| Literature DB >> 30344258 |
Wojciech Wołyniec1, Małgorzata Sulima2, Marcin Renke3, Alicja Dębska-Ślizień4.
Abstract
Introduction. The immunosuppression used after transplantation (Tx) is associated with an increased risk of opportunistic infections. In Europe, parasitic infections after Tx are much less common than viral, bacterial and fungal ones. However, diseases caused by parasites are very common in tropical countries. In the last years the number of travellers with immunosuppression visiting tropical countries has increased. Methods. We performed a literature review to evaluate a risk of parasitic infections after Tx in Europe. Results. There is a real risk of parasitic infection in patients after Tx travelling to tropical countries. Malaria, leishmaniasis, strongyloidiasis and schistosomiasis are the most dangerous and relatively common. Although the incidence of these tropical infections after Tx has not increased, the course of disease could be fatal. There are also some cosmopolitan parasitic infections dangerous for patients after Tx. The greatest threat in Europe is toxoplasmosis, especially in heart and bone marrow recipients. The most severe manifestations of toxoplasmosis are myocarditis, encephalitis and disseminated disease. Diarrhoea is one of the most common symptoms of parasitic infection. In Europe the most prevalent pathogens causing diarrhoea are Giardia duodenalis and Cryptosporidium. Conclusions. Solid organ and bone marrow transplantations, blood transfusions and immunosuppressive treatment are associated with a small but real risk of parasitic infections in European citizens. In patients with severe parasitic infection, i.e., those with lung or brain involvement or a disseminated disease, the progression is very rapid and the prognosis is bad. Establishing a diagnosis before the patient's death is challenging.Entities:
Keywords: immunosuppression; infection; tropics
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30344258 PMCID: PMC6037257 DOI: 10.3390/medicina54020027
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicina (Kaunas) ISSN: 1010-660X Impact factor: 2.430
Endemic areas, species of pathogens, diagnosis and treatment of presented diseases.
| Disease | Parasite | Endemic Areas | Diagnosis | Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Malaria | Tropical | Microscopic diagnosis (thick and thin blood smears); rapid diagnostic tests for malarial antigen; | ||
| Visceral leishmaniasis |
| Tropical and temperate regions in Africa, China, India, Nepal, South America, southern Europe | Microscopic examination of bone marrow, peripheral blood or liver aspirate; | |
| Mediterranean countries, Latin America | ||||
| Dermal leishmaniasis | The Middle East, China, India, Pakistan, Africa, Mediterranean countries | Microscopic examination of skin lesion specimens; | ||
|
| Africa (Ethiopia, Kenya, Yemen) | |||
| America | ||||
| Toxoplasmosis |
| Cosmopolitan | Microscopic examination of infected tissue, blood or CSF; serology; PCR assay testing; imaging studies; fundoscopic examination | Pyrimethamine + folinic acid + sulfadiazine or clindamycin. |
| Babesiosis |
| Europe | Microscopic diagnosis (thick and thin blood smears); PCR assay testing; serology | Quinine + clindamycin |
|
| USA | |||
| GAE | Cosmopolitan | Histological examination of biopsied tissue; serology; | Surgical resection with medical treatment. Amphotericin, miltefosine, rifampicin, fluconazole, azithromycin, pentamidine + sulfadiazine | |
| Amoebiasis |
| Tropical | Stool examination; histological examination of biopsied tissue; serology | Metronidazole, tinidazole |
| Giardiasis (lambliosis) |
| Cosmopolitan | Stool examination; duodenal biopsy and aspirates | Metronidazole, albendazole, nitazoxanide |
| Cryptosporidiosis | Cosmopolitan | Stool examination | Nitazoxanide | |
| Cystoisosporiasis |
| Trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole, pyrimethamine, ciprofloxacin | ||
| Cyclosporiasis |
| Trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole | ||
| Microsporidiosis |
| Cosmopolitan | Stool and urine examination; | Topical and oral fumagillin |
| Strongyloidiasis |
| Cosmopolitan, endemic in the tropics and limited foci in USA, Europe, Australia and Japan | Stool examination; serology | Ivermectine, albendazole |
| Schistosomiasis |
| The Far East | Stool or urine examination; serology; histological examination of biopsied tissue | Praziquantel |
|
| The Middle East, Western Africa, South America | |||
|
| Africa, The Middle East, India | |||
| Taeniasis | Cosmopolitan | Stool examination; serology | Praziquantel, albendazole | |
| Cysticercosis |
| Cosmopolitan | Imaging studies | Praziquantel, albendazole; surgery |
| Hymenolepiasis |
| Cosmopolitan | Stool examination | Praziquantel, nitazoxanide, niclosamide |
| Alveolar echinococcosis |
| Northern hemisphere | Serology; imaging studies | Albendazole, mebendazole, surgery (partial resection of a liver, hemihepatectomy, liver transplantation), biliary stenting |
| Cystic echinococcosis |
| Cosmopolitan | Albendazole, mebendazole, surgery (total pericystectomy or partial hepatectomy), percutaneous treatment (PAIR) | |
| Norwegian scabies |
| Cosmopolitan | Microscopic visualization of mites, larvae, ova or feces in skin scrapings | Ivermectin, permethrin, lindane |
| Demodicosis |
| Cosmopolitan | Microscopic visualization of | Crotamiton cream, permethrin cream, topical or systemic metronidazole, ivermectin |
The most important parasitic infections after transplantation in Europe.
| Disease | Type of Transmission | Importance | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Donor Derived | Reactivation | New Onset | Population in Danger | Mortality | |
|
| Possible, few cases were reported in Europe | Possible in | The most common | One of the most important causes of fever in travellers to tropics | 6% mortality after KTx, 40% mortality after LTX. |
|
| Suggested in literature | Possible | The most common | Travelers to tropics, inhabitants of South Europe | 20% mortality after Tx. |
|
| Possible, serological examination of donors is recommended | The most common | Possible | High prevalence in Europe | 60% mortality in disseminated disease. |
|
| Unlikely | Possible | Possible | Travelers to tropics | High mortality in disseminated disease. |
|
| Unlikely, although cases of donor derived microsporidosis were reported | Possible | Possible | Giardiasis is relatively common in Europe. | Relatively mild when only diarrhoea occurs. |
|
| Not reported | Possible | Possible | Travelers to tropics. | HIS is a typical manifestation of disseminated disease with high mortality. |
|
| Not reported | Possible, especially when schistosomiasis was an indication for LTx | Possible | Travelers to tropics | Relatively good prognosis with low mortality. |
|
| Unlikely | Possible, especially when AE was an indication for LTx | Possible | Rare but still present in in Europe | Relatively good prognosis with low mortality. |