| Literature DB >> 24207100 |
Florence Fenollar, Marie Célard, Jean-Christophe Lagier, Hubert Lepidi, Pierre-Edouard Fournier, Didier Raoult.
Abstract
Tropheryma whipplei endocarditis differs from classic Whipple disease, which primarily affects the gastrointestinal system. We diagnosed 28 cases of T. whipplei endocarditis in Marseille, France, and compared them with cases reported in the literature. Specimens were analyzed mostly by molecular and histologic techniques. Duke criteria were ineffective for diagnosis before heart valve analysis. The disease occurred in men 40-80 years of age, of whom 21 (75%) had arthralgia (75%); 9 (32%) had valvular disease and 11 (39%) had fever. Clinical manifestations were predominantly cardiologic. Treatment with doxycycline and hydroxychloroquine for at least 12 months was successful. The cases we diagnosed differed from those reported from Germany, in which arthralgias were less common and previous valve lesions more common. A strong geographic specificity for this disease is found mainly in eastern-central France, Switzerland, and Germany. T. whipplei endocarditis is an emerging clinical entity observed in middle-aged and older men with arthralgia.Entities:
Keywords: Tropheryma whipplei; Whipple disease; Whipple’s disease; arthralgia; bacteria; endocarditis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24207100 PMCID: PMC3837638 DOI: 10.3201/eid1911.121356
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Epidemiologic and clinical characteristics of 28 patients with Tropheryma whipplei endocarditis*
| Patient (reference) | Area of origin | Age, y | IS | Cardiac history | Arthralgia duration, y | Weight loss | Cardiac symptoms | Fever | Involved valves | Vegetation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | PACA | 80 | N | PM | Y (15) | N | HF and AIS | N | AV | Y |
| 2 | Corsica† | 58 | N | N | Y (8) | N | HF | Y | AV+MV | N |
| 3 | Rhône-Alpes | 54 | N | N | Y (3) | Y | HF | Y | AV | Y |
| 4 | Rhône-Alpes | 45 | N | BAV | N | N | Stroke | Y | AV | Y |
| 5 | Rhône-Alpes | 56 | N | CS | N | N | HF | Y | AV | Y |
| 6 | PACA | 59 | Y | N | Y (35) | N | HF | N | AV | N |
| 7 | Pays de la Loire | 50 | N | N | Y (NA) | N | HF | N | AV+MV | Y |
| 8 | Picardie | 51 | N | N | N | N | Stroke | N | AV | Y |
| 9 | PACA | 79 | N | AVB | Y | N | HF | N | AV | Y |
| 10 | Lorraine | 50 | N | N | N | N | HF | N | MV | N |
| 11 | Rhône-Alpes | 62 | N | N | Y | N | HF | N | AV | Y |
| 12 | PACA | 58 | N | BAV | Y | Y | HF | Y | AV | Y |
| 13 | Rhône-Alpes | 71 | N | N | N | N | HF | N | AV | Y |
| 14 | Rhône-Alpes | 57 | Y | N | Y (4) | N | HF+PAE | Y | AV | N |
| 15 | Poitou-Charentes | 68 | N | N | N | N | HF | Y | AV | Y |
| 16 | Pays de la Loire | 48 | N | AVI | Y (NA) | N | HF | Y | AV | Y |
| 17 | Languedoc-Roussillon | 70 | Y | N | Y (27) | N | HF | Y | AV | Y |
| 18 | Pays de la Loire | 71 | N | MVI | Y (NA) | N | HF | Y | MV | Y |
| 19 | Pays de la Loire | 57 | Y | N | Y (10) | Y | HF | Y | AV+MV | N |
| 20 | Rhône-Alpes | 67 | N | N | Y (4) | N | Stroke | N | AV | N |
| 21 | Rhône-Alpes | 51 | Y | N | Y (6) | N | PAE | N | AV+TV | Y |
| 22 | Pays de la Loire | 58 | N | AAR | Y (NA) | N | PAE | N | AV | Y |
| 23 | Rhône-Alpes | 60 | Y | N | Y (2) | N | HF | N | AV+MV | Y |
| 24 | Rhône-Alpes | 61 | N | AAR | Y (4) | N | Stroke | N | AV+MV | Y |
| 25 | Rhône-Alpes | 63 | N | N | Y (3) | N | PAE+stroke | N | AV | Y |
| 26 | Canada | 42 | N | AAR | N | Y | HF | N | AV+MV | Y |
| 27 | Rhône-Alpes | 40 | Y | AAR | Y (5) | N | HF | N | AV | Y |
| 28 | Rhône-Alpes | 55 | N | N | Y (5) | Y | Stroke | N | MV | Y |
*All patients were male, and none had diarrhea. IS, immunosuppressive therapy; PACA, Provence-Alpes-Côte-d’Azur; N, no; PM, pacemaker; Y, yes; HF; heart failure; AIS, acute ischemic stroke; AV, aortic valve; MV, mitral valve; BAV, bicuspid aortic valve; CS, coronary stent; AVB, aortic valve bioprosthesis; AVI, aortic valve insufficiency; MVI, mitral valve insufficiency; NA, not available; PAE, peripheral arterial embolism; AAR, acute articular rheumatism. †This patient was from Poland but resided in Corsica for 8 years.
