Title: Diagnosis and treatment of Viral Peritonitis
1Diagnosis and treatment of Viral Peritonitis
- Bill Salzer
- University of Missouri
- 2/20/07
- salzerw_at_health.missouri.edu
2Culture Negative PD Peritonitis
- About 20 of cases are culture negative
- Causes
- Current or recent antimicrobials
- Fastidious organisms
- Chemical/inflammatory
- ?Viral
3Viral Peritonitis in PD Patients
- Not much out there
- Extensive literature search
- Consulted with the experts
- Found 3 reported cases
4Case1Striijk DG.Nephron 198644384
- 42 yo F, diabetes, failed transplant 1 year prior
- One week prior- son had a febrile, viral-like
illness - Presents with abdominal pain, cloudy fluid
- Peritoneal WBC 100-400, atypical inclusions
- Routine cultures and gram stain negative
- Dialysate grew virus on days 3-23, stool as
well - Echovirus 11- enterovirus group
- Clinically resolved by day 9
5Case 2Lewis SL. AmJKidneyDis 199117343-5
- 45 yo F, GI bleeds, interstitial pneumonitis,
prednisone - Multiple PRBC transfusions (3/87)
- 2-3 weeks- leukocytosis, LFT abnormalities
- Then 6 episodes of culture- peritonitis in 5
months - Cloudy fluid, WBCs- lymphocytes with atypicals
- Dialysate grew CMV in 9/87
- Serum CMV IgG was in 3/87, in 9/87
- 10/87, catheter changed, subsequently CMV -
6Case 3Yakulis R. ClinInfectDis1999281212-5
- 60yo F, DM, TAH for uterine mesodermal tumor-6mo
- Presents with abdominal pain, cloudy fluid
- Fluid- 100 wbc, PMN-2, lymph-64, mono-32
- Became febrile, severe abd pain, SBO, Cdiff
- Ex-lap d16- friable, necrotic omentum
- HSV on histology, no viral cultures done
- Acyclovir on d26, afebrile
- Died d 30
7Viral peritonitis- Cases in review
- Case 1 Echovirus 11
- Mild peritonitis
- Incidental infection?
- Case 2 CMV
- Patient on prednisone
- Primary infection from transfusion
- Persisted 5-6 months
- Case 3 HSV- fatal
- Severe disease
- Recent malignancy- ? Chemo or rads
8What is a virus?
- A bag of DNA or RNA looking for a cell to infect
- Obligate intracellular parasites
- Require a cells machinery to replicate
- Most are species specific, receptors, cells
- Immune response/immunity
- Viral antigens expressed on surface of infected
cells - CMI- CD4s, CD8s, CTLs, NK cells
9Pathogenesis of Viral Peritonitis
- Infection route- nose, mouth, skin, percutaneous
- Must encounter and bind to cellular receptors
- Peritoneum- mesothelial cells, macs, WBC
- Enter via the catheter?
- Viremia with many
- Cytolytic or not
- Inflammatory response- cytokines, wbc, etc,
10Viral peritonitis- the Unknown
- Absence or proof is not proof of absence?
- Does it occur and how often?
- Culture negative, lymphocyte predominance
- Viral cultures of dialysate
- ? PCR, which ones
- We need more data!
11Varicella-Zoster Virus
- Respiratory spread (varicella)
- Incubation 10-21 days, most 14 d
- Infectivity, infectiousness
- Chicken pox
- More severe in adults, immunocompromised
- Latency in dorsal ganglion
- Reactivation- zoster (shingles)
12Herpes Zoster- Shingles
- Latent in Satellite cells,neurons of dorsal
ganglion - Reactivation- age, CMI, trauma
- Prodromal sensory symptoms
- Unilateral dermatomal vesicles
- Thoracicgt lumbargt cervical
- Trigeminal, V1- keratitis
- Complications
- Post-herpetic neuralgia
- Disseminated in compromised host
13Acute Zoster R T-7 NEJM 347341
14Varicella- Prevention
- Vaccination- childhood, susceptible adults and
teens - Schools, health care facilities
- Live, attenuated Oka strain- approved in US 1995
- Kids 1 dose, gt 12yo 2 doses 4-8 weeks apart
- 85 effective, milder disease in vaccinees
- Rash 5-15, fever
- Immunocompromised- rash 40-50
- Pre-transplant
- Pediatric dialysis patients
15Zoster Vaccine
- Live attenuated Oka strain
- Much higher titer (15X) than varicella vaccine
- Oxman NEJM 20053522271
- Adults gt 60 YO, excluded immunocompromised
- Enrolled 38,500 pts, followed 3 years
- Overall reduced zoster 51, gt70yo-38, lt70-64
- Problems
- Costly, ?third party payers
- Duration of protection?
