| Literature DB >> 34362398 |
Mohamed Ridha1, Dylan G Jones2,3, David P Lerner2,3, Michal Vytopil2,3, Barbara Voetsch2,3, Joseph D Burns2,3, Anil Ramineni2,3, Pooja Raibagkar4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-related neurologic complications have a diverse presentation in transplant recipients, creating diagnostic and therapeutic challenges for clinicians. In this case series, we report unique manifestations of EBV related neurologic complications following solid organ transplant and highlight pitfalls in management. CASE PRESENTATIONS: A retrospective search of the electronic medical record of all patients from January 2015 to December 2020 who underwent solid organ transplantation and had central nervous system complications as determined by ICD-10 codes were included. Three patients with unique manifestation of EBV-related neurologic complications after liver transplantation were identified. The first was a 52-year-old man with a live-donor liver transplant 11 years prior for Budd-Chiari syndrome presented with several weeks of headache and several lesions on brain MRI; he was diagnosed with primary central nervous system post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorder. The second patient was a 63-year-old man with a deceased-donor liver transplant 16 years prior for alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency and was found to have a stroke; he was diagnosed with EBV encephalitis. The final patient was a 75-year-old woman with a deceased-donor liver transplant six years prior for primary biliary cirrhosis who presented with four months of gait instability; she was diagnosed with EBV myelitis. A review of the literature was performed to supplement description of the different diseases.Entities:
Keywords: Central nervous system; Epstein-Barr virus; Post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorder
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34362398 PMCID: PMC8343950 DOI: 10.1186/s12985-021-01629-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Virol J ISSN: 1743-422X Impact factor: 4.099
Clinical characteristics of cases with central nervous system EBV infection
| Patient (age/sex) | Liver allograft type | Years from transplant | Presenting symptoms (EBV syndrome) | Immunosuppression regimen |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 52/M | Live-donor | 11 | Relapsing headache, nausea/vomiting, double vision, facial numbness (PTLD) | Tacrolimus |
| 63/M | Dead-donor | 16 | Encephalopathy, fall, hyperglycemia (encephalitis) | Mycophenolate mofetil, rapamycin |
| 75/F | Dead-donor | 6 | Paraparesis, numbness, urinary dysfunction, falls (myelitis) | Tacrolimus, mycophenolate mofetil |
EBV, Epstein-Barr virus; F, female; M, male
Fig. 1Primary CNS post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorder radiography. Initial brain MRI showing fluid attenuation inversion recovery (FLAIR) hyperintensities within the dorsal pons (A) and throughout the medulla (B) with foci of susceptibility within the pons (C). MRI of the cervical spine with T1 fat saturation sequence showing contrast enhancement of the upper cervical cord (D, arrow) with leptomeningeal enhancement. MRI one month later when the patient presented with left hemisensory symptoms showing multiple FLAIR hyperintense lesions in the pons (E), midbrain and bilateral temporal lobes (F), and left parietal lobe (G). Additionally, contrast enhancement within the middle cerebellar peduncles was seen (H)
Summary of testing and outcomes of cases
| Diagnosis | Case 1: post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorder (PTLD) | Case 2: EBV encephalitis | Case 3: EBV myelitis |
|---|---|---|---|
| EBV serology | EBNA IgG − EBV VCA IgM − EBV VCA IgG + EBV EA IgG + | Not performed | EBNA IgG + EBV VCA IgM ± b EBV VCA IgG + EBV EA IgG + |
