Title: Adenovirus and Bone Marrow Transplantation
1Adenovirus and Bone Marrow
Transplantation
- Stephen J. Chanock
- Immunocompromised Host Section
- Pediatric Oncology Branch
- National Cancer Institute
2Issues for Adenoviral Infection in the
Immunocompromised Host
- The State of the Host Immune Function
- Exposure to Primary Infection
- Multiple Serotypes Provides for Recurrent Risk
- Re-activation
- Underlying events
- New alterations in Immune function
- Co-infection
- Oncogenic Potential
3Adenoviral Serology
- Defined on the basis of standard reference panel
of sera - Primary epitope Capsid protein
- Reflects heterogeneity of Adenovirus genome
- DNA Homology Groups
- Specific serotypes are associated with specific
clinical manifestations
4Clinical Features of Infection Vary Among DNA
Homology Groups
- A URI, Tonsillopharyngitis
- B Hemorrhagic Cystitis, Respiratory Tract
- C Endemic URI, Tonsillopharyngitis
- D Keratoconjunctivitis (epidemic)
- E Conjunctivitis, Pharyngoconjunctival Fever
- F Gastroenteritis
5Detection of Adenovirus
- Culture
- Inoculation into cell lines (i.e.A549)
- Fluorescent antibody staining
- Tissue detection
- in situ hybridization
- Southern blot
- PCR detection
6Adenovirus Infection in the Healthy Child
- gt80 between 1 and 5 years have antibody to one
or more serotypes - Most common site Upper respiratory tract
- Mild illness lasts less than 10 days
- Latency in lymphoid and renal tissue
- Common serotypes 1, 2, 3, 5 ,7 and 41
7Clinical Syndromes Associated with Adenoviral
Infection in the Normal Host
- In order of decreasing frequency
- Pharyngitis
- Conjunctivitis
- Gastroenteritis
- Pneumonia
- Hemorrhagic Cystitis (young children)
8Epidemiology of Adenoviral Infection in the
Normal Host
- Infection rate
- 40.8/100 person years, below age 1
- 14.4/100 person years, above age 10
- Acute Disease
- 5 of URI
- 8 of childhood pneumonia (3, 4 21)
- Adult pneumonia (3, 4 7)
- Subgenus 1, 2 5 particularly common during
infancy
9Definitions
- Infection - Isolation of adenovirus from sterile
(excluding gastrointestinal tract) - Disease - Positive culture from sterile site,
- Typical adenoviral nuclear inclusion
-
- Clinical signs and symptoms
-
10Clinical Syndromes Associated with Adenoviral
Infection in the Immunocompromised Host
- Disseminated disease (including two or more of
each of below) - Pneumonia
- Fulminant hepatits/pancreatitis
- Colitis/gastroenteritis
- Hemorrhagic cystitis
- Encephalitis (rare)
11Distinct Serotypes Cause Disease in the
Immunocompromised Host
- Serotypes 5, 11, 34 35 commonly isolated from
immunocompromised adults - Series of 46 patients with Adeno 35
- 36 AIDS
- 5 BMT
- 1 Renal transplant recipient
- 1 SCID
- 3 Healthy
12Lessons Learned from Patients with Primary or
other Secondary Immunodefciencies
- Sporadic neonatal adenoviral pneumonia is severe
but localized outbreaks have been reported - SCID population at high risk- even with benign
serotypes Severe morbidity and mortality - DiGeoge syndrome-case reports of fatal hepatic
necrosis - Solid organ transplant-
- Infection of transplanted organ
- Source reactivation and donor
- AIDS patients-
- Co-infection with other pathogens
- Diversity of serotype isolated
13Adenovirus Infection and BMT
- Mortality
- 18-60 (Hierholzer 1992)
- Risk factors
- Age
- GVHD
- Conditioning
- T-cell depletion/HLA
-
14Adenoviral Infection in BMTX
- Risk for Adverse Outcomes
- Multiple sites (disseminated)
- Serotype
- 11, 34, 35 for hemorrhagic cystitis
- 2,5,7,9 for pulmonary disease in young patients
- Co-infection with Opportunistic Infection
-
15Adenoviral Infections in BMT Patients
- Adenoviral infection 20.9, adenoviral disease
6.5 in 201 BMT patients (Flomenberg 1994) - Risk Factors for Disease
- Isolation of virus from multiple sites
- Moderate to severe aGVHD
- Infection more common in children (31.3 vs.
