Title: Viral infections in immunocompromised patients: recent developments
1Viral infections in immunocompromised
patientsrecent developments
- Dr Andrew Turner
- Clinical Virology
- Manchester Royal Infirmary
- UK
2Introduction
- Virus infections are important causes of
morbidity and mortality in immunocompromised
patients, including - Patients with primary immunodeficiency, including
Severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) - Solid organ transplant (SOT) recipients
- Haematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT)
recipients - HIV-infected patients
3Introduction
- Infections caused by CMV, HSV, VZV and EBV, and
by respiratory viruses such as RSV,
parainfluenzaviruses and influenzaviruses are
familiar - The significance of adenovirus infections is
increasingly recognised - Other viruses are of emerging significance, such
as BK virus, human herpesvirus 6 (HHV6) and human
metapneumovirus (hMPV)
4Background
- In addition to the direct consequences of virus
infection there are also indirect effects, which
may include - GvHD
- Delayed engraftment in BMT
- Graft failure
- Predisposition to bacterial and fungal infections
- association with malignancy, e.g. post-transplant
lymphoproliferative disease (PTLD)
5Background
- Immunocompromised patients are
- more susceptible to infection and disease
- More likely to develop persistent infection
- More likely to develop multiple infections,
especially patients with SCID - may develop unusual clinical manifestations, i.e.
which are not seen in immunocompetent patients
6Background
- The spectrum of viruses and the clinical
presentation may vary between different patient
groups, for example - CMV retinitis in HIV
- CMV pneumonitis in transplantation
- BK nephropathy in renal transplantation
- BK-associated haemorrhagic cystitis in HSCT
7Virus infections in HSCT
- Increased significance of virus infections
- Changes in conditioning regimes
- Increasing number of transplants
- Improved diagnostics
- Availability of additional antivirals
- Developments in T cell immunotherapy
- Will be discssed in relation to BK virus, human
herpesvirus 6 (HHV6), human metapneumovirus
(hMPV) and adenoviruses
8UK Bone marrow transplants 1996 - 2004
Data source British Society of Blood and Bone
Marrow Transplantation
9Human herpesvirus 6 (HHV6)
- HHV6 is lymphotropic
- 2 major variants, A and B
- Ubiquitous infects most people by 2 years of age
- persists in lymphocytes
- and salivary glands
10Human herpesvirus 6 (HHV6)
- HHV6 reactivates after HSCT, detectable in blood
at a median of 20 days post-Tx - HHV6 type B is commoner than type A
- HHV6 associated with encephalitis and impaired
memory, and with delayed platelet engraftment - Recent study found that plasma viraemia was
associated with - All-cause mortality
- Grade 3-4 GvHD
- Lower probability of monocyte and of platelet
engraftment - High viral load associated with risk of CNS
dysfuntion - Zerr DM et al. Clin Infect Dis 2005 40932-940
11Human herpesvirus 6 (HHV6)
- Predictive value of HHV6 viral load testing not
yet established - Asymptomatic reactivation appears to be common so
interpretation of positive results can be
problematic - Foscarnet, ganciclovir and cidofovir all have in
vitro activity and have been used for treating
patients but no controlled trial data exist
12BK virus
- A human polyomavirus
- non-enveloped, DNA virus
- Seroprevalence in adults is between 60 80
- primary infection in childhood
- latent infection in renal tubules and urothelial
cells - Reactivation, mostly asymptomatic viruria, with
decoy cells in urine
BK virus
Decoy cells
13BK virus
- BK reactivation in immunocompromised, e.g.,
pregnancy, AIDS, transplantation - BK viruria in up to 95 HSCT recipients
- BK virus causes nephropathy in renal transplant
recipients, which may be complicated by graft
loss - Associated with haemorrhagic cystitis in HSCT
14BK virus
- Detection of BK viruria has a low predictive
value for BK disease - BK viral load testing in blood may be better for
diagnosis and monitoring - BK viraemia occurs in about 1/3 HCST recipients,
typically about 40 days post-Tx - Viral load of more than 10,000 copies/ml
- associated with haemorrhagic cystitis
-
- Erard V, et al. Blood 2005 106 1130-1132
15BK virus
- Treatment of haemorrhagic cystitis is largely
supportive - Avoidance of cyclophosphamide toxicity
- Diuresis and bladder irrigation
- Platelet replacement
- Surgical intervention may be necessary
- Cidofovir active against BK virus in vitro and
accumulates in renal tissue and urine - Case series suggest cidofovir can lead to
clearance of viraemia and stabilisation of graft
in BK nephropathy but role not established in HSCT
16Human metapneumovirus (hMPV)
- Discovered in 2001
- Paramyxovirus first member of metapneumovirus
genus - Related to RSV 4 genotypes A1, A2, B1, B2 A2
is the commonest - Occurs world-wide, most individuals infected by
age 5 - Causes upper and lower respiratory tract
infections - Seasonal incidence late winter/early spring
- different genotypes may co-circulate
17Human metapneumovirus (hMPV)
- Lower respiratory tract infections mainly in very
young and the elderly - Conflicting data on significance of dual
infection with RSV - More serious infections reported in
immunocompromised patients - may be an important cause of idiopathic pneumonia
in HSCT detected in 3.8 BAL samples from HSCT
patients 4 patients died -
- Englund P, et al. Blood 2004 104 58a (abstract
189)
18Human metapneumovirus (hMPV)
- Originally identified in cell culture but
difficult to isolate - Value of serology limited by early acquisition of
