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Recurrent Respiratory Papillomatosis

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Recurrent Respiratory Papillomatosis Michael E. Decherd, MD Ronald W. Deskin, MD April 7, 1999 Overview Warty growths in aerodigestive tract Natural history unknown ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Recurrent Respiratory Papillomatosis


1
Recurrent Respiratory Papillomatosis
  • Michael E. Decherd, MD
  • Ronald W. Deskin, MD
  • April 7, 1999

2
Overview
  • Warty growths in aerodigestive tract
  • Natural history unknown
  • Caused by human papillomavirus
  • Can lead to airway obstruction
  • Treatment essentially palliative

3
History
  • 1923 Ullmann injects papilloma into own forearm
  • 1956 Association made with maternal condylomata
  • 1972 CO2 Laser used for debulking
  • 1973 Virus identified in electron micrographs

4
Basic Science
  • Icosahedral, naked, supercoiled DNA
  • Papovavirus family
  • PApillomavirus (HPV)
  • POlyoma
  • JC virus -- progressive multifocal
    leukencephalopathy
  • BK virus -- isolated from urine of renal
    transplant patients
  • siman VAculolating virus

5
Basic Science, cont.
  • Over 90 subtypes
  • Subtypes arranged in families by DNA homology
  • RRP usually HPV 6,11
  • HPV 16, 18 implicated in cervical cancer

6
Epidemiology
  • Bimodal
  • juvenile, 75 by age 5
  • incidence 4.3/100,000
  • adult, usually young adulthood
  • incidence 1.8/100,000

7
Epidemiology, cont
  • Clinical Triad
  • firstborn
  • teenage mother
  • vaginal delivery
  • Cost 151 million annually

8
Transmission
  • Acquired during vaginal birth
  • 10-25 childbearing-age women with HPV in
    cervical swabs
  • Hematogenous
  • Ascending
  • Contact with anogenital lesions

9
Cesarean?
  • Shah 109 children with RRP, only 1 born by
    C-section
  • No consensus
  • Literature does not generally endorse in absence
    of other indications

10
Diagnosis
  • Symptoms
  • Hoarseness
  • Weak cry
  • Chronic cough
  • Stridor
  • Visualize lesions
  • Biopsy

11
Histology
  • Epithelial projection with fibrovascular core
  • Viral histological findings
  • parakeratosis
  • acanthosis
  • koilocytosis
  • Virus demonstrated in normal epithelium

12
Location (Squamocolumnar junction)
  • Limen vestibuli
  • Nasopharyngeal surface soft palate
  • Midzone, laryngeal surface of epiglottis
  • Upper and lower margins of ventricle
  • Undersurface of ventricles
  • Carina and bronchial spurs

13
Course
  • Variable by patient
  • Frequent debulking mainstay of Rx
  • Avoid damage to normal tissue
  • May require tracheotomy
  • ?predisposes to distal spread

14
Course, cont.
  • Spontaneous remission
  • 1/3 by age 40
  • Distal disease -- bad
  • Malignant degeneration

15
Anesthesia
  • Apnea
  • Laser tube
  • Jet ventilation
  • Spontaneous ventilation

16
Treatment, Surgical
  • Cold steel, less common
  • CO2 Laser
  • protect airway from fire
  • protect health care personnel
  • laser masks
  • adequate suction

17
Treatment, Medical
  • Interferon
  • I3C
  • Acyclovir
  • Retinoids
  • Photodynamic therapy
  • Methotrexate
  • Cidofovir
  • Ribavirin

18
Alfa-Interferon
  • Derived from leukocytes, now recombinant
  • Dose 3MU per m2 BSA
  • Bad side effects
  • Healy Initial benefit seen at 6 mo. not
    sustained at one year
  • Neutralizing antibodies may play a role

19
Indole-3-carbinol
  • Derived from cruciferous vegetables
  • Over-the-counter
  • Dose 200-400 mg adults, 100-200 mg kids
  • well-tolerated
  • Affects estrogen metabolism

20
Acyclovir
  • Thought that Herpesvirus coinfects many cases
  • Limited studies

21
Retinoids
  • Vitamin A derivative
  • Alters epithelial differentiation
  • May synergize with interferon

22
Photodynamic Therapy
  • Patient is given IV photosensitizing agent
  • Concentrated in proliferating tissues
  • Ablated with argon dye laser
  • Photosensitivity limits usefulness, lasts
    weeks/months

23
Conclusion
  • Morbid disease we still do not understand
  • Treatment is debulking, airway protection
  • Future therapies are under investigation
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