Zoonoses articles
Volume 18, Number 8–August 2012
Volume 18, Number 8—August 2012
Dispatch
Severe Human Granulocytic Anaplasmosis Transmitted by Blood Transfusion
Article Contents
Abstract
A 36-year-old woman acquired severe human granulocytic anaplasmosis after blood transfusion following a cesarean section. Although intensive treatment with mechanical ventilation was needed, the patient had an excellent recovery. Disease caused by Anaplasma phagocytophilum infection was confirmed in 1 blood donor and in the transfusion recipient.The Case-Patient
The patient's condition deteriorated further, and on September 27 she was transferred to an intensive care unit. Tachypnea (30–40 breaths/min) without hypoxia, tachycardia (120 beats/min), elevated temperature (37.8°C), and hypotension (90/60 mm Hg) were recorded at admission. Antimicrobial drug therapy was changed to imipenem, azithromycin, and vancomycin. Computed tomography scan of the chest showed consolidation in the lower right lobe. Blood cultures and other relevant microbiological tests remained negative for infectious agents. Antiphospholipid syndrome was suspected, and treatment with corticosteroids, immunoglobulins, and heparin was initiated. However, corresponding tests did not confirm the diagnosis. Drug therapy was changed to piperacillin/tazobactam, daptomycin, and azithromycin.
The fever continued, laboratory test results worsened (Table 1), and acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) developed. Bone marrow examination, performed because of persistent thrombocytopenia, showed reactive changes. Because of the febrile illness associated with laboratory indicators of inflammation, presence of thrombocytopenia, and elevation of transaminases, as well as the ineffectiveness of treatment, a working diagnosis of HGA was posed, and doxycycline was added to the treatment regimen on October 1.
The diagnosis was confirmed by demonstration of morulae on examination of whole blood smears by microscopy (Figure), by a positive PCR for DNA coding 16S rRNA of A. phagocytophilum in whole blood, and later by seroconversion to Anaplasma antigens (Table 2). Morulae and A. phagocytophilum DNA were also detected in bone marrow biopsy samples (6,7). In addition, all samples positive by PCR were tested for the groESL operon of A. phagocytophilum, and reliability of products was confirmed by direct sequencing. On the second day of doxycycline treatment, respiratory distress progressed further and artificial ventilation was necessary. However, the next day the patient experienced dramatic improvement; on the fourth day after initiation of doxycycline, the breathing tube was removed, and her later clinical course was uneventful. She was discharged at the end of a 14-day treatment course of doxycycline, and at follow-up visits she reported no difficulties.
Because the patient denied having been bitten by ticks, had not left her house for several weeks before admission to the hospital on August 26 because of a complicated pregnancy, was continuously hospitalized for 30 days before the onset of fever on September 25, and received transfusions during her hospital stay, transfusion-associated transmission of HGA was suspected and searched for. Blood taken from the patient for pretransfusion cross-matching on September 15 tested negative by PCR and by immunofluorescence assay for antibodies against A. phagocytophilum. Stored plasma samples from all 6 blood donors, frozen on the day of donation (2 donated blood on August 10, 4 on September 7, 2010), were tested for antibodies against A. phagocytophilum and the presence of corresponding DNA. The results were negative for all but 1 donor. This 42-year-old man, a regular blood donor who lived in a region where sporadic HGA cases had been established (8), reported being an outdoor person who received several tick bites every year (the most recent in July 2010). He donated blood twice in 2010, on May 12 and September 7; blood obtained at the latter visit was transfused as packed erythrocytes to the patient reported here. At the end of August, a self-limited illness had developed in the donor with fever (39°C), myalgia, and arthralgia (Table 2).
Conclusions
In our patient, pregnancy, cesarean section, blood loss after the operation, an additional surgical procedure, corticosteroid treatment, and an interval of 6 days before correct diagnosis and treatment could have contributed to the severity of her illness. It is also possible that infection acquired through transfusion results in a more severe illness than infection after the bite of an infected tick. However, only a few reports of presumed transmission of A. phagocytophilum from sources other than ticks have been published (3–5,12). In a previous single report of transmission by blood transfusion (5), the evidence that HGA was acquired through the transfusion was convincing, but the report could not prove that the patient was free of A. phagocytophilum infection beforehand.