infection - Detection of hMPV by immunofluoresence in
respiratory secretions may be useful depending on
availability of commercial reagents - Real time RT-PCR is the method of choice but not
widely available - Most published assays based on prototype strain
- Need to be able to detect all 4 genotypes
- No established treatment although ribavirin has
similar in vitro activity against hMPV and RSV
19Adenoviruses
- Non-enveloped, DNA viruses capsid formed by
hexons and pentons, fibres project from penton
bases - 51 serotypes grouped into 6 species (formerly
sub-groups), A to F - Primary infection with one or serotype in
childhood site of latency uncertain - Many serotypes cause disease in immunocompromised
patients - commonest are 1, 2 and 5 (species C) and 34 and
35 (species B)
20Adenoviruses
- Species Tissue tropism Serotypes
- A Gastrointestinal tract 12, 18, 31
- B Urinary tract, lung 3, 7, 11, 14, 16, 21, 34,
- 35, 50
- C Respiratory tract 1, 2, 5, 6
- D Eye, gastrointestinal 8-10, 13, 15, 17, 19,
20 - tract 22-30, 32, 33, 36-39,
- 42-49, 51
- E Respiratory tract 4
- F Gastrointestinal tract 40,41
- Leen AM, Rooney CM, Br J Haematol 2005 128
135-144
21Adenoviruses
- Adenovirus infections are common in HSCT with
reported rates of 5 29 - Incidence higher in children and time of
diagnosis is earlier than in adults (less than 30
days cf. more than 90 days) - Variation in reported rates may be due to
- Differences in patient groups (adults/children)
- Conditioning regimes
- Diagnostic tests used
- Testing protocols
- Lack of accepted case definitions for
infection/disease
22Adenoviruses
- Clinical features include
- Pneumonia
- Gastrointetsinal disease
- Hepatitis
- Haemorrhagic cystitis
- Nephritis
- Encephalitis
- Reported mortality varies from 30 50
23Adenoviruses
- Virus can be detected from numerous sites
including - Throat
- Nasopharynx and respiratory secretions
- Blood
- Stool
- Urine
- CSF
- Tissue biopsies
- Conventional culture methods are slow and have
largely been replaced by PCR (with EIA for
detection of serotype 40/41 infections)
24Adenoviruses risk factors for infection and
disease
- Chakrabarti et al (2002) studied 76 adult HSCT
recipients - Adenovirus isolated from 19.7 patients only
those receiving a T-cell depleted graft - 40 infected patients developed disease risk
factors identified were - Severe lymphopenia (ALC less than 0.3 x 109)
- Failure to reduce immunosuppression
- Positive blood PCR at diagnosis
- Chakrabarti S et al. Blood 20021001619-27.
25Adenoviruses risk factors for infection and
disease
- Lion et al. (2003) studied 132 paediatric HSCT
recipients using RT-PCR for detection of all 51
serotypes - Incidence of infection was 27
- Adenovirus DNA detectable in blood at median of
16 days post-transplant, a median of 29 days
before death in fatal cases - Subsequently studied 80 paediatric patients and
found rising viral load in faeces also predictive
of adenovirus disease - Lion et al. Blood 2003 102 1114-1120 and 2003
102 (suppl. 1) 196a (abstract)
26Adenoviruses
- Risk factors for infection
- younger age
- matched unrelated donor or mismatched donor
- total body irradiation
- adenovirus positive donor
- use of Campath or ATG
27Adenoviruses
- Risk factors for disease
- Detection of virus at multiple sites
- Moderate to severe GvHD
- Immunosuppressive therapy
- Lymphocytopenia
- Viraemia
- Rising blood viral load
- Rising faecal viral load
28Adenoviruses
- Pre-emptive treatment based on post-transplant
- surveillance
- Reduction of immunosuppression if possible
- Antiviral therapy
- Ribavirin
- Cidofovir
- Donor leucocyte infusion (DLI)
29Antiviral therapy for adenovirus infection/disease
- Ribavirin
- guanosine analogue with broad antiviral activity
- Used for treating adenovirus infection and
disease with variable results - Cidofovir
- Nucleotide analogue with potent in vitro activity
against several DNA viruses - Appears to be more efficacious in vivo than
ribavirin - Low dose regime used to avoid nephrotoxicity
- Neither agent is particularly effective for
established disease - No controlled clinical trial data exist
- may be important to determine species in case of
differences in antiviral sensitivity (Morfin F et
al. Antivir Ther 2005 10 225-229)
30Invasive adenovirus infections in paediatric HSCT
patients
- Study of 71 HSCT recipients at Royal Manchester
Childrens Hospital - Used RT-PCR based on consensus primers for the
hexon gene - Monitored blood and faeces samples weekly and
other sites as indicated - In total, 9 patients developed invasive
adenovirus infection, 3 of whom died
31Invasive adenovirus infection illustrative case
32T cell therapy for adenovirus infection/disease
- Adoptive immunotherapy with in vitro using
expanded cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) shown to
be effective for prevention and treatment of
disease due to CMV and EBV - Adenovirus-specific immune responses are less
well understood but several groups a re working
on different approaches to adenovirus-adoptive
immunotherapy
33Adenovirus-adoptive immunotherapy
Leen AM, Rooney, CM, British Journal of
Haematology 2004 128 135-144
34Recent diagnostic developments
- Real-time PCR is replacing conventional methods
of virus detection, such as shell vial culture or
CMV antigenaemia testing - Rapid (e.g. Fast TaqMan)
- Sensitive
- Accurate quantitation
- Wider use of sequencing for genotyping and
anti-viral resistance testing - Future developments include use of
- Luminex technology
- Microarrays
35Kinderscout, Derbyshire, January 2006