Infections in the Immunocompromised Flashcards

1
Q

What leads to someone becoming immunosuppressed?

What tends to cause infections and how can you predict them?

A

Disruption of specific defence of an organ/system

you can often predict the infection if you know the underlying disease

infections can be caused by organisms of low pathogenicity / opportunistic infections

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2
Q

What are the 2 host defences against infection?

What are the 2 types of infection

A
  1. Non-specific innate immune system
  2. Specific adaptive immune system - humoral or cellular

Infections can be congenital or acquired

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3
Q

What are the innate defences against infection?

A

Skin:

  • barriers
  • sebum
  • normal flora

Mucous membranes:

  • tears
  • urine flow
  • phagocytes

Lungs:

  • ​goblet cells
  • muco-ciliary escalator

Other:

  • interferons
  • complement
  • lysozyme
  • acute phase proteins
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4
Q

What general things can make someone more susceptible to infection?

A
  • Extremes of age
  • pregnancy
  • malnutrition
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5
Q

What happens if the normal commensal flora in the gut are altered?

A

Antibiotic treatment can kill/alter the normal commensal flora in the gut

this increases susceptibility to C. Diff and Candida spp. Infections

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6
Q

Which infections are burns patients susceptible to?

A

Infections by pseudomonas and streptococcus

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7
Q

At which stage of infection are neutrophils important?

What happens if someone was to have less neutrophils?

A

Neutrophils are important after the initial breach of innate defences

if someone has less neutrophils, they have an increased risk of contracting an infection

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8
Q

What are the 2 categories of neutrophil defects and the differences between them?

A

Qualitative defects:

  • this is when the neutrophils are present, but they don’t work properly

Quantitative defects:

  • this is when there are not enough neutrophils present to be effective
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9
Q

What are examples of qualitative neutrophil defects?

A

Neutrophils lose the ability to kill or chemotaxis

  • e.g. Inadequate signalling
  • chronic granulomatous disease
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10
Q

What infection is someone with chronic granulomatous disease more susceptible to?

A

Staphylococcus aureus infection

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11
Q

What may quantative neutrophil defects lead to?

In which patients is this seen?

A

Neutropenia

this is a lack of neutrophils

  • cancer treatment
  • bone marrow malignancy
  • aplastic anaemia from drug use
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12
Q

What is aplastic anaemia?

A

A rare disorder in which the bone marrow fails to produce enough blood cells

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13
Q

When is neutropenia particularly clinically important?

A

If neutrophil count is < 0.5 x 109

or

if neutropenia is prolonged over long periods of time

e.g. In AML patients who have neutropenia for weeks are at more risk of bacterial or fungal infections

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14
Q

What infection is particularly prominent in neutropenia patients?

A

>50% of neutropenia patients are prone to infection with high mortality

>50% of those with pseudomonas infections will die in 24 hours if they are not treated

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15
Q

What is the treatment for infection in neutropenic patients?

A

They are treated with a broad spectrum antibiotic which includes defence against pseudomonas

antipseudomonal penicillin +/- gentamicin

if first line treatment is not effective, the second line treatment is carbapenem

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16
Q

What opportunistic infection are neutropenia patients more susceptible to?

A

Infections with normal flora - coagulase negative staphylococcus

this is a low pathogenicity organism which can enter the blood

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17
Q

Which bacterial infections are more prominent in neutropenic patients?

A

E. Coli, Staphylococcus aureus

look for skin infections as chemotherapy can lead to ulcers and bacteraemia

18
Q

Which fungal infections are neutropenic patients more susceptible to?

A

Candida spp. , aspergillus spp.

the spores will enter the alveoli and cause fungal pneumonitis

19
Q

Why is it important to try and prevent infections in neutropenic patients?

What treatment can be used?

A

Cancer patients may need to have chemotherapy delayed due to infection

this can worsen the cancer outcome

granulocyte stimulating factors (GCSF) are used to try and prevent immunosuppression

20
Q

What are the different types of T cell deficiencies?

A

Congenital:

  • these are rare
  • T helper dysfunction +/- hypogammaglobulinaemia

Acquired:

  • drugs e.g. ciclosporin after transplantation and steroids
  • viruses e.g. HIV
21
Q

What opportunistic bacterial infections are T cell deficient patients susceptible to?

A

Listeria monocytogenes

this grows in fridge temperatures and comes from food such as Brie cheese

mycobacteria

22
Q

Which viral infections are T cell deficient patients susceptible to?

What is the treatment?

A

Herpes viruses - herpes simplex, cytomegalovirus and varicella zoster

serological testing followed by prophylaxis and treatment with aciclovir and gangciclovir

23
Q

What fungal infections are T cell deficient patients susceptible to?

