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Herpesvirus Infections in Immunocompromised Patients

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Herpesvirus Infections in Immunocompromised Patients An Overview Immunocompromising conditions Congenital immunodeficiencies e.g.. Di George, Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Herpesvirus Infections in Immunocompromised Patients


1
Herpesvirus Infections in Immunocompromised
Patients
  • An Overview

2
Immunocompromising conditions
  • Congenital immunodeficiencies e.g.. Di George,
    Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome.
  • AIDS
  • Haematological malignancies such as leukaemia.
  • Organ transplant recipients
  • Autoimmune diseases eg. SLE
  • Iatrogenically immunosuppressed patients e.g.
    cancer patients receiving chemotherapy.

3
Herpesvirus
  • Enveloped DNA viruses.
  • Set up latent infection following primary
    infection.
  • Reactivation are more likely to take place during
    periods of immunosuppression.
  • Both primary infection and reactivation are
    likely to be more serious in immunocompromised
    patients.

4
Herpesvirus Particle
HSV-2 virus particle. Note that all herpesviruses
have identical morphology and cannot be
distinguished from each other under electron
microscopy. (Courtesy of Linda Stannard,
University of Cape Town, S.A.)
5
Herpes Simplex Virus
  • Normal individuals
  • Primary HSV infection usually occurs in
    childhood, the majority of infections are
    asymptomatic or present with a gingivostomatitis.
  • The virus becomes latent in the craniospinal
    ganglia.
  • The virus may then be reactivated from time to
    time by various triggers such as stress,
    infection, sunlight, immunosuppression.

6
Herpes Simplex Virus
  • Immunocompromised individuals
  • Patients receiving cytotoxic therapy, organ graft
    recipients, and patients with AIDS are at risk of
    severe HSV disease.
  • HSV disease are more frequent and severe in these
    patients.
  • Severe local disease or disseminated infection
    may be seen.
  • Acyclovir may be used to treat HSV infection, but
    resistance to acyclovir may emerge during long
    term therapy.
  • Acyclovir is now routinely given as prophylaxis
    for those receiving organ graft transplant, and
    HSV has ceased to be a major problem in these
    patients.

7
Varicella-Zoster Virus
  • Normal individuals
  • Primary infection (chickenpox) is one of the
    classical rash diseases of childhood.
  • Following primary infection, the virus remains
    latent in the cranial-spinal ganglia.
  • Reactivation leading to the appearance of
    shingles occurs in 10-20 of infected individuals
    and usually occurs after the fourth decade of
    life. Usually, only one episode of reactivation
    occurs.

8
Immunocompromised individuals
  • Primary infection
  • Chickenpox is much more severe in children
    undergoing treatment for malignancies such as
    leukaemia and lymphoma.
  • Life-threatening complications such as
    disseminated varicella, pneumonia, and
    encephalitis are much more likely to be seen.
  • Reactivation
  • Immunocompromised individuals are at risk of
    developing herpes zoster, herpes zoster may
    appear at an earlier age than usual in these
    individuals, furthermore, more than one episode
    may occur.
  • Severe, disseminated disease may occur but
    fatality is rare.

9
Treatment and Prevention
  • Acyclovir may be used for the treatment of severe
    varicella or zoster infections.
  • A live attenuated vaccine has now been licensed
    in many countries. Its use is still controversial
    in immunocompromised individuals because it is a
    live vaccine.
  • Recent data suggests that it is safe in children
    with leukaemia provided that they are in
    remission.
  • VZIG can be used to prevent primary infection in
    susceptible individuals.

10
Cytomegalovirus
  • Normal individuals
  • Primary infection is usually asymptomatic,
    occasionally an infectious mononucleosis-like
    illness may be seen.
  • Reactivations or re-infections are common
    throughout life and are usually asymptomatic.

11
Immunocompromised individuals
  • Both primary and recurrent infection may lead to
    symptomatic disease.
  • Primary CMV infection is usually more severe than
    recurrent infection, with the exception of bone
    marrow transplant recipients, where primary and
    recurrent infections are just as severe.

12
Clinical Manifestations
  • Fever
  • Pneumonitis
  • Hepatitis
  • Gastrointestinal manifestations eg. colitis
  • Encephalopathy
  • Retinitis
  • Poor graft function
  • Pneumonitis is the most severe manifestation,
    and carries a mortality rate of 85 in the
    absence of treatment.