For the patient reported here, findings exclude tick transmission and convincingly favor transfusion-associated transmission of A. phagocytophilum. The latter was confirmed by the presence of A. phagocytophilum DNA in stored plasma specimens of 1 of the 6 blood donors. This donor, who had negative test results for the bacteria 4 months earlier, reported having had an acute self-limited febrile illness 2–3 weeks before blood donation. This infection probably resulted in severe acute HGA in the patient reported here.
A. phagocytophilum remains viable under refrigeration conditions at 4°C for up to 18 days, enabling potential transmission of infection by blood transfusion (13). This case of transfusion-associated HGA in Europe is practical evidence of such transmission and corroborates findings from the United States (5) that transfusion-associated febrile illness with thrombocytopenia could be caused by Anaplasma infection. Because transfusion-associated HGA appears to be very rare, routine screening of blood donors for the presence of A. phagocytophilum genome is not likely to be cost-effective. Nevertheless, when febrile illness associated with leukopenia or thrombocytopenia develops in a patient after transfusion, testing for infection with A. phagocytophilum may be beneficial.
Dr Jereb is a consultant in infectious diseases and intensive care medicine in the Department of Infectious Diseases, University Medical Center Ljubljana. His research interests involve severe infectious diseases and new laboratory markers of bacterial infections.
References
- Chen SM, Dumler JS, Bakken JS, Walker DH. Identification of a granulocytotropic Ehrlichia species as the etiologic agent of human disease. J Clin Microbiol. 1994;32:589–95.PubMed
- Petrovec M, Lotric-Furlan S, Avsic-Zupanc T, Strle F, Brouqui P, Roux V, Human disease in Europe caused by a granulocytic Ehrlichia species. J Clin Microbiol. 1997;35:1556–9.PubMed
- Zhang L, Liu Y, Ni D, Li Q, Yu Y, Yu KY, Nosocomial transmission of human granulocytic anaplasmosis in China. JAMA. 2008;300:2263–70. DOIPubMed
- Horowitz HW, Kilchevsky E, Haber S, Aguero-Rosenfeld M, Kranwinkel R, James EK, Perinatal transmission of the agent of human granulocytic ehrlichiosis. N Engl J Med. 1998;339:375–8. DOIPubMed
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Anaplasma phagocytophilum transmitted through blood transfusion—Minnesota, 2007. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep. 2008;57:1145–8.PubMed
- van Dobbenburgh A, van Dam AP, Fikriq E. Human granulocytic ehrlichiosis in western Europe. N Engl J Med. 1999;340:1214–6. DOIPubMed
- Bakken JS, Krueth J, Wilson-Nordskoq C, Tilden RL, Asanovich K, Dumler JS. Clinical and laboratory characteristics of human granulocytic ehrlichiosis. JAMA. 1996;275:199–205. DOIPubMed
- Lotrič-Furlan S, Rojko T, Petrovec M, Avsic Zupanc T, Strle F. Epidemiological, clinical and laboratory characteristics of patients with human granulocytic anaplasmosis in Slovenia. Wien Klin Wochenschr. 2006;118:708–13. DOIPubMed
- Dumler JS, Madiqan JE, Pusterla N, Bakken JS. Ehrlichiosis in humans: epidemiology, clinical presentation, diagnosis, and treatment. Clin Infect Dis. 2007;45(suppl1):S45–51. DOIPubMed
- Brouqui P, Bacellar F, Baranton G, Birtles RJ, Bjoersdorff A, Blanco JR, Guidelines for the diagnosis of tick-borne bacterial diseases in Europe. Clin Microbiol Infect. 2004;10:1108–32. DOIPubMed
- Remy V, Hansmann Y, De Martino S, Christmann D, Brouqui P. Human anaplasmosis presenting as atypical pneumonitis in France. Clin Infect Dis. 2003;37:846–8. DOIPubMed
- Bakken JS, Krueth JK, Lund T, Malkovitch D, Asanovich K, Dumler JS. Exposure to deer blood may be a cause of human granulocytic ehrlichiosis. Clin Infect Dis. 1996;23:198. DOIPubMed
- Kalantarpour F, Chowdhury I, Wormser GP, Aquero-Rosenfeld ME. Survival of the human granulocytic ehrlichiosis agent under refrigeration conditions. J Clin Microbiol. 2000;38:2398–9.PubMed
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario