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SARCOIDOSIS SARCOIDOSIS Definition: Idiopathic systemic disorder characterized by accumulation of lymphocytes and monocytes in many organs forming noncaseating, epitheloid granuloma and subsequent conformational changes in the involved organs Etiology: unknown Extent of involvement : systemic Clinical course : variable from asymptomatic disease with spontaneous resolution to progressive disease with organ system failure Symptoms: dependent on site of involvement Epidemiology • Common in : N. Europe (especially Scandinavia, Ireland, Great Britain), N. America, and Japan • Low incidence: China, India, Africa, Russia • Peak age of incidence: 20’s and 30’s • Sex prevalence : women > men • In USA : blacks > whites • Worldwide: 80% of affected patients are white Etiopathogenesis Genetic susceptibility Environmental factors •Triggers an immune response (Th type 1) Genetic factors • • • • • Prevalence in certain race Familial clustering HLA -A1, -B8, and -DR3 HLA B22 in Italians HLA DR-17 good prognosis in Scandinavians; protracted course with DR 15 and 16 • DR5j Japanese patients have poor prognosis • Negative association: HLA B12 and -DR4 Environmental agents • 1969 Mitchell and Reese - ? Infectious agent • Non-infectious agents ? Aluminum, berrylium etc. • Mycobacterial ? Granulomatous reaction • T cells predominantly CD4 accumulate • Releases IFN-gamma, IL-2 and other cytokines • Macrophages are recruited and release its own inflammatory mediators (TNF, IL12, IL15, growth factors) • CD45RO + Th1 type lymphocyte is activated • Granuloma formation Signs and Symptoms • Depend on the site • Fever, fatigue, weight loss, arthralgias (1/3) – Persistent fever seen in liver involvement • Peripheral lymphadenopathy usually asymptomatic – Cough and dyspnea less often seen SARCOIDOSIS Systemic Involvement • Lung lesions – 95% • Thoracic lymph nodes – 50% • Skin lesions – 30% • Eyes – 30% SARCOIDOSIS Systemic signs • Hilar adenopathy on chest x-ray • Lung infiltrate • Erythema nodosum • Arthritis Lung involvement • • • • In 90% - 95%of cases Dyspnea, dry cough, and chest pain (1/3) Primarily involves the parenchyma Lymph node involvement, and airway lesions (larynx, trachea and bronchi) may also be involved; 20% asthma-like • Mediastinal adenopathy on routine x-ray – Bilateral hilar and right paratracheal adenopathy universally seen Lung involvement • Pulmonary infiltrate may have a diffuse, fine, ground-glass appearance – Fibrosis, cystic changes, and cor pulmonale in late progressions • Uncommon manifestations include pleural effusion, pleural thickening, pneumothorax • cavity formation, lymph node (LN) calcification Radiographic stages • Stage 0, no intrathoracic finding • Stage 1 – Bilateral hilar adenopathy, often accompanied by paratracheal node enlargement – 80% has regression of hilar nodes in 1-3 years • Stage 2 – Bilateral hilar adenopathy and interstitial infiltrates (upper lung zone more than lower) – Mild to mod symptoms – can undergo spontaneous resolution • Stage 3 – Interstitial disease with shrinking hilar nodes, upper lung zone interstitial opacities • Stage 4 – Advanced fibrosis CXR Findings • Stage 1- Bilateral hilar adenopathy (80% resolution) • Stage 2- Hilar adenopathy + parenchymal infiltrates (50% resolution) • Stage 3- Parenchymal infiltrates (30% resolution) • Stage 4- Advanced fibrosis Sarcoidosis stage 1 CT Scan • Mediastinal and hilar adenopathy • Mid to upper lung predominance • Nodules along brochi, vessels or subpleural • Consolidation or ground glass opacity • Fibrosis with distortion of lung architecture • Stage I • Stage II • Stage III • Stage IV Studies to evaluate pulmonary sarcoidosis • Imaging study with CXR, CT • Lung function tests – restrictive pattern, reduction in DLCO, endobronchial sarcoidosis presents obstructive pattern • Radiotracer scanning – staging the alveolitis in interstitial lung disease, unclear role • Broncho-alveolar lavage (BAL) – adjunctive measure to support the diagnosis. CD4:CD8 ratio • These support the diagnosis but not confirmatory • Differ.diagnosis of pulmonary involvement – hypersensitivity pneumonitis, eosinophilic granuloma, collagen vascular disease, pneumoconiosis, chronic beryllium lung dz, infections Lung Function Tests • Lung function tests show restriction, decreased compliance, and impaired diffusing capacity • Co2 retention is uncomon, but airway obstruction is common in endobronchial disease and late states with pulm. fibrosis • Serial spyrometries are important for guiding treatment Perpheral Lymph Nodes Involvement • Most common : cervical, epitrochlear, axillary, and inguinal nodes • Seen in 1/3 of patients • discrete, movable and non-tender • Do not ulcerate and form draining sinuses Myocardial involvement • Myocardial involvement 5-10% – arrhythmias, heart failure (restrictive type), conduction abnormalities – The risk of cardiac dysfunction or sudden death in these patients is low (those with positive thallium201 imaging) – endomyocardial biopsy confirms the diagnosis – need to exclude coronary artery disease Eye involvement • In 15-25% of cases : Anterior uveitis - the most common form of ocular sarcoidosis - congestion, photophobia and ocular discomfort Heerfordt’s syndrome or uveoparotid fever - anterior uveitis + parotitis, fever and facial palsy Posterior uveitis - vitreous infiltrates, choroidal nodules, periphlebitis, retinal hemorrhage, and papilledema Conjunctivitis - superficial congestion Ocular Involvement • Anterior segment lesions (30%) – Conjunctival granuloma – Lacrimal gland involvement/dry eye – Acute or chronic uveitis – lesions described as ‘mutton fat’ because they are large and greasy Ocular Involvement • Posterior segment lesions (20%) – Patchy venous sheathing – Cellular infiltrate around vessels – Chorioretinal granulonmas – Vasculitis including occlusive causing:– Neovascularisation – Infiltrate in vitreous (vitritis) including cell clumps (snowballs) Ocular Involvement Systemic steroids may be necessary in patients with posterior segment disease where vision is threatened, especially if optic nerve is involved Skin disease • In chronic sarcoidosis 1520% – plaques, papules, subcutaneous nodules – keloid formation in atrophic scars – Nasal and conjunctival mucosal granulomas may occur – erythema nodosum (EN) with fever and arthralgias seen often in Europeans; – EN + bilateral hilar lymphadenopathy = Lofgren’s syndrome, portends a good prognosis Skin disease Lupus pernio violaceous, chronic and disfiguring lesions of the ears, nose and cheeks Lupus pernio affecting the nose – a chronic progressive cutaneous sarcoid Lupus Pernio Sarcoid Dactylitis Neurologic Disease • In 5-10% of cases: Unilateral facial nerve palsy - most common Almost any structure can be involved Hypotalamus-pituitary axis involvement can cause hyperprolactinemia and diabetes insipidus. SARCOIDOSIS Systemic signs • Facial palsy • Salivary gland enlargement Joint involvement • Acute polyarthritis may be prominent – Chronic periarticular swelling and tenderness due to osseous changes in phalanges Liver and other organs • Hepatic granulomas in biopsy in 50-80% of patients with normal liver function – Hepatomegaly in < 10% – Severe liver disease and jaundice are rare manifestations • Myopathy, splenomegaly, lacrimal gland, parotid gland, bone involvement SARCOIDOSIS Investigations • Leukopenia frequent • Serum uric acid high, but gout is rare • Alkaline phosphatasis and GGT may be high if liver involved • Hypercalcemia +/- hypercalciuria due to calcitriol from macrophages • Depression of delayed hypersensitivity is characteristic: negative (or false neg) tuberculin skin test SARCOIDOSIS Investigations • Serum angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) – elevated in active sarcoidosis • Mantoux test – caution in patients who have had BCG vaccination. Test may be negative. • Lung function tests - restriction Broncho-alveolar lavage(BAL) Gallium scanning • CD4/CD8 ratio is elevated in BAL in sarcoidosis but reduced in hypersensitivity pneumonitis • whole-body gallium scanning is sensitive, but not specific – Symetric uptake in mediastinal and hilar nodes (lambda sign) and in lacrimal, parotid and salivary glands (panda sign) – Pathognomonic for sarcoidosis SARCOIDOSIS Investigations Gallium scan showing increased uptake in the lacrimal and parotid glands and pulmonary regions in a patient with active sarcoidosis Serum ACE • Serum ACE activity elevated in 40- 90% due to macrophage activity, but nonspecific since hystoplasmosis, acute milliary TB, hepatitis, and lymphomas also have this finding (5% false +) • Lacks diagnostic specificity and poor prognostic value in identifying patients with progressive disease • Tissue ACE activity is highest in sarcoid lymph nodes rather than in pulmonary tissues Kveim-Siltzbach test • Rarely used in practice • Intradermal injection of homogonized tissue of organs involved with sarcoidosis causes delayed cutaneous reaction in 4-6 weeks • Within granulomas are multi-nucleated giant cells called with stellate inclusions called asteroid bodies and laminated calcificcations called Schaumann’s bodies Kveim-Siltzbach test Questions • Do we need a biopsy to diagnose sarcoidosis? Where to biopsy? • What markers are available to follow disease progression of sarcoidosis? • What medications other