Approach to Pulmonary Problems of Immunosuppressed Patients

Preview:

DESCRIPTION

Approach to Pulmonary Problems of Immunosuppressed Patients. Dr.Özlem Özdemir Kumbasar. Pulmonary complications are frequent and life-threatining problems in immunocompromised patients. Early diagnosis for optimal treatment is very important. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

1

Approach to Pulmonary Problems of Immunosuppressed Patients

Dr.Özlem Özdemir Kumbasar

2

Pulmonary complications are frequent and life-threatining problems in immunocompromised patients.

Early diagnosis for optimal treatment is very important.

Empirical therapy should be started as soon as possible for most of the patients.

3

The number of immunosuppressed patients has increased recently: Neutropenia following cancer chemotherapy Hematological malignancy Solid organ transplantation Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation Immunosuppressive treatments for auto-

immune diseases HIV infection …………

4

Rapid diagnosis is necessary because of high mortality.

To obtain an etiological diagnosis is usually difficult and sometimes requires invasive diagnostic methods.

5

To obtain an etiological diagnosis is difficult. Because: Clinical findings may be silent Clinical picture is nonspecific Infectious and non-infectious diseases

can be seen together More than one infectious agent may be

responsible for the pulmonary problem

6

Sometimes invasive diagnostic methods are necessary. But, usually these procedures are difficult for these patients: General condition of the patient? Respiratory failure? Thrombocytopenia?

7

Approach to Pulmonary Complications in an Immunosupressed Patient Clinical evaluation Radiologial findings

Empirical treatment Diagnostic tests

8

Clinical Evaluation Type of imunosuppression

Neutropenia Humoral immunodeficiency Cellular immunodeficiency

9

Neutropenia Gram-negative rods S.aureus Coagulase-negative staphylococci Viridans streptococci Aspergillus

10

Neutropenia Long lasting profound neutropenia:

Fungi Multiresistent gram negative rods (P.aeruginosa,

S.maltophilia) and other bacteria P.jiroveci Viruses ……………

Noninfectious diseases Alveolar bleeding COP Lesions due to chemo- or radiotherapy Malign infiltration ……………

11

Humoral immunosuppresion Pneumococcus H.influenzae

12

Cellular immunosuppression M.tuberculosis P.jiroveci Legionella Nocardia Nontuberculous mycobacteria Fungi Viruses

13

Clinical evaluation Medical history

Type, intensity and duration of immunosuppression

Previous treatments Prophylaxis CAP? HAP? Condition of the hospital

14

Clinical evaluation Timing of the complication

HSCT SOT

15

Timing HSCT

Preengraftment phase (0-30days) Bacteria, Candida, Aspergillus DAH, IPS, engraftment syndrome

Early postengraftment phase (30-100days) CMV, PCP, Aspergillus IPS

Late posttransplant phase (>100days) CMV, VZV, community acquired viruses,

pneumococcus, H.influenzae, tuberculosis BOOP PTLD BO

16

Timing SOT

0-1 month: HAP Fungi

1-6 months: Aspergillus PCP CMV, other viruses Nocardia

>6 months: CAP Tuberculosis

17

Clinical evaluation Clinical behavior of the complication

Acute Bacteria Viruses PCP (nonHIV patients) Pulmonary edema, DAH, PTE….

Subacute/chronic Aspergillus CMV Nocardia Tuberculosis

18

Symptoms Symptoms are usually nonspecific

Cough Fever Dyspnea Skin lesions-bacteria, fungi

Nodules-Aspergillus, Nocardia Invasive sinusitis-mucor, Aspergillus, Fusarium Corioretinitis-CMV Brain abscess-Nocardia, Aspergillus,

Pseudomonas, Toxoplasma

19

Radiological findings To evaluate radiological clues is

vey important for planning rapid and optimal empirical therapy

The main radiological patterns: Focal infiltrate-consolidation Nodular infiltrates Diffuse interstitial infiltrates

20

Additional radiological findings Cavitation Pleural effusion Atelectasis Lymphadenopathy Pneumothorax

21

Acute/focal infiltrates Bacteria Aspergillus Legionella

Subacute-chronic/focal infiltrates Aspergillus Nocardia M.tuberculosis, MAI

22

Acute/nodular(+cavity) infiltrates Bacterial lung abscess Legionella

Subacute-chronic/nodular (+cavity) Tuberculosis Nocardia Aspergillus Cryptococcus

23

Acute/diffuse interstitial infiltrates CMV P.jiroveci

Subacute-chronic/diffuse intertitial CMV P.jiroveci RSV Miliary tuberculosis

24

25

26

27

28

29

Noninfectious disorders Diffuse

Pulmonary edema BOOP-COP NSIP LIP Drug induced pneumonitis Lymphangitic metastasis DAH IPS Radiation toxicity PAP

30

Noninfectious disorders Nodular + cavity

Malignancy Septic embolism Kaposi sarcoma Posttransplant lymphoprolipherative

disorder

31

Noninfectious disorders Focal

BOOP-COP Radiation toxicity Pulmonary embolism and infarctus Phantom tumor Primary/metastatic tumor Atelectasis Kaposi

32

33

Computed tomography detects pulmonary iniltrates earlier than chest x-ray.

CT gives valuable information about characteristics of the pulmonary infiltrate. The diagnosis of pulmonary aspergillosis,

PCP, CMV pneumonia could be suspected from the typical CT findings.

34

CT findings of invasive pulmonary aspergillosis Single or multiple nodules Mass like appearence Consolidation-especially pleural based,

wedge shaped Halo sign Cavitation Air-crescent sign

35

36

37

38

39

Similar BT findings may be seen in other invasive fungal infections, nocardiosis.

40

Halo sign- IPA->%60 (early finding) Pulmonary zygomycosis-%25

41

Reverse halo sign Central ground-glass opacity,

surrounding consolidation Reverse halo sign may be seen in

COP

42

43

189 patients with fungal pneumonia Reverse halo sign in 8 patients (7-

zygomycosis; 1 aspergillosis) Reverse halo sign was detected in

19% of patients with zygomycosis and <1% of aspergillosis.

44

PCP-CT findings: Ground glass opacities Interlobular septal thickening Cystic lesions

45

PCP

46

OP

47

48

49

50

51

52

Recommended