A

Candida spp. , cryptococcus spp.

new patients with HIV usually present with cryptococcus meningitis

this has a thick capsule to help prevent it from phagocytosis

24
Q

What is the difference with varicella zoster virus in a T cell deficient patient?

A

Shingles will be much more severe

this means that the skin is much more prone to secondary infection by staphylococcus aureus

25
Q

Which protozoan/parasitic infections are T cell deficient patients more susceptible to?

A

Cryptosporidium parvum and Toxoplasma gondii

26
Q

What are the characteristics of cryptosporidium parvum?

How is it treated and how long does it take to recover?

A

Oocysts are shed by cattle/humans into the water so it is spread via faecal-oral route

most patients recover after prolonged illness of up to 3 weeks

recovery takes much longer in T cell deficiencies

in most cases, only symptomatic treatment is used and antibiotics are not given

27
Q

What is meant by hypogammaglobulinaemia?

What are the 2 different types?

A

This is having an antibody level below normal

Congenital:

  • x-linked agammaglobulinaemia (rare)

Acquired:

  • multiple myeloma
  • burns
28
Q

What is the treatment for hypogammaglobulinaemia?

Which bacteria and parasites tend to cause infection?

A

It is treated with immunoglobulin to replace the antibodies

it is encapsulated bacteria that cause problems e.g. streptococcus pneumoniae

the parasite that usually causes infection is giardia lamblia

29
Q

What are the 2 forms of giardia lamblia?

What symptoms can it cause?

A

Trophozyte form:

  • this is the form of the disease which is present in the water

cystic form:

  • this is the form of the disease that is ingested
  • it has a hard shell to stop it from drying out

It causes diarrhoea, fatty stools and can cause weight loss

30
Q

What type of infections tend to be present in complement deficiency?

A

Encapsulated bacteria - complement is needed to help kill organisms

If the C5-8 section is deficient - Neisseria meningitidis is important

this is a gram negative coccus that causes meningitis

there are frequent serious S. Pneumoniae infections due to poor quality opsonisation

31
Q

What can cause splenectomy?

A

The spleen is a source of complement and antibody producing B-cells

it removes opsonised bacteria from the blood

splenectomy can be caused by:

  1. Traumatic
  2. Surgical
  3. Functional asplenia e.g. sickle cell disease
32
Q

What are the treatments for infections in splenectomy?

Which infections are common?

A
  1. S. Pneumoniae
  2. Haemophilus influenzae type B
  3. N. Meningitidis
  4. Malaria

these are mostly encapsulated organisms

these infections have high mortality and can be prevented through vaccination and prophylactic penicillin

33
Q

What are biologics and how do they work?

A

They are antibodies or other peptides

they inhibit inflammatory cytokine signals e.g. tumour necrosis factor

this inhibits T cell activation and depletes B cells

they are used in severe rheumatoid arthritis

34
Q

What are the risks associated with biologics

A
  1. Risk of tuberculosis
  2. Risk of herpes zoster
  3. Risk of legionella pneumonophilia
  4. Risk of listeria monocytogenes
35
Q

What are the 2 types of organ transplantation?

What treatment is required afterwards and why?

A

Solid organ transplants - e.g. liver in paracetamol overdose

stem cells in haematological malignancy

anti-rejection treatment is needed to suppress cell mediated immunity

this stops the effects of cytotoxic and natural killer cells

36
Q

What affects the degree of immunosuppression in organ transplants?

A

The degree of immunosuppression varies on how closely the donor and recipient are matched and the organ involved

37
Q

What are the general principles for management of infection?

A
  • Treat the known infection - need specimens from the likely site of infection to guide therapy
  • remove catheters and lines
  • reverse the defect if possible - stop immunosuppression - GCSF
  • prevention is most important i.e. hand washing
38
Q
A
39
Q

What techniques can help in prevention of infection?

A
  • Hand washing, aseptic technique, protective isolation, HEPA air filtration
  • vaccines (avoid live in T cell deficient patients as this can cause infection)
  • prophylactic antimicrobials and passive immunoglobulin
  • special diets
40
Q

In a febrile neutropenic, what treatment should be given?

A

Broad spectrum anitbiotics

piperacillin / tazobactam

41
Q

What are the stages involved in treating candida infections?

A

Start antifungal therapy and remove any lines

give liposomal amphotericin B (broad spectrum antifungal) followed by fluconazole treatment

this is an oral agent given for 2 weeks after treatment

42
Q

What is the treatment for lobar pneumonia?

A

Lobar pneumonia caused by streptococcus pneumoniae is treated with IV benzylpenicillin