Tamara C' Pozos, MD PhD - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 11
About This Presentation
Title:

Tamara C' Pozos, MD PhD

Description:

Lysis of gram-negative organisms. Chemotaxis and activation of leukocytes ... Lysis of Neisseria spp. and other pathogens. C3a, C4a, C5a. Phagocyte recruitment. C3b ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:59
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 12
Provided by: clini
Category:
Tags: phd | lysis | pozos | tamara

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Tamara C' Pozos, MD PhD


1
  • Tamara C. Pozos, MD PhD
  • Childrens Hospitals and Clinics of Minnesota
  • CIS 8/12/08

2
Case Presentation
  • 2.5 year old boy with 4 episodes of pneumococcal
    bacteremia/sepsis
  • First episode he was hypotensive and
    unresponsive subsequent episodes less severe
  • PMHx
  • Born at 30 weeks gestation
  • No pneumonia, sinusitis, diarrhea, skin
    infections
  • Vaccines including Prevnar up to date
  • FHx
  • No family history of severe infections, 1.5 year
    old brother is healthy
  • Paternal aunt died at 20 years of age due to
    heart disease
  • PE
  • Weight 14kg (gt50), height 90cm (lt25)
  • Normal exam
  • During last hospitalization WBC 21.3, 57
    neutrophils, 22 bands
  • Chest Xray clear, no mention of thymus

3
Immune workup
4
Cases 2 and 3
  • 7 year old boy
  • Pneumococcal meningitis in 2004
  • Prevnar _at_ 2,4,6 mo missed 12 - 15mo dose
  • Complement
  • CH50 lt 4, measured twice in 2004
  • Normal C1, C3, C4, C5-9
  • AH50 50 (normal 28 - 144)
  • C2 undetectable
  • 3.5 year old girl, sister of case 2
  • Asymptomatic, no history of infections
  • Complement
  • CH50 18 - 32 (normal 26 -50)
  • C1, C3, C4, C5-9 normal
  • C2 undetectable

5
Complement pathway
  • Serum component which complemented antibodies
  • gt 30 known proteins
  • Constitutes 15 of the globulin fraction
  • Components numbered in order of discovery

Key functions Defense against
infection Opsonization of pyogenic bacteria Lysis
of gram-negative organisms Chemotaxis and
activation of leukocytes Bridge between innate
and adaptive immunity C3 receptors on B cells,
antigen presenting cells, dendritic
cells Disposal of immune complexes
6
MANNOSE BINDING LECTIN PATHWAY lectin binds
pathogen surfaces ( C2C4, MBL, MASP-1, MASP-2 )
CLASSICAL PATHWAY activated by antigen-antibody (
C1, C2, C4 )
ALTERNATIVE PATHWAY activated directly by
pathogen surface ( C3, Factors B, D, and I )
C3 Convertase
C3
C3b
C3a, C4a, C5a Phagocyte recruitment
Membrane Attack Complex
C5-C6-C7-C8-C9 Lysis of Neisseria spp. and other
pathogens
Binds complement receptors on phagocytes Opsonizat
ion of pathogens Removal of immune complexes
7
Complement Deficiencies
  • Recurrent infection
  • C1-C4 classical pathway infections with
    encapsulated/pyogenic organisms
  • C3 defects associated with a wide range of
    infections
  • C5-C9 (membrane attack complex) 5 - 10,000 fold
    increased risk of Neisseria
  • Early complement defects are also associated with
    autoimmune diseases
  • Angioedema
  • C2 deficiency
  • Most common complete complement deficiency
  • Autosomal recessive
  • Estimated prevalence 1/10,000
  • 50 develop recurrent infections
  • 30 - 40 develop lupus
  • Some impaired production of functional antibodies
  • Infection is usually systemic (sepsis and
    meningitis)
  • Infections usually with encapsulated organisms
    (S. pneumoniae, H. flu)

8
Diagnosis and Treatment
  • CH50 is the best screening test
  • Severe classical pathway deficiencies are usually
    lt5 of normal
  • C9 deficiency can be 30 to 50 of normal
  • AH50
  • Used to assess for deficiencies of Factor B, H,
    and I, and properidin (alternative)
  • Will also detect deficiencies in C5-C9
  • Specific component assays are also available for
    each component
  • Treatment is individualized with no
    well-established guidelines
  • Prophylactic antibiotics may be helpful in some
    early complement deficiencies
  • Vaccines - conjugated H. flu, pneumococcus,
    menningococcus, plus polysaccharide pneumococcus
  • Reports of plasma replacement for acute disease

9
Complement Questions
  • 1. Should all patients with invasive
    pneumococcal, H. influenzae or meningococcal
    infections have complement evaluations?
  • 2. With increasing pneumococcal resistance, what
    prophylactic treatment makes sense?
  • 3. Does complement deficiency compromise
    adaptive immunity?
  • 4. Which vaccines are important?
  • 5. What autoimmune screening should be done in
    those with early complement deficiencies?

10
When to screen for complement deficiency?
  • Invasive Meningococcal disease
  • 1 - 47 in primary, 40 in recurrent disease
  • 10 if family history of meningococcal infection
  • 20 - 50 if unusual serotype
  • ? Invasive pneumococcal/H. flu
  • 1 case in series of 398 (0.25)
  • Densen, et al, Interscience Conference on AAC,
    1990
  • Screening for complement deficiencies in
    unselected meningitis
  • No homozygous deficiencies in 209 possible
    meningitis cases
  • 100 confirmed, 22 of these with decreased
    complement
  • Rasmussen, et al, Clin. Exp. Immunology, 1987
  • No data in modern vaccine era

11
Complement Questions, continued
  • 1. Should all patients with invasive
    pneumococcal, H. flu, menningococcus have
    complement evaluations?
  • 2. With increasing pneumococcal resistance what
    prophylactic treatment makes sense - when to
    abandon PCN?
  • 2007 CHRMC susceptible
  • 56 PCN, 57 TMP/SMZ, 75 cefuroxime, 92
    ceftriaxone, 100 vancomycin
  • 3. Does complement deficiency compromise adaptive
    immunity?
  • Case 1 had poor pneumococcal titers despite
    Prevnar x 4 and Pneumococcus x 5
  • An association has been described (Ochs, et al,
    1983, Ochs, et al, Clinical Imm/Immunpathology,
    2002)
  • ? poor antigen presentation to dendritic cells
  • 4. Which vaccines are important?
  • 5. What autoimmune screening should be done in
    those with early complement deficiencies?
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com