13
AIDS Patients
  • CMV disease is present in 7.4 to 30 of all AIDS
    patient.
  • Sight-threatening retinitis, colitis, and
    encephalopathy are the most common manifestations
    of CMV disease in AIDS patients. Pneumonitis is
    extremely rare.

14
Solid organ transplant recipients e.g. renal,
liver, heart
  • Most common infection, leading cause of morbidity
    and mortality.
  • Occurs 1 - 3 months following transplant.
  • Primary infection more severe than recurrent
    infection.
  • Patients may present with fever, pneumonitis, GI
    manifestations, hepatitis, and poor graft
    function.
  • Does not appear to be associated with organ
    rejection.

15
Bone marrow transplant recipient
  • The host immune system is ablated before the
    transplant and thus every aspect of the immune
    system is deficient.
  • CMV is the leading infection and the greatest
    cause of transplant failure.
  • Both primary and recurrent infection may cause
    severe disease, pneumonitis is seen in 15 of
    patients.
  • At special risk are seropositive recipients of
    graft from seronegative donors, and seronegative
    recipients of graft from seropositive donors.

16
Laboratory Diagnosis (1)
  • In general, the detection of CMV from blood
    specimens or bronchioalveolar lavage is more
    prognostic of clinical CMV disease than the
    detection of the virus from urine or saliva.
  • 1. Virus isolation
  • (a) Conventional cell culture - human embryo lung
    fibroblasts used, requires 1 to 3 weeks for
    characteristic CPE to appear, remains the gold
    standard for the diagnosis of CMV infection
  • (b) Rapid culture methods - eg. DEAFF test -
    detects the expression of CMV early antigens
    within 24 to 48 hours of inoculation. Appears to
    be as sensitive and specific as conventional cell
    culture.

17
Cytopathic Effect of CMV
(Courtesy of Linda Stannard, University of Cape
Town, S.A.)
18
DEAFF test for CMV
(Virology Laboratory, Yale-New Haven Hospital)
19
Laboratory Diagnosis (2)
  • 1. CMV antigenaemia test - widely used in many
    European countries. CMV antigens at the surface
    of polymorphonuclear leukocytes are detected by
    immunoperoxidase or immunofluorescence
    techniques. A result can be obtained within 4 to
    6 hours but the technique is very tricky.
  • 2. Polymerase chain reaction - becoming the
    method of choice in many centers, had been
    reported to carry a higher prognostic value for
    CMV disease than the DEAFF test. The use of
    real-time quantitative PCR has proven to be of
    great use in the management of bone marrow
    transplant recipients. However, the lack of
    standardization of real-time PCR protocols
    hindered the comparison of data between centers.
  • 3. Serology - not reliable in general but
    occasionally, rises in IgG titre and the presence
    of IgM may be seen.

20
CMV pp65 antigenaemia test
(Virology Laboratory, New-Yale Haven Hospital)
21
Management (1)
  • Ganciclovir - is the drug of choice. However, it
    is associated with neutropenia and
    thrombocytopenia.
  • Valganciclovir - is now the drug of choice for
    prophylaxis against CMV in solid organ transplant
    recipients.
  • Forscarnet - can be used as the 2nd line drug.
    Again it is very toxic and is associated with
    renal toxicity.
  • Cifofovir (HPMCC) - approved for the treatment of
    CMV retinitis. It is also associated with renal
    toxicity. Like forscarnet, it is used as a 2nd
    line drug
  • Drugs Under Investigation - Maribavir (UL97
    kinase inhibitor), brincidofovir (oral
    bioavailable form of cidofovir), and letermovir
    (viral terminase complex inhibitor).
  • CMV hyperimmune globulin - found to be effective
    against CMV pneumonitis.

22
Management (2)
  • Transplant Recipients - once clinical disease is
    established, the patient should be treated
    vigorously with antiviral agents. Ganciclovir is
    the drug of choice. CMV hyperimmune globulin had
    been found to be useful in the treatment of CMV
    retinitis.
  • AIDS patient with retinitis - vigorous antiviral
    therapy should be given. Both systemic and local
    (intravitreal implants) may be used.