Figure 1Number of reported cases of Tropheryma whipplei endocarditis per 1 million inhabitants in each area of France over 10 years. Data from this series and the literature (–) were included. Among the metropolitan areas in France, the incidence of T. whipplei endocarditis is significantly more frequent in the Rhône-Alpes area than in 11 others areas (Alsace, Aquitaine, Basse-Normandie, Bourgogne, Centre, Champagne-Ardenne, Haute-Normandie, Ile de France, Languedoc-Roussillon, Midi-Pyrénées, and Nord Pas-de-Calais; p = 0.04, p = 0.004, p = 0.048, p = 0.04, p = 0.01, p = 0.04, p = 0.02, p<0.001, p = 0.04, p = 0.007, p = 0.006, respectively). The incidence rate is also significantly more frequent in the Pays de la Loire area than in 6 other areas (Aquitaine, Bretagne, Centre, Ile-de France, Lorraine, Midi-Pyrénées, Nord Pas de Calais; p = 0.04, p = 0.04, p = 0.04, p = 0.003, p = 0.03, p = 0.02, respectively).
Figure 2Aortic valve from patient with Tropheryma whipplei endocarditis. A) Hematoxylin–eosin–saffron stain (original magnification ×100). B) Foamy macrophages containing characteristic inclusion bodies (periodic acid–Schiff stain; original magnification ×200). C) Immunostaining of T. whipplei with polyclonal rabbit antibody against T. whipplei and Mayer’s hemalum counterstain (original magnification ×100). No destruction of this valve is visible.
Treatment, outcome, and follow-up data for 14 patients with Tropheryma whipplei endocarditis managed entirely by our team*
| Patient no.† | First drug (duration) | Second drug (duration)† | Outcome | Length of follow-up at the end of the last treatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | AMX + GEN (15 d) | DOX + HCQ (ongoing) | Well, including arthralgia disappearance | Ongoing treatment |
| 2 | AMX + GEN (15 d) | DOX + HCQ (ongoing) | Well, including arthralgia disappearance | Ongoing treatment |
| 5 | CEF + GEN (15 d) | DOX + HCQ (ongoing) | Well | Ongoing treatment |
| 6 | NA | DOX + HCQ (1 yr) | Well | 1 yr |
| 7 | AMX + GEN (NA) | DOX + HCQ (7 mo) | Relapse 4 mo after the end of treatment; prosthetic dehiscence without fever; heart valve positive by PAS and immunohistochemical staining; negative by PCR | Ongoing new treatment |
| 9 | AMC + GEN (11 d) | DOX + HCQ (ongoing) | Well | Ongoing treatment |
| 12 | CEF (5 d) | DOX + HCQ (ongoing) | Well | Ongoing treatment |
| 14 | CEF + GEN (15 d) | DOX + HCQ (1 yr) | Well | 2.5 yr |
| 17 | CEF + GEN (15 d) | DOX + HCQ (1.5 yr) | Well | 3.5 yr |
| 20 | NA | DOX + HCQ (1 yr) | Well | 6 mo |
| 21 | AMX + GEN (18 d) | SXT (1.5 yr) | Well | 5 yr |
| 23 | VAN + DOX + OFX (19 d) | DOX + HCQ (1.5 yr) | 1 yr after end of treatment, saliva sample positive for | 9 mo after onset of lifelong prophylaxis |
| 5.5 yr after end of treatment, saliva and fecal samples positive for | ||||
| 24 | AMX + GEN (4 wk) | DOX + HCQ (1.5 yr) | Well | 2 yr, then colon cancer and death |
| 25 | AMX + GEN (15 d) | SXT (14 mo) | 12 mo after the end of the treatment: saliva specimen positive for | 6 yr |
*Team from Assistance Publique Hôpitaux de Marseille, Marseille, France. All patients had undergone heart valve surgery. AMX, amoxicillin; GEN, gentamicin; HCQ,, hydroxychloroquine; PAS, periodic acid–Schiff; CEF, ceftriaxone ; AMC, amoxicillin–clavulanate; VAN, vancomycin; DOX, doxycycline; OFX, ofloxacin. †DOX at 100 mg 2×/d and HCQ at 200 mg 3×/ d; SXT at 320 mg trimethoprim and 1,600 mg sulfamethoxazole 3×/d.
Figure 3Number of reported cases of Tropheryma whipplei endocarditis per 1 million inhabitants in each country of Europe (www.statistiques-mondiales.com/union_europeenne.htm).
Figure 4Number of cases of Tropheryma whipplei endocarditis reported in the literature since the first detection of this condition in 1997. Cases in 2013 are reported through April.