- Response in ESRD patients
16Kaplan-Meier Estimates of the Effect of Zoster
Vaccine on the Cumulative Incidence of
Postherpetic Neuralgia (Panel A) and Herpes
Zoster (Panel B) in the Modified
Intention-to-Treat Population
Oxman M et al. N Engl J Med 20053522271-2284
17Influenza virus
- Orthomyxovirus, enveloped, 80-120nm
- Ss RNA, linear but in 8 pieces
- Types A and B, C
- Yearly epidemics in winter
- Type As- hemagglutinin (H) and neuraminidase (N)
- Recombination with animal strains in Asia?
- Antigenic Drift- minor changes in H or N year to
year - Antigenic Shift- New H or N- pandemic
- World-wide, wide spread, severe disease
18Transmission andNatural History
- Spread by virus-laden respiratory secretions from
an infected to a susceptible person - Community spread of influenza typically produces
a bell-shaped curve of reported cases and usually
lasts 6-8 weeks - Affects 15 of the US population annually
- Illness attack rate is highest in children,
ranging from 14-40 yearly - The elderly are also highly susceptible nursing
home attack rates can approach 60
Zimmerman RK. J Fam Pract 199745107-24.
19Influenza Clinical
- Incubation 1-2 days, abrupt onset of symptoms
- Fever, malaise, myalgia, headache, eye ache
- Dry cough, rhinitis, sore throat
- Pneumonia- primary viral, secondary bacterial
- COPD, Asthma, CHF exacerbation
- Myositis/rhabdo, TSS, Reyes (ASA)
- DX- clinical, antigens (respiratory), cultures
20Influenza in ESRD
- Increased risk of severe disease, complications
- Vaccinate each fall
- Response to vaccine is decreased in ESRD
- Vaccinate all staff, dialysis units etc
- ? Vaccinate all close household contacts
- ? Flu mist- live virus vaccine, intranasal
21Influenza Vaccination
- Trivalent - 2 type A and 1 type B
- Effectiveness of influenza vaccination depends
upon - degree of similarity between the virus strains in
the vaccine and circulating virus - age and immune status of the vaccine recipient
- 60-80 in healthy young adults
- 20-30 in the elderly
- 50-60 in preventing hospitalization and
pneumonia - Protection
- only when good match and circulating viruses
- annual re-vaccination required
MMWR 200049(RR-3)1-38.
22Amantadine, Rimantadine
- PO, active on influenza A only
- Blocks M2 protein-ion channel, viral uncoating
- Resistance- 1AA change in M2 transmembrane
- 2005-6 H3N2 strain- 92 resistant
- Amantadine- renal, rimantadine hepatic
- Amantadine dose must be reduced with low GFR
- Treatment and prophylaxis of influenza A
- Side effects
- CNS (AgtR)- dizzy, nervous, mental status changes
- gt in elderly, renal dysfunction- reduce dose
- Anorexia, nausea, vomiting
23Zanamivir, Oseltamivir
- Neuraminidase inhibitors- influenza A and B
- NA cleaves sialic acids- receptor for HA
- Resistance- mutation in NA or HA
- Zanamivir- inhaled powder- bronchospasm
- Oseltamivir- PO- nauseavomiting- food reduces
- No dose adjustment for patients on dialysis
- Treatment- begin ASAP- (lt36-48hours)
- Prophylaxis
- ? Bird flu- oseltamivir resistance reported
24Emergence of New Influenza A Virus Subtypes in
Humans
Gerberding, J. L. et. al. N Engl J Med
20043501236-1247
25The Two Mechanisms whereby Pandemic Influenza
Originates
Belshe, R. B. N Engl J Med 20053532209-2211
26Generation of New Influenza A Virus Subtypes with
Pandemic Potential
Gerberding, J. L. et. al. N Engl J Med
20043501236-1247
27Avian influenza
- Current human strains- H1, H2, H3
- 1997- Hong Kong- H5N1- 18 human cases, 6 deaths
- 1999- Hong Kong- H9N2- mild
- 2003- Hong Kong- H5N1- 2 CASES, 1 DEATH
- 2003- Dutch- H7N7 89 human cases, 1 death
- 03-04- Asia H5N1, high mortality (80 in Hanoi)
- 2006-At least 2 H5N1 clones circulating
- Poultry, ducks, chickens
- Affect healthy adults and children
- Possible human to human transmission-family
28Avian Influenza- 2/07
- Birds, wild and domestic- Asia, Europe, Africa
- Epidemic strain- vs others
- Human cases- Asia, Mideast, Africa
- As Of 2/07- about 250 human cases, 55mortality
- Humans- close contact with infected birds
- Healthy adults, kids- fulminant disease
- Maybe 1 documented human to human
- Vaccine development ongoing
- Drug therapy?