| Literature DB >> 35732985 |
Inge C Van Gool1, Jesper Kers2,3,4, Jaap A Bakker5,6, Joris I Rotmans7, Y K Onno Teng7, Martijn P Bauer7.
Abstract
Infective endocarditis (IE) may be misdiagnosed as ANCA-associated vasculitis (AAV), especially when antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCA) are detected. Distinguishing IE from AAV is crucial to guide therapy. However, little is known about ANCA positivity in IE patients. We present a case report and systematic review of the literature on patients with ANCA-positive IE, aiming to provide a comprehensive overview of this entity and to aid clinicians in their decisions when encountering a similar case. A systematic review of papers on original cases of ANCA-positive IE without a previous diagnosis of AAV was conducted on PubMed in accordance with PRISMA-IPD guidelines. A predefined set of clinical, laboratory, and kidney biopsy findings was extracted for each patient and presented as a narrative and quantitative synthesis. A total of 74 reports describing 181 patients with ANCA-positive IE were included (a total of 182 cases including our own case). ANCA positivity was found in 18-43% of patients with IE. Patients usually presented with subacute IE (73%) and had positive cytoplasmic ANCA-staining or anti-proteinase-3 antibodies (79%). Kidney function was impaired in 72%; kidney biopsy findings were suggestive of immune complexes in 59%, while showing pauci-immune glomerulonephritis in 37%. All were treated with antibiotics; 39% of patients also received immunosuppressants. During follow-up, 69% of patients became ANCA-negative and no diagnosis of systemic vasculitis was reported. This study reviewed the largest series of patients with ANCA-positive IE thus far and shows the overlap in clinical manifestations between IE and AAV. We therefore emphasize that clinicians should be alert to the possibility of an underlying infection when treating a patient with suspected AAV, even when reassured by ANCA positivity. Key Points • This systematic review describes - to our knowledge - the largest series of patients with ANCA-positive infective endocarditis (IE) thus far (N=182), and shows a high degree of overlap in clinical manifestations between IE and ANCA-associated vasculitis (AAV). • ANCA positivity was found in 18-43% of patients with infective endocarditis. Of patients with ANCA-positive IE, the majority (79%) showed cytoplasmic ANCA-staining or anti-PR3-antibodies. We emphasize that clinicians should be alert to the possibility of an underlying infection when treating a patient with suspected AAV, even when reassured by ANCA positivity. • In patients with IE and ANCA-associated symptoms such as acute kidney injury, an important clinical challenge is the initiation of immunosuppressive therapy. All patients with data in this series received antibiotics; 39% also received immunosuppressive therapy. In many of these patients, ANCA-associated symptoms resolved or stabilized after infection was treated. ANCA titers became negative in 69% , and a diagnosis of AAV was made in none of the cases. We therefore recommend that (empiric) antibiotic treatment remains the therapeutic cornerstone for ANCA-positive IE patients, while a watchful wait-and-see approach with respect to immunosuppression is advised.Entities:
Keywords: ANCA; ANCA-associated vasculitis; Glomerulonephritis; Infective endocarditis; Neutrophil extracellular trap; Pauci-immune glomerulonephritis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35732985 PMCID: PMC9485185 DOI: 10.1007/s10067-022-06240-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Rheumatol ISSN: 0770-3198 Impact factor: 3.650
Fig. 1Representative images of renal biopsy findings. Hematoxylin-eosin staining shows a glomerulus with fibrocellular crescent formation (indicated by the black arrow) at 40× magnification (A). Jones silver staining shows a fibrocellular crescent without abnormalities in the intact portion of the glomerular basement membrane (B, 20× magnification). Electron microscopy showed a few tiny subendothelial depositions (red arrows) without remodeling of the glomerular basement membrane (C). Immunofluorescence revealed granular mesangial and focal subendothelial staining of IgM (D), C3c (E), kappa- (F), and lambda light chain (G; D–G all 20× magnification, all scored as maximum intensity 1+).
