| Literature DB >> 33250898 |
Paul Bastard1,2, Aurélien Galerne1, Alain Lefevre-Utile1,3,4, Coralie Briand1, André Baruchel4,5, Philippe Durand6,7,8, Judith Landman-Parker9, Elodie Gouache9, Nathalie Boddaert4,10,11, Despina Moshous2,4,11, Joel Gaudelus1,12, Robert Cohen13, Georges Deschenes14, Alain Fischer2,4,11,15, Stéphane Blanche2,4, Loïc de Pontual1,12, Bénédicte Neven2,4,11.
Abstract
Primary infection with varicella-zoster virus (VZV) causes chickenpox, a benign and self-limited disease in healthy children. In patients with primary or acquired immunodeficiencies, primary infection can be life-threatening, due to rapid dissemination of the virus to various organs [lung, gastrointestinal tract, liver, eye, central nervous system (CNS)]. We retrospectively described and compared the clinical presentations and outcomes of disseminated varicella infection (DV) in patients with acquired (AID) (n= 7) and primary (PID) (n= 12) immunodeficiencies. Patients with AID were on immunosuppression (mostly steroids) for nephrotic syndrome, solid organ transplantation or the treatment of hemopathies, whereas those with PID had combined immunodeficiency (CID) or severe CID (SCID). The course of the disease was severe and fulminant in patients with AID, with multiple organ failure, no rash or a delayed rash, whereas patients with CID and SICD presented typical signs of chickenpox, including a rash, with dissemination to other organs, including the lungs and CNS. In the PID group, antiviral treatment was prolonged until immune reconstitution after bone marrow transplantation, which was performed in 10/12 patients. Four patients died, and three experienced neurological sequelae. SCID patients had the worst outcome. Our findings highlight substantial differences in the clinical presentation and course of DV between children with AID and PID, suggesting differences in pathophysiology. Prevention, early diagnosis and treatment are required to improve outcome.Entities:
Keywords: disseminated varicella; innate immunity; primary immumunodeficiencies; steroids; varicella
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33250898 PMCID: PMC7674974 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2020.595478
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Demographic, clinical, biological, treatment and prognosis characteristics of the 7 patients with AID included in the French retrospective study of DV in children.
| Case | Age | Sex | First symptom | Clinical and biological presentation | Medical history | Immunosuppressive therapy | VZV DNA + | Delay between onset and TTT initiation (hours) | Treatment | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 16 | M | Abdominal pain | Abdominal pain, seizures, skin rash, hemorrhages, hepatitis, DIC | Nephrotic syndrome, 3rd relapse | Steroids, | Blood: + | 38 | Acyclovir IV + IgIV | Death |
|
| 14 | M | Fever, vomiting | Fever, skin rash, coma, acute respiratory distress, hemorrhages, rhabdomyolysis, hepatitis | Nephrotic syndrome, 1st relapse | Steroids | Blood: + | 52 | Acyclovir/Gancyclovir/Foscavir IV + IgIV | Death |
|
| 12 | M | Headache | Headache, convulsions, hepatitis, neutropenia, thrombopenia | Lymphoblastic lymphoma type B | Methotrexate, | Blood: + | 46 | Acyclovir IV, VZIG, IgIV | neurologic sequela |
|
| 6 | M | Abdominal pain | Abdominal pain, skin rash, acute respiratory distress, hepatitis, renal failure, thrombopenia | Renal transplant for renal hypoplasia | Steroids, | Blood: + | 78 | Acyclovir IV, VZIG, IgIV | Favorable |
|
| 6 | M | Abdominal pain | Abdominal pain, fever, acute respiratory distress, hepatitis, CID, thrombopenia | ALL type B | Methotrexate, | Blood: + | 96 | Acyclovir IV, VZIG | Favorable |
|
| 4 | F | Abdominal pain | Abdominal pain, hemorrhage, fever, hepatitis, CID, thrombopenia, skin rash | ALL pre-B | Steroids, Chemotherapy | Blood: ND | 90 | Acyclovir IV, IgIV | Favorable |
|
| 10 | M | Skin rash | Abdominal pain, respiratory distress, fever, hepatitis, skin rash | ALL type B | Methotrexate, Purinethol | Blood: + | 35 | Acyclovir IV | Favorable |
Age is expressed in years. M, male; F, female; ALL, acute lymphoblastic leukemia; DIC, disseminated intravascular coagulopathy, ICU, intensive care unit, BAL, bronchoalveolar lavage; IV, intravenous; TTT, treatment; VZIG, immunoglobins against varicella-zoster virus; IgIV, intravenous immunoglobins.
Demographic, clinical, biological, treatment and prognosis characteristics of the 13 patients with PID included in the French retrospective study of DV in children.