than steroids are available for treatment? Biopsy • Confirmation of diagnosis – Palpable lymph nodes – Subcutaneous nodule – Cutaneous lesion – Enlarged parotid – Lacrimal gland – Transbronchial lung biopsy -> recommended site for biopsy but diagnostic yield varies Biopsy • Tissue biopsy is essential – Biopsy almost always positive if skin, lymph nodes, conjunctiva involved • Transbronchial biopsy is best initial procedure for securing histologic evidence since granulomas can be seen regardless of chest x-ray findings • Diagnosis of pulmonary sarcoidosis relies on : a) tight, well-formed granulomas and a rim of lymphocytes and fibroblasts b) perilymphatic distribution of granulomas c) exclusion of an alternative cause Pathologic DDx • Lungs • TB, atypical mycobacteriosis • Fungal : aspergillosis, crytptococcosis, histoplasmosis, blastomycosis, coccidiodomycosis • Mycoplasma • Pneumoconioses: berrylium, titanium, aluminum • Drug reactions • Hypersensitivity pneumonitis • Aspiration of foreign materials • Wegener’s granulomatosis • NSG (necrotizing sarcoid granulomatosis) Pathologic DDx • Lymph Node • • • • • • • • • TB, atypical mycobacteriosis Brucellosis Toxoplasmosis Granulocytic histiocytic necrotizing lymphadenitis (Kikuchi’s disease) Cat scratch disease Carcinoma Hodgkin’s disease Non-Hodgkin lymphoma GLUS (granulomatous lesions of unknown significance) Pathologic DDx • Bone Marrow • TB, hystoplasmosis • Hodgkin’s and NHL • Drugs • Other organs • TB, brucellosis • Giant cell myocarditis Pathologic DDX Skin • TB, atypical mycobacteriosis • Fungal infections • Reaction to foreign bodies: beryllium, zirconium, tattooing, paraffin, etc. • Rheumatoid nodules Liver • • • • TB, Brucellosis Schistosomiasis Crohn’s disease Hodgkin’s and NHL Prognosis • About 10% will have serious disability such as ocular or respiratory • Mortality < 3% – Pulm fibrosis leading to respiratory failure is most common cause of death – Also pulmonary hemorrhage from aspergilloma TREATMENT • Corticosteroids • Cytotoxic agents: methotrexate, azathioprine, chlorambucil, cyclophosphamide • Other agents : antimalarials, ketoconazole, NSAID’s • Infliximab When to treat? Criteria for institution of glucocorticoid therapy Disabling symptoms Organ dysfunction Organ derangement Fever Arhtralgias Cough Dyspnea Chest discomfort Exercise limitation Lung Eye Heart CNS Liver Enlarged LN Enlarged spleen Parotitis Cutaneous lesions Abnormal tests Hypercalcemia Progressively elevated liver enzymes Ancillary criteria Elevated levels of BAL lymphocytes Elevated ACE Abnormal gallium-67 scan To treat or not to treat... • • • • Possibility of spontaneous resolution Variable course Side effects of medications Neurologic, cardiac, and intraocular involvement generally warrants early therapy • Bottomline: there is a need for serial reevaluation Use of steroids • Acutely suppress the manifestions of the disease; QUESTIONABLE IMPACT ON LONG-TERM NATURAL HISTORY • Prednisone 0.5 to 1 mg/kg/day for 4-6 weeks and then taper over 2-3 months. Treat for a minimum of 1 year using the lowest possible suppressive dose. • Repeat if the disease reactivates. • Consider alternative modalities if steroids fail • Prevent osteoporosis Response to steroids • Generally used for skin lesions, iritis, uveitis, nasal polyps, or airway disease • Inhaled corticosteroids (?) • Systemic therapy: remission of granuloma, relief of respiratory symptoms, and improvement in CXR and lung function studies • Relapse after steroid withdrawal > 1/3 within 2 years Indicators of Sarcoid Activity • • • • • • • Worsening clinical features Worsening symptoms Lung function deterioration Elevated Serum Ca++ Elevated serum ACE level Gallium scanning positivity increases Worsening evidence of alveolitis in BAL Treatment with Cytotoxic Drugs • Methotrexate 10-15 mg/week; can be used solely for cutaneous and musculoskeletal symptoms. • Systemic sarcoidosis refractory to steroids • Cutaneous sarcoidosis after relapse Treatment with Cytotoxic Drugs • Methotrexate toxicity: Hypersensitivity pneumonitis and hepatotoxicity • Appear to be limited with the use of folic or folinic acid • Avoid in patients with significant renal failure Alternative Regimens • Azathioprine 50-150 mg/day +/- prednisone • Chlorambucil +/- prednisone • Cyclophosphamide +/- prednisone • Hydroxychloroquine 200-400 mg/day • Infliximab- some benefit in refractory disease Treatment of Complications • Bronchiectasis and its complications : - antibiotics, antifungal (aspergilloma) - surgical resection and embolization for hemoptysis • Osteoporosis prevention: vitamin D, calcium, nasal calcitonin, bisphosphonate • Pulmonary rehab, O2, lung transplantation