Patient characteristics
| Male gender | 106/133 | 79 |
| Constitutional symptoms | 131/147 | 89 |
| New heart murmur | 61/96 | 64 |
| Cardiac valve involved | ||
| Aortic valve | 42/116 | 36 |
| Mitral valve | 24/116 | 21 |
| Multiple valvesa | 22/116 | 19 |
| Other valve(s)b | 22/116 | 19 |
| No valve involvement identified | 6/116 | 5 |
| Vegetations on echocardiographyc | 86/109 | 79 |
| Splenomegaly | 34/78 | 44 |
| Cutaneous manifestationsd | 38/100 | 38 |
| Vascular phenomenae | 35/173 | 20 |
| Elevated CRP and/or ESR | 91/94 | 97 |
| Leukocytosis | 27/75 | 36 |
| Anemia | 66/74 | 89 |
| Thrombocytopeniaf | 29/49 | 59 |
| Impaired kidney function | 86/120 | 72 |
| Urinalysis: microscopic hematuriag | 80/98 | 82 |
| Hypocomplementemia | 44/65 | 68 |
| Hypergammaglobulinemia | 35/39 | 90 |
| Cryoglobulins | 15/39 | 38 |
| Auto-antibodies (other than ANCA): | ||
| Rheumatoid factor | 55/87 | 63 |
| Anti-phospholipid antibodiesh | 23/61 | 38 |
| Anti-nuclear antibodiesi | 24/101 | 24 |
| Valvular disease | 18/60 | 30 |
| Valve replacement | 9/60 | 15 |
| Congenital heart disease | 11/60 | 18 |
| Poor dentition or recent dental procedure | 11/60 | 18 |
| Intravenous drug use | 8/60 | 13 |
| ICD or intravenous catheter | 4/60 | 8 |
| History of IE | 3/60 | 5 |
aAortic- and mitral valves were involved in 17 cases (17/116, 14%), mitral- and tricuspid valves in 2 cases (2/116, 2%), mitral-, tricuspid-, and pulmonary valves in 1 case (1/116, 1%), mitral- and aortic valves with abscess of the interventricular septum in 1 case (1/116, 1%), and involvement of tricuspid valve and implantable cardioverter defibrillator (ICD) lead in 1 case (1/116, 1%)
bTricuspid valve was involved in 10 cases (10/116, 9%), pulmonary valve in 2 cases (2/116, 2%). Right-sided IE was reported but not specified in 4 cases (4/116, 3%). A pre-existing ventricular septal defect was affected in 2 cases (2/116, 2%), the right atrium in 3 cases (3/116, 2%), and an ICD lead in 1 case (1/116, 1%)
cTransthoracic (82/116, 71%), transesophageal (12/116, 10%%), or both transthoracic and transesophageal echocardiograms (22/116, 19%) were performed. For 9 cases, it was unclear whether vegetations were present or not. Of the 23 cases without vegetations on initial investigations, repeat ultrasounds at a later stage showed vegetations in 43% (n = 10)
dCutaneous manifestations included 28 cases with purpuric rash, 4 with petechial rash, 4 with a rash not otherwise specified, 1 with splinter hemorrhages, and 1 with Osler nodes
eVascular phenomena included cerebral infarction (n = 6), septic embolism (n = 1) or (micro)hemorrhages (n = 2), symmetrically decreased perfusion of the frontal lobes (n = 2), cerebral vasculitis changes not otherwise specified (n = 1), septic pulmonary embolism (n = 6), multiple pulmonary nodules and hilar lymphadenopathy resembling polyangiitis (n = 1), splenic infarction (n = 9), or renal infarction (n = 1)
fThrombocytopenia was mild in 18 patients (62%, platelet count 100–150 × 109/L) and severe in one case (3%, <50 × 109/L)
gEight of these patients presented with gross hematuria