13.6) - Time of onset of post transplant
- Pediatric, mean lt30 days
- Adults, mean gt 90 days
- ??Significance of primary infection
16Adenoviral Infections in BMT Patients
- 1300 adult patients (Mirza 1995)
- Allogeneic 6 vs. 1 in autologous
- GVHD not a risk factor
- 40 fatal, 50 self-limited , 10 asymptomatic
- Incidence 4.9 in 1051 (Shields 1985)
- 9.8 death rate due to adenovirus
- GVHD only risk factor for occurrence
- Incidence 13.5 among 74 T-cell-depleted
allogenic BMT patients (Blanke 1995) - 50 adenovirus-related mortality
- GVHD and co-infection non-contributory
17Adenoviral Infections in BMT Pediatric Patients I
- 96 children reported by Wasserman (1988)
- Adenovirus in 18, more common than adults
- 20 with GVHD and 17 without GVHD
- Ad12, uncommon in normal host, recovered from 4
patients - Major risk factor preconditioning regimen
18Adenoviral Infections in BMT Pediatric Patients II
- Hale (1999)Retrospective study of 206 children
- 6 Adenovirus infection
- Restricted to Hematologic Malignancies
- Detection Median of 54 d (-4 to 333)
- Type of graft
- Mismatch/MUD 11.6
- HLA-match sib 7.7
- Autograft 1.1
19Adenoviral Infections in BMT Pediatric Patients
III
- Hale et al. (cont.)
- Most Common Hemorrhagic Cystitis
- 7/13 died (only 1 clearly due to adenovirus)
- Sites involved 1.77 (range 1-4)
- Risk factors
- TBI OR14.11 (by univariate and multiple
logistic regression analysis) - Type of graft OR9.92 (univariate only)
20Hemorrhagic Cystitis and Adenovirus Infection in
BMT
- Major complication in BMT
- Compounded by Cyclophosphamide
- Serotypes 11 and 35 (propensity for urinary
tract) - Ad35 infects neonates and establishes latency
until immunosuppression - Screening- Unproven
-
21Primary Disease vs. Reactivation
- Reactivation has been implicated in the majority
of disease - Incidence of primary infection may be higher in
children - Case reports of primary infection and fatal
adenoviral disease in infants - Might expect an increased incidence of primary
infection as more infants undergo BMT
22Source of Adenovirus in BMT Patients
- Primary Infection
- Case reports document fatal primary infection
- Will primary infections increase as more infants
receive BMT? - Re-infection
- Nosocomial transmission documented
- Altered susceptibility to re-infection?
- Reactivation
- Incidence of viral gastroenteritis as high as 15
to 20
23Treatment of Adenovirus Infection in BMT
- Treatment options are limited because no
effective therapy is available - AntiviralsPoor record, occ. anecdotal case
- Ribavirin (intravenous)
- Ganciclovir
- Intravenous IgG
- Donor pool may not have sufficient serotype
specific antibodies (i.e., 11, 35)
24Adenoviruses in HIV Infection
- 1. Not a major source of morbidity and mortality
- Chronic diarrhea
- 2. Increased excretion in urine (esp serotype
35) - 12 overall- mainly Group B (
- Question of recombination 7 and 34 (closely
related serotypes) - 3. New serotypes identified
-
25Issues for Adenoviral Infection in the
Immunocompromised Host
- The State of the Host Immune Function
- Exposure to Primary Infection
- Multiple Serotypes Provides for Recurrent Risk
- Re-activation
- Underlying events
- New alterations in Immune function
- Co-infection
- Oncogenic Potential
26Future Issues
- Development of new antiviral therapies
- Use of cytotoxic lymphocytes
- (e.g., EBV, CMV)
- Early detection
- Adenovirus PCR/Antigen detection
- Host susceptibility factors
- Genetic
- Therapy-induced
27Adenovirus Infection in Gene Transfer Protocols
- Response and Site of Inoculation
- High Risk Sites
- Pulmonary
- Hepatic
- State of the Host Immune Function
- Undergoing Change
- Iatrogenic vs Disease-Related
- Recombination events between closely related
serotypes -
-