23
Prevention
  • Pre-transplant donor-recipient matching - shown
    to be effective in reducing CMV disease but will
    be very difficult to implement in Hong Kong
    because of the high seropositive rate.
  • Prophylaxis - prophylaxis with acyclovir/ganciclov
    ir for all transplant recipients and CMV
    immunoglobulin for seronegative recipients of
    graft from seropositive donors should be
    considered.
  • Vaccination - an experimental live attenuated
    vaccine known as the Towne strain is available
    but there is great reluctance to give it to
    immunocompromised individuals. Subunit vaccines
    are being developed.

24
Post-transplant surveillance
  • Weekly surveillance blood, urine or saliva
    cultures are now routinely carried out for bone
    marrow transplant recipients and other organ
    transplant recipients if clinically indicated.
    Bronchioalveolar lavages are performed routinely
    at 1 month post-transplant in some centres.
  • In general, a positive result from urine or
    saliva warrants extra vigilance and relaxation of
    immunosuppression should be considered. A
    positive result from the blood or BAL warrants
    the commencement of antiviral therapy with
    ganciclovir.

25
Epstein-Barr Virus
  • After primary infection, EBV maintains a steady
    low grade latent infection in the body.
  • During periods of immunosuppression, the virus
    may reactivate to cause clinical disease.
  • In a few cases, lymphoproliferative lesions and
    lymphoma may develop. These lesions tend to be
    extranodal and in unusual sites such as the GI
    tract or the CNS.
  • Three groups of immunocompromised patients are
    particularly susceptible to severe EBV associated
    diseases X-linked lymphoproliferative syndrome,
    transplant recipients, and AIDS.

26
Risk Groups
  • Ducan X-linked lymphoproliferative syndrome -
    this condition occurs exclusively in males who
    had inherited a defective gene in the
    X-chromosome . This condition accounts for half
    of the fatal cases of IM.
  • Transplant Recipients - solid organ tranplant
    recipients encountering primary EBV infection in
    the post transplant period may develop Post
    Transplant Lymphoproliferative Disorder.
    Transplant recipients are also prone to develop
    lymphoproliferative disorders and lymphomas
    several years after the transplant.
  • AIDS - EBV is associated to varying degrees with
    certain types of non-Hodgekins lymphoma in AIDS
    patients. These include primary lymphoma of the
    brain, Burkitts lymphoma, and immunoblastomas.

27
Post Transplant Lymphoproliferative Disorder
  • PTLD is thought to be a lymphoproliferation of
    EBV infected B-cells arising in the setting of
    over immunosuppression.
  • The patients at risk are those who encounter EBV
    as a primary infection during the post-transplant
    course.
  • The proliferation may be seen anywhere lymphoid
    tissue presides, although in lung transplant
    recipients, presentation in the allograft is
    relatively common.
  • Histopathological manifestation appears as
    nodular sheets of atypical lymphoid cell which
    are not dissimilar to Non-Hodgkins lymphomas.
  • Some cases are similar to lymphomatoid
    granulomatosis or T-cell rich B-cell lymphomas
    with a large subset of reactive T-cells.
    Reduction in immunosuppression often results in
    regression of PTLD.

28
HHV-6 and HHV-7
  • Like other herpesviruses, HHV-6 and HHV-7 become
    latent following primary infection and are
    reactivated from time to time, especially during
    periods of immunosuppression.
  • HHV-6 infection is firmly associated with roseala
    infantum. It had also been associated with
    neurological manifestations such as febrile
    convulsions, meningitis, and encephalitis.
  • It had also been associated with a variety of
    symptoms in transplant recipients such as fever,
    graft vs host disease, liver and CNS
    manifestations. However such associations are
    very difficult to prove since CMV is almost
    always concomitantly reactivated.
  • Likewise the role of HHV-6 reactivation in HIV
    infection remains unclear.
  • HHV-7 is not associated conclusively with any
    human disease.

29
Human Herpes Virus 8
  • Now appears to be firmly associated with Kaposis
    sarcoma as well as some lesser known malignancies
    such as Castlemans disease and primary effusion
    lymphomas.
  • HHV-8 DNA is found in almost 100 of cases of
    Kaposis sarcoma.
  • Most patients with KS have antibodies against
    HHV-8.
  • The seroprevalence of HHV-8 is low among the
    general population but is high in groups of
    individuals susceptible to KS, such as
    homosexuals.
  • Unlike other herpesviruses, HHV-8 does not have a
    ubiquitous distribution.
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