hAnti-phospholipid antibodies concerned anticardiolipin antibodies (n = 10), lupus anticoagulant (n = 2), and/or anti-beta-2-glycoprotein I antibodies (n = 2; anticardiolipin antibodies and lupus anticoagulant, n = 2; anticardiolipin- and anti-beta-2-glycoprotein antibodies, n = 5; anti-phospholipid antibodies not otherwise specified, n = 2)
iAnti-nuclear antibodies including one case with anti-double-stranded DNA antibodies
IE, infective endocarditis; ICD, implantable cardioverter defibrillator; CRP, C-reactive protein; ESR, erythrocyte sedimentation rate
Micro-organisms identified in ANCA-positive IE (n = 131)
| Gram-positive | 84 (64) |
| | 28 (21) |
| | 23 (17) |
| Coagulase-negative | 5 (4) |
| | 35 (27) |
| Bovis group D streptococci | 7 (6) |
| Viridans group streptococci | 17 (13) |
| | 11 (8) |
| Other gram-positive cocci | 6 (5) |
| | 1 (1) |
| Other | 3 (2) |
| Gram-negative | 31 (24) |
| | 28 (21) |
| | 2 (2) |
| | 1 (1) |
| 1 (1) | |
| Multiple | 15 (11) |
| | 10 (8) |
aSix cases with chronic hepatitis infections: two cases with Staphylococcus aureus and chronic hepatitis C infections [23, 77], two cases with Enterococcus faecalis and chronic hepatitis C infections [20, 37], one with Abiotiophia defectiva and chronic untreated hepatitis B infections [9], and one with Candida parapsilosis and chronic hepatitis C infections [15]
bCategorization according to Facklam [101]
Light microscopy findings in kidney biopsies of patients with ANCA-positive IE (n = 71)
| Crescentic GNa | 36 (51) |
| Proliferative GN | 13 (18) |
| Mesangiocapillary GN | 3 (4) |
| Mesangioproliferative GN | 3 (4) |
| “Infection-associated GN” NOS | 2 (3) |
| Glomerular sclerosis | 5 (7) |
| Pattern not specified or not reported | 9 (13) |
| Acute tubular necrosis | 10 (14) |
| Tubulointerstitial inflammation | 23 (32) |
| Predominantly polymorphonuclear infiltrate | 7 (10) |
| Predominantly plasma cells | 0 (0) |
| Arteriits/arteriolitis | 3 (4) |
| Interstitial fibrosis and tubular atrophy | 14 (20) |
aWhen looking at the percentage of affected glomeruli, crescents were seen in 3–70% of glomeruli with a median of 27% (n = 15), and capillary necrosis in 3–54% with a median of 20% (n = 10)
IE, infective endocarditis; GN, glomerulonephritis; NOS, not otherwise specified
Follow-up data (outcomes, kidney function, ANCA titers) of patients with ANCA-positive IE
| All cases | Cases treated with antibiotics alone | Cases treated with antibiotics and immunosuppressants n/n with data (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dead | 21/130 (16) | 7/47 (15) | 6/35 (17) |
| Restored to baseline | 30/97 (31) | 17/46 (37) | 12/35 (34) |
| Improved but not restored | 19/97 (20) | 11/46 (24) | 8/35 (23) |
| No improvement | 18/97 (18) | 4/46 (9) | 8/35 (23) |
| No decline at presentation | 30/97 (31) | 14/46 (30) | 7/35 (20) |
| Positive | 17/55 (31)b | 12/31 (39) | 5/23 (22) |
| Increased or stablea | 3/55 (5) | 1/31 (3) | 2/23 (9) |
| Decreaseda | 11/55 (20) | 9/31 (29) | 2/23 (9) |
| Negative | 38/55 (69) | 19/31 (61) | 18/23 (78) |
aChange in ANCA titer compared to ANCA titer at presentation
bANCA titers were increased in 1, stable in 2, and not reported in 3 cases
IE, infective endocarditis
Key Points |