| Literature DB >> 28202022 |
Tamer Akel1, Neville Mobarakai2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Babesiosis, a zoonotic parasitic infection transmitted by the Ixodes tick, has become an emerging health problem in humans that is attracting attention worldwide. Most cases of human babesiosis are reported in the United States and Europe. The disease is caused by the protozoa of the genus Babesia, which invade human erythrocytes and lyse them causing a febrile hemolytic anemia. The infection is usually asymptomatic or self-limited in the immunocompetent host, or follows a persistent, relapsing, and/or life threatening course with multi-organ failure, mainly in the splenectomized or immunosuppressed patients. Hematologic manifestations of the disease are common. They can range from mild anemia, to severe pancytopenia, splenic rupture, disseminated intravascular coagulopathy (DIC), or even hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH). CASEEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28202022 PMCID: PMC5310009 DOI: 10.1186/s12941-017-0179-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Clin Microbiol Antimicrob ISSN: 1476-0711 Impact factor: 3.944
Diagnostic criteria for HLH used in the HLH-2004 trial
| Five of the eight criteria listed below should be fulfilled |
| Fever ≥38.5 °C |
| Splenomegaly |
| Cytopenias (affecting at least 2 of 3 lineages in the peripheral blood) |
| Hemoglobin <9 g/dL (in infants <4 weeks: hemoglobin <10 g/dL) |
| Platelets <100 × 103/mL |
| Neutrophils <1 × 103/mL |
| Hypertriglyceridemia (fasting, >265 mg/dL) and/or hypofibrinogenemia (<150 mg/dL) |
| Hemophagocytosis in bone marrow, spleen, lymph nodes, or livera |
| Ferritin >500 ng/mL |
| Elevated sCD25 (α-chain of sIL-2 receptor) |
| Low or absent NK-cell activity |
aFindings in up to two-thirds of initial bone marrow aspirates may be nondiagnostic; an additional bone marrow finding includes dyserythropoiesis, which has been observed in the absence of hemophagocytic histiocytes [24]
Reported cases of HLH and babesiosis (Babesia microti) with our case
| Author, year (Ref.) | Auerbach et al. [ | Gupta et al. [ | Poisnel et al. [ | Mecchella et al. [ | Our case |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Underlying disease | Cryptosporidium | Renal transplant | None | Amyopathic DM and ILD | None |
| Medication | None | Prednisone, azathioprine | None | Rituximab/MMF/prednisone | Prednisone |
| Parasitemia % | 7 | 13 | 3 | <1 | 4 |
| Cytopenia (as per HLH-2004) | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Ferritin, ng/mL | Not reported | Not reported | 5953 | 1665 | 1316 |
| Fibrinogen, mg/dL | Not reported | Not reported | Not reported | Not reported | 98 |
| Bone marrow biopsy | Hemophagocytic histiocytes | Hemophagocytic histiocytes | Hemophagocytic histiocytes | Not done | Dyserythropoiesis |
| LDH, units/L | 485 | 3510 | 620 | 586 | 476 |
| Haptoglobin mg/dL | Not reported | <3 | Undetectable | <10 | <3 |
| Splenomegaly | Yes | Asplenic | Not reported | No | |
| Fever | Yes | Yes | Yes, value not reported | Yes, but low grade | Yes |
| Coombs test | Not reported | Positive | Not reported | Negative | Negative |
Reported cases of splenic rupture due to babesiosis
| Author, year (Ref.) | Splenomegaly | Immunity status | Urgent splenectomy |
|---|---|---|---|
| Siderits et al. [ | Had splenomegaly | Immunocompetent | Yes |
| Florescu et al. [ | 2 cases both had splenomegaly | 2 cases both are immunocompetent | No |
| Kuwayama and Briones [ | Subclinical splenomegaly | Immunocompetent | Yes |
| Froberg et al. [ | Had splenomegaly | Immunocompetent | Yes |
| Reis et al. [ | Not reported | Immunocompetent | Treated by splenic artery embolization |
| El Khoury et al. [ | 2 cases both had splenomegaly | 2 cases both are immunocompetent | No |
| Tobler Jr. et al. [ | Had splenomegaly | Immunocompetent | No |
| Seible et al. [ | Not reported | Immunocompetent | No |
| Farber et al. [ | Subclinical splenomegaly | Immunocompetent | Yes |