| Literature DB >> 28791279 |
Sally J Lawrence1, Manish Sadarangani2, Kevan Jacobson1.
Abstract
Immunosuppressive therapy is a known risk factor for opportunistic infections. We report the first case of severe Pneumocystis jirovecii infection requiring intensive care in a pediatric patient with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). The literature was reviewed and there were 92 reported cases of Pneumocystis pneumonia (PCP) in patients with IBD. Most sources were case reports and there was likely reporting bias toward patients receiving immunomodulators, anti-tumor necrosis factor (anti-TNF) therapy, and those who died. Overall, 56% of patients were males and 58% had Crohn's disease. The median age was 45 years (interquartile range 30-68, range 8-78) and 86% of patients were lymphopenic. The case-fatality rate was 23%. Corticosteroids were used as IBD treatment in 88% of patients who subsequently developed PCP, 42% received thiopurines, 44% used anti-TNF therapy, and 15% received either cyclosporine or tacrolimus. Rates of mono, dual, triple, and quadruple immunosuppression therapy were 35, 35, 29, and 2%, respectively. This report highlights the importance of considering PCP in immunosuppressed lymphopenic pediatric IBD patients who present with unusual symptoms. Moreover, it should give gastroenterologists the impetus to limit immunosuppressive therapy to its minimal effective dose and consider options such as exclusive enteral nutrition wherever possible. Although there is no place for global PCP prophylaxis in IBD given the low incidence, in an era when there is increasing use of biologic agents with combination immunosuppressive therapy, the risk-benefit profile of PCP chemoprophylaxis should be revisited in selected cohorts such as patients on triple immunosuppression with corticosteroids, thiopurines, and a biological agent or calcineurin inhibitor, especially in lymphopenic individuals.Entities:
Keywords: Pneumocystis jirovecii; immunosuppressive therapy; inflammatory bowel disease; lymphopenia; opportunistic infection; pediatric; pneumocystis pneumonia
Year: 2017 PMID: 28791279 PMCID: PMC5522842 DOI: 10.3389/fped.2017.00161
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pediatr ISSN: 2296-2360 Impact factor: 3.418
Figure 1Chest X-ray demonstrating bilateral pulmonary infiltrates caused by pneumocystis pneumonia.
Figure 2Grocott–Gomori’s methenamine silver stain of sputum specimen showing “cup shaped” Pneumocystis jirovecii cysts in small aggregates.
Summary of published literature of inflammatory bowel disease patients who developed pneumocystis pneumonia (n = 92).
| Reference | No of patients | Disease subtype | Gender | Age (years) | Medication at time of PJP | Single (S), dual (D), triple (TR), quadruple (Q) immunosuppression | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Khatchatourian and Seaton ( | 1 | UC | M | 68 | CS + T | D | Died |
| Lee et al. ( | 1 | UC | M | 21 | CS + T | D | Survived |
| Takenaka et al. ( | 3 | UC (100%) | F (67%) | 26–68 | CS + T (67%), CS (33%) | S (33%) | Survived (100%) |
| D (67%) | |||||||
| Bernstein et al. ( | 2 | UC (100%) | M (100%) | 32–73 | CS (100%) | S (100%) | Died (50%) |
| Escher et al. ( | 2 | UC (100%) | M (100%) | 72–74 | CS + Tac, CS + Tac + T | D (50%) | Died (100%) |
| TR (50%) | |||||||
| Art et al. ( | 3 | UC (100%) | M | 32 | CS + CSA + T (100%) | TR (100%) | Died (33%) |
| Quan et al. ( | 1 | UC | M | 63 | CS + CSA | D | Died |
| Scott et al. ( | 1 | UC | M | 43 | CS + CSA | D | Survived |
| Smith and Hanauer ( | 1 | UC | M | 32 | CS + CSA | D | Survived |
| Desales et al. ( | 1 | CD | M | 36 | CS + T + anti-TNF | TR | Survived |
| Lawrance et al. ( | 2 | CD (100%) | F (50%) | 18–32 | CS + T + anti-TNF, CS + MTX + MMF + anti-TNF | TR (50%) | Survived (100%) |
| Q (50%) | |||||||
| Cotter et al. ( | 3 | UC (67%) | M (100%) | 63–78 | MTX + anti-TNF, CS + anti-TNF, T | S (33%) | Survived (100%) |
| D (67%) | |||||||
| Tschudy and Michail ( | 1 | CD | M | 8 | Anti-TNF | S | Survived |
| Iwama et al. ( | 1 | CD | M | 51 | Anti-TNF | S | Survived |
| Velayos and Sandborn ( | 1 | CD | M | 19 | T + anti-TNF | D | Survived |
| Kaur and Mahl ( | 1 | CD | M | 59 | CS + anti-TNF | D | Died |
| Stratakos et al. ( | 1 | CD | F | 77 | CS + anti-TNF | D | Survived |
| Estrada et al. ( | 1 | UC | M | 45 | CS + T + anti-TNF | TR | Survived |
| Sharma and Rao ( | 1 | CD | F | 36 | CS + T + anti-TNF | TR | Survived |
| Seddik et al. ( | 1 | CD | M | 29 | CS + T + anti-TNF | TR | Survived |
| Itaba et al. ( | 1 | CD | F | 57 | CS + T + anti-TNF | TR | Survived |
| DeFilippis et al. ( | 1 | CD | F | 56 | CS + MTX + anti-TNF | TR | Survived |
| Long et al. ( | 38 | CD (55%) | F (55%) | 43–57 IQR | CS: 11/38 | S: 12/38 (32%) | ND |
| T: 1/38 | D: 5/38 (13.2%) | ||||||
| T + CS: 5/38 | TR: 4/38 (10.5%) | ||||||
| CS + 2IM: 2/38 | |||||||
| ND (5%) | CS + IM + anti-TNF: 2/38 | ||||||
| Kaur and Mahl ( | 16 | CD (88%) | ND | ND | Anti-TNF (100%) | ND | ND |
| Fillatre et al. ( | 1 | ND | ND | ND | ND | ND | ND |
| Bienvenu et al. ( | 4 | ND | ND | ND | ND | ND | ND |
| Roblot et al. ( | 2 | ND | ND | ND | ND | ND | ND |
CS, corticosteroids; T, thiopurines (azathioprine/6-Mercaptopurine); Tac, tacrolimus; CSA, cyclosporine; anti-TNF, anti-tumor necrosis factor therapy (adalimumab or infliximab); MTX, methotrexate; MMF, mycophenolate mofetil; IMs, immunomodulators (thiopurine, tacrolimus); ND, not documented; CD, Crohn’s disease; UC, ulcerative colitis; IQR, interquartile range.
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