| Case | Age | Sex | First symptom | Clinical and biological presentation | Medical history | VZV DNA + | Treatment | IRIS/time post HSCT/organs | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 1,5 | M | Skin rash | Skin rash, stroke 6 months after the initial VZV infection | CID: MHC II deficiency | Blood | Acyclovir IV | No | A.W, mild Neurological sequelae |
|
| 12 | M | Skin rash | Bilateral interstitial pneumonia, impetiginized skin rash | CID: ARTEMIS deficiency | Blood, lungs (BAL), skin | Acyclovir IV | No | A.W. |
|
| 0,5 | M | Skin rash | Impetiginized skin rash, respiratory distress | CID: ZAP-70 deficiency | Blood, lungs (BAL) | Acyclovir IV | Yes (M24) | A.W. |
|
| 4 | M | Skin rash | Severe skin rash, respiratory distress (bilateral pneumonia) | CID: ZAP 70 deficiency | Skin | Acyclovir IV | No | A.W. |
|
| 3 | F | Skin rash | Severe skin rash, bilateral VZV pneumonia | CID (unidentified) | Blood, lungs (BAL) | Acyclovir IV | No | A.W. Keloid scar |
|
| 0,8 | F | Skin rash | Respiratory distress, skin rash | CID (unidentified) | Blood, lungs (BAL) | Acyclovir IV | No | A.W. |
|
| 1,3 | M | Skin rash | Skin rash, ARDS, keratitis, meningo-encephalitis | SCID: JAK 3 deficiency | Blood, lungs (BLA), skin, CSF, vitreous fluid | Acyclovir IV + Foscavir IV | Yes (M3) pneumonitis, retinitis | Death from suspected IRIS |
|
| 1 | M | Skin rash | Severe skin rash, bilateral interstitial pneumonia | SCID : RAG 2 | Blood | Acyclovir IV + Foscavir IV | Yes (M2) encephalitis | Death from suspected IRIS |
|
| 0,7 | F | Skin rash | Skin rash, bilateral interstitial pneumonia, radiculo-neuritis | SCID: RIL-7alpha | Blood, CSF | Acyclovir IV + Foscavir IV | Yes (M4) Pneumonitis | Death from suspected IRIS |
|
| 0,2 | M | Skin rash | Severe skin rash, meningo-encephalitis | SCID : RAG 1 | Blood, CSF | Acyclovir IV | Yes (M1) | A.W., mild Neurological sequelae |
|
| 0,4 | F | Meningitis | Respiratory distress, neurological involvement (meningitis, retinitis) | SCID: γC | Blood, CSF | Acyclovir IV + Gancyclovir IV followed by Foscavir and Cidofovir. | No | Severe Neurological and ocular sequelae |
|
| 0,5 | M | Skin rash | Severe skin rash, neurological involvement, hepatitis | SCID: RAG 1 | Blood, CSF | Acyclovir IV | No | Death from VZV encephalitis 2M after HSCT |
Age is expressed in years. M, male; F, female; ALL, acute lymphoblastic leukemia; SCID, severe combined immunodeficiency; CID, combined immunodeficiency; HSCT, hematopoietic stem cell transplantation; RAG, recombination-activating genes; ARTEMIS, Artemis protein, encoded by the DCLRE1C gene; ZAP, 70 kb zeta chain-associated protein kinase; BAL, bronchoalveolar lavage; IV, intravenous; TTT, treatment (500 mg acyclovir/m2/8 h).
Treatments of patients with AID.
| Patient | Steroid molecule | Daily steroid dosage during varicella infection | Total cumulative steroid dose | Time between steroid initiation and varicella infection | Other immunosuppressive treatments (and doses) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Oral prednisone | 2 mg/kg/day | NA | 1 month | Cyclosporine (oral, 165 mg/m²/day) |
|
| Oral prednisone | 0 | NA | 1 month | None |
|
| Oral prednisone | 1.2 mg/kg/day | NA | 2 years | Tacrolimus (oral, 0.23 mg/kg/day) |
|
| None (stopped 5 months before) | 0 | 1800 mg/m² (60 mg/m²/day for 1 month) | 6 months | Methotrexate (oral, NS) and purinethol (oral, NS) |
|
| None | 0 | NA | NA | Methotrexate (oral, 25 mg/m²/week) and purinethol (oral, 75 mg/m²/day) |
|
| Oral prednisone (7 days, at 60 mg/m²/day) followed by IV dexamethasone (7 days) | 6 mg/m²/day of IV dexamethasone | 420 mg/m²/day prednisone + 400 mg/m²/day prednisone equivalent | 14 days | Intrathecal methotrexate (14 days before varicella infection); IV vincristine (7 days before varicella infection); IV L-asparaginase (2 and 4 days before varicella infection) |
|
| None (stopped 9 months before) | 0 | 1800 mg/m² over a 6-month period | 15 months | Methotrexate (oral, 25 mg/m²/week) and purinethol (oral, 75 mg/m²/day) |
NA, not applicable or unknown.
Figure 1MRI scan of patient N09, 1 year after stroke secondary to cerebral VZV vasculitis. Right hemisphere atrophy on axial FLAIR sequence (A–C) and coronal T2 sequence (D) and stenosis of internal carotid artery and posterior cerebral arteries in vascular sequences Time of flight (TOF) angiography (E, F).
Comparison of clinical characteristics between patients with DV and AID or PID.
| Acquired ID | Primary ID | Statistical analysis* | Test used | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 9,2 | 0.9 | 0.002 | # |
|
| 6/1 | 8/4 | 0.6 | * |
|
| ||||
|
| 7/7 | 0/12 |
| * |
|
| 3/7 | 6/12 | NS | * |
|
| 3/7 | 12/12 |
| * |
|
| 7/7 | 1/12 |
| * |
|
| ||||
|
| 6/7 | 4/12 |
| * |
|
| ||||
|
| 7/7 | 3/12 |
| * |
|
| ||||
|
| 0/5 | 5/8 |
| * |
|
| 2/7 | 4/12 | NS | * |
Age, expressed in years. M, male; F, female; DIC, disseminated intravascular coagulopathy; ICU, intensive care unit. #Wilcoxon rank sum test with continuity correction. *Fisher's Exact Test for Count Data.