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University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health “55 year old female with acute respiratory illness” Barb Stowe-Carpenter, M.D. Professor of Medicine Department of Medicine / General Internal Medicine Primary Care Conference Presentation Wednesday, June 14, 2006 1 Disclaimer • I have not received research support from pharmaceutical companies. • I am not a consultant or paid speaker for any pharmaceutical companies. 2 Learning Objective • Review Nontuberculous mycobacterial diseases 3 March 2006 55 yo female presents in March 2006 with acute respiratory illness Patient was in Bahamas had 5d T>101, pleuritic chest pain, productive cough with some blood, marked dyspnea In ER found to be hypoxic O2 Sat 85%, WBC 16,000 Chest x-ray showed mixed interstitial and parenchymal disease In right lung and left lung base 4 Past Medical History 2002 • s/p partial colectomy for ruptured appendix or diverticula and left ovariectomy • Abnormal CT of lung noted at preop • Over the course of the next two years, fluctuating pulmonary nodules and interstitial lung disease, emphysema changes with apical bleb • Only symptom was DOE on two flights (-) PPD (-) sputum x3 5 Past Medical History 2002 • 25 py smoking history, no smoking in 10 years • FEV1 2.59 FVC 3.85 FEF 25-75% 38% • DLCO 57% • pH 742, pCO2 36, pO2 62 • Bronchoscopy and washing for AFB and culture MAC • Treatment was begun Azithromycin, rifabutin, ethambutol • Stayed on three months and discontinued because of losing job 6 NG 7 02/23/2006 8 02/24/2006 9 04/25/2006 10 RS 11 03/27/2006 12 05/11/2006 10/07/2003 13 MAI Table 1 ©2006 UpToDate® 14 Epidemiology • Sources Most NTM organisms have been isolated from water and soil Animal to human transmission is not an issue Human to human transmission is rare • Prevalence MAC 1.1/100,000 15 Clinical Presentation and Diagnostic Criteria 1. Chronic Pulmonary Disease 2. Lymphadenitis 3. Skin and soft tissue infection 4. Disseminated Disease 16 Chronic Pulmonary Disease • Generally older – Common Symptoms: Chronic cough Sputum production Fatigue – Other Symptoms: • Malaise Dyspnea Fever Hemoptysis Weight loss Chest pain NTM often occurs in the context of pre-existing lung disease especially COPD, bronchiectasis, pneumonoconiosis, cystic fibrosis, previous TB 17 Chronic Pulmonary Disease (cont’d) • MAC—3 major clinical presentations 1. Disease in middle age or elderly male • • +/- Etohic and/or smoker with underlying lung disease Looks like TB with upper lobe infiltrates and cavities, cough, weight loss 2. Disease in Areas of Bronchiectasis 3. Disease associated with nodular reticular pattern or interstitial lung disease in nonsmoking women >50 *Solitary nodules and dense consolidation have been described 18 Chronic Pulmonary Disease (cont’d) • Colonization is quite rare • Contamination and transient infection does occur • HRCT has been instrumental in defining disease and showing that there is slow progression 19 Table 2 ©2006 UpToDate® 20 Lymphadenitis • Usually in children 1-5 years old • 80% is MAC • Unilateral 95% • Rare systemic symptoms • Nodes enlarge rapidly • Sinus tracts and fistulas develop with prolonged drainage 21 Skin and Soft Tissue Infection • Usually M. fortuitum, M absessus, M. marinum, M. ulcerans • “swimming pool granulara” fish tank granuloma • Bursa joints tendon sheaths and bones can also be infected. These can be nosocomial or from contamination in the environment 22 Disseminated Disease • Immunosuppressed—cardiac transplant, chronic steroids, leukemia • AIDS rare unless CD4<50 • 90% have prolonged fevers • Symptoms: night sweats, weight loss, abdominal pain, diarrhea, decreased WBC, anemia, increase Alk phos HSM, retroperitoneal lymphadenopathy, cough and other pulmonary symptoms 23 Treatment: Pulmonary Disease MAC Usually multi drug 1. Clarithromycin 500 mg bid or Azithromycin 250 mg q day or 500 mg tiw 2. Ethambutol 25 mg/Kg/d x 2 mo then 15 mg/Kg/d 3. Rifampin or rifabutin +/- intermittent streptomycin 2-3 mo for extensive disease 24 Treatment: Pulmonary Disease (cont’d) • Treatment recommended 12 mo post negative sputum • Cheek sputums q month • Should show clinical improvement 3-6 mo • Cultures should be negative within 12 mo • Surgery in MAC if poor response to therapy or macrolide resistance in patient with disease in 1 lobe • Susceptibility testing recommended to macrolide if previously treated on a macrolide 25 M. kansasii • Since rifampin success rate has improved (nearly 100%), surgery has no role in routine cases • Usual regimen: INH 300 mg/day, rifampin 600 mg/day, ethambutol 25 mg/Kg/day x 2 mo, then 15 mg/Kg/day x 18 mo (at least 12 mo of negative cultures) 26 Treatment: Lymphadenitis • Usually caused by MAC or M. scrofulaceum • Treat by excision 95% successful without chemotherapy 27 Treatment: Skin Tissue Skeletal Disease • Usually a combination of excisional surgery and chemotherapy (drug therapy 6-12 mo) 28 Treatment: Disseminated MAC • In AIDS—median survival 134 days, 13% alive at 1 year • Multi-drug with clarithromycin or azithromycin, ethambutol, rifabutin ( preferred because can still use indinavir), rifampin (cannot be used with protease inhibitors) 29 Prophylaxis of Disseminated Disease in AIDS • Has been shown to be effective • Development of resistance is a concern • Clarithromycin decreased incidence of disseminated disease from 16% to 6% • Rifabutin decreased incidence from 17% to 8% • Azithromycin was shown to be effective at 1200 mg/wk +/- rifabutin 30 Treatment in Rapidly Growing Mycobacterial Disease • Isolates of M. fortuitum are susceptible to Amikacin 100%, Cipro 100%, Sulfonamides 100%, Cefoxitin 80%, imipenem 100%, Clarithromycin 80%, doxycycline 50% • Isolates of M. abscessus are susceptible to Clarithromycin 100%, Clofazimine, amikacin 90%, Cefoxitin 70%, imipenem 50% • Isolates of M. chelonae are susceptible to Amikacin 80%, tobramycin 100%, clarithromycin 100%, imipenem 60%, clofazimine , doxycycline 25%, Cipro 25% • Usually causes cutaneous disease • Some minor infections resolved spontaneously or after surgical debridement 31 Treatment in Rapidly Growing Mycobacterial Disease (cont’d) • Pulmonary disease is increasingly being recognized • >60 year old female nonsmoker with underlying disease like lung damage from previous TB, GI disorders especially chronic vomiting, cystic fibrosis, bronchiectasis • Tends to be indolent 32 Drug Toxicity • GI Intolerance: clarithromycin, azithromycin, rifabutin, rifampin • Abnormal LFTs: clarithromycin azithromycin, rifabutin, rifampin, INH, ethionamide • Decreased WBC: rifabutin • Impaired visual acuity and color vision: ethambutol • Auditory and Vestibular Function: streptomycin, amikacin, clarithromycin, azithromycin • Renal Function: Streptomycin, Amakacin • Peripheral Neuropathy: Ethanbutol • Clarithromycin enhances rifabutin toxicity especially uveitis 33 Bibliography 1. UpToDate including ATS Guidelines: Diagnosis and Treatment of Disease caused by non-TB mycobacteria. 2006 2. Diagnosis and Treatment of Disease caused by Nontuberculosis mycobacteria, Am Rev Respir Dis 1990;142(4):940-53. 3. Reich, J and Johnson RE. Mycobacterium avium complex pulmonary disease. Am Rev Respir Dis 1991;143(6):1381-5. 34