Transplant Center, Transplant Infectious Disease and Compromised Host Service, Infectious Disease Division, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02114, USA.
Liver Transpl. 2011 Nov;17 Suppl 3:S34-7. doi: 10.1002/lt.22378.
(1) Why do we need to know anything about these patients? Regardless of their specialties, physicians are increasingly confronted with the side effects of therapies that cause varying degrees of immunosuppression: chemotherapy and stem cell transplantation for cancer, solid organ transplantation, and therapies for autoimmune and rheumatological diseases. The management of these patients is increasingly being returned to community-based physicians. The infectious disease clinician is faced with major challenges. (2) The possible etiologies of infections are diverse; they range from common bacterial and viral pathogens that affect the entire community to opportunistic pathogens that are clinically significant only for immunocompromised hosts. (3) Inflammatory responses are impaired by immunosuppressive therapy, and this results in diminished clinical and radiological findings. Thus, an early diagnosis is much more difficult, but it is the key to successful therapy. Invasive diagnostic procedures are often required. (4) Antimicrobial therapies are often more complex in these patients versus other patients because of the urgency of empiric therapy and the frequency of drug toxicity and drug interactions. (5) Drug interactions and drug toxicity are common. The initiation or cessation of antimicrobial therapies may alter the levels of calcineurin inhibitors, antifungal agents, and other drugs. (6) Graft rejection and graft-versus-host disease may be confused with infections. (7) New pathogens and new manifestations of infections in compromised hosts are also problems: a Pathogens common to individuals with prolonged defects in their cellular immune function (human immunodeficiency virus) and to neutropenic hosts [Rhodococcus, Cryptosporidium, and Penicillium species; Mycobacterium species (eg, Mycobacterium avium complex); and Scedosporium] have been identified in transplant recipients. b Antimicrobial resistance is a major problem [vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus; methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus; Pseudomonas, Stenotrophomonas, and Burkholderia species; fungi (both yeasts and molds); and ganciclovir-resistant cytomegalovirus]. c There are few therapies for newer viral pathogens (eg, human herpesvirus 6, human herpesvirus 8, and BK virus) and common respiratory viruses (eg, respiratory syncytial virus, adenoviruses, and Metapneumovirus). d Patients from endemic regions may have parasites (eg, Chagas disease and Leishmania).
(1) 为什么我们需要了解这些患者的情况?无论其专业如何,医生都越来越多地面临各种程度免疫抑制治疗的副作用:癌症的化疗和干细胞移植、实体器官移植以及自身免疫和风湿性疾病的治疗。这些患者的管理越来越多地回归到社区医生手中。传染病临床医生面临着重大挑战。(2) 感染的可能病因多种多样;它们从影响整个社区的常见细菌和病毒病原体到对免疫功能低下宿主具有临床意义的机会性病原体不等。(3) 免疫抑制治疗会损害炎症反应,导致临床和影像学发现减少。因此,早期诊断更加困难,但这是成功治疗的关键。通常需要进行侵入性诊断程序。(4) 与其他患者相比,这些患者的抗菌治疗通常更为复杂,因为需要进行经验性治疗,并且药物毒性和药物相互作用的频率更高。(5) 药物相互作用和药物毒性很常见。启动或停止抗菌治疗可能会改变钙调神经磷酸酶抑制剂、抗真菌药物和其他药物的水平。(6) 移植物排斥和移植物抗宿主病可能与感染混淆。(7) 新病原体和感染在免疫功能低下宿主中的新表现也是问题:a 长期存在细胞免疫功能缺陷(人类免疫缺陷病毒)和中性粒细胞减少宿主[罗红霉素、隐孢子虫和青霉菌属;分枝杆菌属(如鸟分枝杆菌复合体);和 Scedosporium]的个体中已发现病原体。b 抗菌药物耐药性是一个主要问题[万古霉素耐药肠球菌;耐甲氧西林金黄色葡萄球菌;假单胞菌、嗜麦芽窄食单胞菌和伯克霍尔德菌属;真菌(酵母和霉菌);和更昔洛韦耐药巨细胞病毒]。c 新型病毒病原体(如人类疱疹病毒 6、人类疱疹病毒 8 和 BK 病毒)和常见呼吸道病毒(如呼吸道合胞病毒、腺病毒和副流感病毒)的治疗方法很少。d 来自流行地区的患者可能有寄生虫(如恰加斯病和利什曼病)。