| EBV CSF PCR | Positive | Positive (quantitative EBV PCR: 383,000 copies/mL) | Positive |
| CSF profilea | WBC 12; lymphocytes 81% (occasional plasmacytoid and atypical cells) < 1 RBC Protein 36 Glucose 53 | WBC 171; lymphocytes 95% RBC 234 Protein 169 Glucose 63 | WBC 23; lymphocytes 95% < 1 RBC Protein 60 Glucose 55 |
| Other serum testing | CBC, CMP California virus, East Equine encephalitis, St. Louis encephalitis, West Equine encephalitis Treponemal antibody ANA HIV QuantiFERON Anaplasma, Ehrlichia Lyme Aspergillus galactomannan Anti-aquaporin-4 IgG Anti-MOG IgG C-reactive protein Vitamin B12 | CBC, CMP Treponemal antibody HIV QuantiFERON Lyme | CBC, CMP Vitamin B12 Methylmalonic acid Copper Vitamin E Zinc HIV Lyme Treponemal antibody ANA ACE ANCA Anti-aquaporin-4 IgG Anti-MOG IgG |
| Other CSF testing | Herpes simplex virus I/II PCR Listeria Cryptococcal antigen Varicella zoster PCR Toxoplasma PCR Tropherma whipple Mycoplasma Histoplasma Cytomegalovirus PCR Enterovirus PCR JC virus PCR HHV-6 PCR Oligoclonal bands Cytology Flow cytometry | Herpes simplex virus I/II PCR Cryptococcal antigen Varicella zoster PCR Cytomegalovirus PCR Cytology Flow cytometry Universal bacterial and fungal PCR | Herpes simplex virus I/II PCR Cryptococcal antigen Varicella zoster PCR Cytomegalovirus PCR paraneoplastic panel VDRL oligoclonal bands West-Nile virus PCR HHV-6 PCR |
| Treatment | 1. rituximab, prednisone, methotrexate 2. IV ganciclovir then po valganciclovir; tacrolimus held | Mycophenolate mofetil held, tacrolimus continued; IV acyclovir then transitioned to IV ganciclovir | Mycophenolate held, tacrolimus continued; IV solumedrol |
| Outcome | Significant improvement 20 weeks after presentation with residual radiographic lesions | Deceased | Complete recovery 5 months later |
ACE, angiotensin converting enzyme; ANCA, antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies; ANA, antinuclear antibody; CBC, complete blood cell count; CMP, complete metabolic panel; CSF, cerebral spinal fluid; EA, early antigen; EBER, Epstein-Barr encoding region; EBNA, Epstein-Barr nuclear antigen; EBV, Epstein-Barr virus; HHV-6, Human Herpesvirus 6; HIV, human immunodeficiency virus; IV, intravenous; JC virus, John Cunningham virus; LMP1, latent membrane protein 1; MOG, myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein; RBC, red blood cell count; VCA, viral capsid antigen; VDRL, venereal disease research laboratory; WBC, white blood cell count
aLab reference values: WBC < 10 cells/μL, RBC < 1 cells/μL, lymphocytes 40–80%, protein 15–45 mg/dL, glucose 40–70 mg/dL)
b+/−Means borderline/equivocal
Fig. 2Primary CNS post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorder pathology. Pathology showed perivascular polymorphic inflammatory infiltrate, as well as numerous plasma cells and eosinophils (A–C). Panel B is an enhanced image of the boxed area in A. Immunohistochemical staining was positive for scattered EBER positive cells (D). Also positive for CD20 positive B-cells, CD3 positive T cells, polytypic plasma cells (not pictured)
Fig. 3EBV encephalitis. MRI of the brain revealed a small area of diffusion restriction along the posterior left insula, consistent with an acute infarct (A); multiple cranial enhancement including the right oculomotor nerve (B, arrow), left facial and vestibulocochlear nerve complex (C, arrow), and left trigeminal nerve (not pictured). There were also new areas of restricted diffusion in the left frontal operculum and posterior left temporal lobe white matter (D, arrow). Two weeks later, MRI of the brain showed multiple areas of non-enhancing FLAIR hyperintensity in the bilateral temporal lobes (E, F)
Fig. 4EBV myelitis. MRI of the spinal cord in axial (A) and sagittal (B) views revealed a longitudinal extensive area of T2 hyperintensity involving the dorsal cervical spinal cord from C1–C7 (arrows)