15 m) | PSL (5 m) → TCZ, PSL | Negative | Improved | Exacerbated → well |
| 4 | None (3 years) | SASP, PSL | No change | No change | Exacerbated |
| 5 | CAM, RFP, EB, SM (20 m) | None | Negative | Improved | ND |
| 6 | CAM (12 m) → none (6 years) | MTX, BUC | Negative | Improved | Exacerbated |
| 7 | CAM, RFP, EB, SM (5 m) | MTX, PSL | Negative | Improved | Exacerbated |
| 8 | CAM, RFP, EB (18 m) | None | Negative | Improved | Well |
| 9 | CAM, RFP, EB (3 m) → AZM (3 m) | PSL | Negative | Improved | Well |
| 10 | CAM, RFP, EB (1 m) → CAM, EB (14 m) | MTX, SASP, PSL | Negative | Improved | Exacerbated |
| 11 | None (14 m) → CAM, RFP, EB, LVFX (2 years) | ETN, MTX, SASP, PSL (13 m) → MTX, SASP, PSL | Negative | Improved | Well → exacerbated |
| 12 | RFP, EB, MFLX (22 m) | BUC, PSL | Negative | Improved | Exacerbated |
| 13 | CAM, EB, LVFX (20 m) | MTX, TAC, PSL | Negative | Improved | Well |
NTM nontuberculous mycobacteria, RA rheumatoid arthritis, CAM clarithromycin, AZM azithromycin, RFP rifampicin, RBT rifabutin, EB ethambutol, SM streptomycin, MFLX moxifloxacin, LVFX levofloxacin, MTX methotrexate, BUC bucillamine, SASP salazosulfapyridine, TAC tacrolimus, TCZ tocilizumab, ETN etanercept, PSL prednisolone, ND no data, m months
aIn cases 3 and 6, anti-NTM therapy was completed; cases 2 and 4 had never received such therapy; and the other patients were still receiving anti-NTM agents at the time of enrollment in this study. Side effects of anti-NTM agents were observed in case 9 (hepatotoxicity) and case 10 (eruption)