1 / 20

CMV Pneumonitis in a Neonate

CMV Pneumonitis in a Neonate. Mimi Emig, MD Spectrum Health Infectious Diseases Grand Rapids, MI. HPI. 3 month old admitted with 2d cough + decreased po intake Born at 33 weeks EGA d/t maternal eclampsia + seizure 12 days in newborn nursery. HPI, continued.

odele
Télécharger la présentation

CMV Pneumonitis in a Neonate

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CMV Pneumonitis in a Neonate Mimi Emig, MD Spectrum Health Infectious Diseases Grand Rapids, MI

  2. HPI • 3 month old admitted with 2d cough + decreased po intake • Born at 33 weeks EGA d/t maternal eclampsia + seizure • 12 days in newborn nursery

  3. HPI, continued • Brought to primary care with decreased po intake, cough for 2 days • Usu feeds 4-6 oz; now < 1 oz; decreased wet diapers • Sent to ED- on arrival, dusky, poor capillary refill, desaturating

  4. Social History • Lives with mom & 17 yo brother • Mom is 35 yo, in stable relationship for 5 years

  5. Exam • T 38; SBP 65; P 156; P ox 95% on 1L NC • Weight 5kg • Subcostal retractions; tachypneic

  6. Initial Labs / Studies • WBC 9.3 (36N, 59L) Hb 10.9 Plt 436K • AST 79, ALT 59 • BC neg • CSF 3WBC; cx neg • CXR bilateral patchy perihilar infiltrates, bilateral lower lobe alveolar infiltrates

  7. Hospital Course • HD 3- increased respiratory distress, transferred to ICU • Intubated • Blind BAL sent • Progressive respiratory failure, requiring high frequency oscillating jet ventilation

  8. Hospital day 7 • BAL grew CMV- pediatric ID consulted • Added IV ganciclovir • Bactrim + steroids started pending PCP Ag • Immune w/u sent

  9. HD 10 • Bactrim & steroids stopped • No substantial improvement in respiratory status- still requiring HFOJV

  10. HD 13 • CD4 = 426 (27%) • HIV DNA qualitative positive • Increased ganciclovir to 6mg/kg q12hr • Started preventive TMP/SMX

  11. Maternal Hx • Last tested negative during blood donation 5 yr ago • Never tested for HIV during pregnancy • In “stable relationship”, but partner married to another woman • Maternal testing- CD4 = 61

  12. Testing of Neonate • VL 1.77 million (log 6.25) • HLA B*5701 negative • No significant resistance mutations

  13. Clinical Issues • 1) Pneumonitis not improving; all other testing (PCP, Crypto, fungal, AFB) negative. What would you do next? (now HD 15) • 2) When would you start antiretrovirals?

  14. Hospital Course • HD 15- added high-dose Bactrim + steroids • HD 18- off HFOJV, on conventional ventilator • Transaminases rising- 500-600 • HD18- started stavudine / lamivudine / Kaletra • HD 22- extubated

  15. Hospital Course • Remained O2 dependent • Completed 21 d high-dose Bactrim + steroids; changed to secondary prophylaxis • Tolerated antiretrovirals well, LFT’s came down to nl • After 2 weeks tx: • Viral level 76,000 (prev 1.77 million) • CD4 1207 (previously 426)

  16. Hospital Course • Increasing FiO2, low-grade fevers • HD 42- bronchoscopy + PCP • Retreated with high-dose Bactrim + steroids- weaned off O2 • Discharged home after 72 day hospital course

  17. IRIS • New symptoms of infection / inflammation in pt recently on antiretrovirals with: • Increasing CD4 (> 25 cells ) • > 1 log decrease VL • Most common pathogens • MAI • Cryptococcus • Hepatitis B

  18. Predictors of IRIS • > 1 prior OI • Low CD4 • Anemia • Antiretroviral naïve • Rapid decline in HIV • Proximity to recent OI

  19. Management of IRIS • Search for new OI • Continue antiretrovirals • ? Steroids- with caution

  20. References • Robertson J, Meier M, Wall J, et al. Immune Reconstitution Syndrome in HIV: Validating a Case Definition and Identifying Clinical Predictors in Persons Inititiating Antiretroviral Therapy. Clinical Infectious Diseases 2006; 42(11): 1639-46. • Ratnam I, Chiu C, Kandala N-B and Easterbrook PJ. Incidence and Risk Factors for Immune Reconstitution Inflammatory Syndrome in an Ethnically Diverse HIV Type 1-Infected Cohort. Clinical Infectious Diseases 2006; 42: 418-427. • Hirsch H, Kaufmann G, Sendi P and Battegay M. Immune Reconstitution in HIV-Infected Patients. Clinical Infectious Diseases 2004; 38(8)” 1159-1166.

More Related