Title: E. Tortoli
1Clinical Features of Infections Due to
Nontuberculous Mycobacteria
Cesme Symposium of Mycobacteriology, December
10, 2004
2Nontuberculous mycobacteria
- Environmental
- Opportunistic
- About 3 new species per year
- Over 100 species, 60 of which described in the
last 15 years
3Diseases due to NTM
- Pulmonary infections
- Lymphonodal infections
- Cutaneous infections
- Osteo-articular infections
- Disseminated infections
- Sepsis
4Pulmonary disease
- The most frequent NTM disease with the main route
of infection being the inhalation - HIV-negative patients
- Disease undistinguishable from tuberculosis,
very slow progression - manifestations ranging from lack of symptoms to
cavitary disease - radiographic picture presenting fibrosis, upper
lobe cavitation, nodular or parenchymal opacity,
pleural thickening - Target elderly patients with other pulmonary
problems (silicosis, OPD, pneumoconiosis,
previous TB, bronchiectasis, cancer) - Symptoms cough, fever, weight loss, weakness,
respiratory insufficiency - AIDS patients
- Disease chest X-ray often normal or presenting
mediastinal / hilar adenopathy, rapid progression - Target patients with CD4 lt100/mL
- Symptoms cough, fever, weight loss
5Agents of pulmonary diseases
- M. avium complex
- M. kansasii
- M. xenopi
- M. malmoense
- new mycobacteria
- M. celatum
- mainly in AIDS with CD4 lt100/mL
- rifampicin resistant
- possible misdiagnosis as M. tuberculosis
- M. goodii from patients with lipoid pneumonia
- M. immunogenum isolated from aerosols of
metal-working fluids which are associated with
hypersensitivity pneumonitis
6M. xenopi TB-like pulmonary infiltrates (X-ray)
61-year male Hodgkins lymphoma in the past
7M. xenopi TB-like pulmonary infiltrates (CT scan)
61-year male Hodgkins lymphoma in the past
8M. intracellulare upper lobe pulmonary
infiltrate
67-year, female previously healthy
9M. avium massive upper mediastinum adenopathy
(CT scan)
41-year, male AIDS
10Lymphadenitis
- Scrofula disease of childhood, exceptional in
adults - Unilateral swelling of cervical lymph nodes
without pain and without thoracic involvement - Evolution with softening and fistula formation
- Oral route of infection including throat,
gingivae and lips - Surgical treatment, antimicrobial therapy
ineffective
11Agents of cervical lymphadenitis
- M. scrofulaceum, classically considered the main
responsible of scrofula - M. avium complex, the current most frequent agent
of NTM lymphadenitis - M. malmoense
- new mycobacteria
- M. bohemicum
- M. interjectum
- M. lentiflavum
- A number of pigmented slow growing new species
12Disease of skin and soft tissue
- Consequent to trauma or surgical wound (mainly
plastic or cardiac interventions) - Nodular granulomatous lesions of cutis or
subcutaneous developing in about a month and
often involving lymph nodes - Frequent dissemination with ulcer formation or
cellulitis - Almost only rapidly growing species involved
13Agents of skin and soft tissue infections
- M. abscessus
- M. chelonae
- M. fortuitum
- M. smegmatis
- new mycobacteria
- M. goodii (following pacemaker implantation and
breast plastic interventions) - M. mageritense (following liposuction)
- M. wolinskyi (following facial plastic surgery
and responsible of post traumatic cellulitis)
14M. abscessus painful red nodular lesions of the
forearm
45-year, male kidney transplanted aquarium-lover
15Bone and articular infections
- Targets synovia, tendon sheaths, bursa, bone
tissue, vertebral discus - Consequent to open fracture, penetrating trauma
or surgical wound (mainly cardiac) - Possible evolutions lost of function, swelling,
fistula or granuloma formation, osteomyelitis
and/or cellulitis, bone necrosis - Predisposing conditions chronic rheumatism and
steroid treatment
16Agents of bone and articular infections
- M. abscessus
- M. chelonae
- M. fortuitum
- M. smegmatis
- new mycobacteria
- M. goodii many cases of osteomyelitis and/or
cellulitis in young people with open fractures or
penetrating trauma - M. wolinskyi
17Disseminated infections
- Target immunocompromised patients
- AIDS, leukemia, organ transplantation, protracted
steroid treatment - Symptoms fever, weight loss, abdominal pain,
splenomegaly, diarrhea - Very frequent several years ago, their role has
been scaled down following the introduction of
HAART
18Agents of disseminated infections
- M. avium estimated to affect more than 50 of
severely immunocompromised AIDS patients not
treated with HAART - M. genavense
- Young subjects, prevalently male, with lt25 CD4/mL
- Isolated predominantly from blood but also from
lymph nodes and duodenal biopsies - Extremely rare in HIV-negative patients
- M. celatum
- Responsible of disseminated infections combined,
or not, with pulmonary disease
19Sepsis
- Several cases of catheter-related sepsis have
been reported for rapidly growing mycobacteria - M. immunogenum (bone marrow transplantation,
leukemia, pacemaker holder)
20Rare NTM-related diseases
- Genital infections
- Hepatic infections
- Ocular infections
21Conclusions 1
- In AIDS patient the large majority of the
mycobacterial infections are disseminated, their
number has dramatically decreased following the
introduction of HAART - In HIV-negative subjects
- Slowly growing mycobacteria are prevalently
responsible of pulmonary and lymphonodal disease - Rapidly growing mycobacteria are prevalently
responsible of cutaneous, osteo-articular and
septic diseases - The number of cases due to new mycobacteria is
certainly underestimated because of the
problematic identification of these strains - The role of rapid growers is more important than
commonly believed
22Conclusions 2
drug susceptibility
- Slowly growing mycobacteria
- Isoniazid and pirazinamide are not effective
- Aminoglycosides, quinolones, macrolides,
rifamycins may be effective - M. celatum is rifampin-resistant
- The species genetically related to M. simiae are
dramatically multidrug-resistant - Rapidly growing mycobacteria
- The spectrum of potentially active drugs
includes amikacin, cefoxitin, ciprofloxacin,
clarithromycin, trimetoprim-sulfametoxazole,
doxycycline, imipenem
23Conclusions 3
the ATS criteria
- Minimal requirements for diagnosing a pulmonary
infection due to NTM - Case 1. Three samples have been investigated in
the last year - 3 cultures are positive, even with negative
microscopy - 2 cultures are positive, at least one of which
with positive microscopy - Case 2. One sample only has been investigated
- Culture and microscopy are strongly positive
- Case 3. The involvement in the disease of an
agent other than a NTM cannot be excluded - The NTM has been grown from a biopsy
- The histologic picture is compatible with a
mycobacterial infection and the isolation (even
single and with low charge) has been obtained
from the sputum