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Clinical Discussant: David B. Pearse, M.D.

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Presentation on theme: "Clinical Discussant: David B. Pearse, M.D."— Presentation transcript:

1 Clinicopathological Conference   The Johns Hopkins Hospital December 1, 2009
Clinical Discussant: David B. Pearse, M.D. Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine

2 Timeline March 08: June 08: Early December 08 to early Jan 09:
SOB, cough, pul infiltrates; Idiopathic Bronchiolitis Obliterans Organizing Pneumonia (BOOP) Dxed June 08: Successfully tapered off steroids Early December 08 to early Jan 09: increasing SOB, cough bilat pul infiltrates, refractory hypoxemia corticosteroids, antibiotic started

3 Timeline Mid Jan 09: End Jan 09: Sicker Lung bx: BOOP
Febrile on 100 mg/day methylprednisilone Diffuse nodular infiltrates, LLL consolidation Severe hypoxemic respiratory failure Refractory atrial arrhythmias; death

4 Idiopathic BOOP (or Cryptogenic Organizing Pneumonia)
Middle aged or older; non or ex-smokers Subacute URI presentation Persistent cough, dyspnea, fever Patchy bilateral alveolar/interstitial infiltrates Path: organizing pneumonia with granulation tissue buds in alveoli and bronchioles No other associated diseases Cordier JF. Cryptogenic organizing pneumonia. Clin Chest Med 25: , 2004

5 Idiopathic BOOP 80% steroid responsive
1 or 2 relapses common during steroid taper but relapses remain steroid responsive do not affect overall mortality Cordier JF. Cryptogenic organizing pneumonia. Clin Chest Med 25: , 2004

6 BOOP (or Organizing Pneumonia)
Bacterial infections: Strep, Staph, Chlamydia, Legionella, Mycoplasma, Nocardia Viruses: HSV, HIV, Influenza, Parainfluenza, CMV Fungi: Cryptococcus, Pneumocystis Drugs/Toxins Connective Tissue Disease Transplantation Cordier JF. Cryptogenic organizing pneumonia. Clin Chest Med 25: , 2004

7 BOOP (or Organizing Pneumonia)
Bacterial infections: Strep, Staph, Chlamydia, Legionella, Mycoplasma, Nocardia Viruses: HSV, HIV, Influenza, Parainfluenza, CMV Fungi: Cryptococcus, Pneumocystis Drugs Connective Tissue Disease Transplantation Cordier JF. Cryptogenic organizing pneumonia. Clin Chest Med 25: , 2004

8 Approach to Patient Initial illness likely idiopathic BOOP
Consistent host and presentation Consistent transbronchial biopsy Complete response to steroid treatment

9 Approach to Patient What was the second illness in Dec 08?

10 Approach to Patient What was the second illness in Dec 08? Assuming this was a single illness………

11 Second Illness: Key Findings
Subacute presentation (2 weeks) Corticosteroid, cephalosporin- unresponsive Bilat upper lobe nodular interstitial onset Progressed to alveolar-filling process Fever despite 100 mg methylprednisilone Lung biopsy: ?BOOP

12 Differential Dx of Progressive Alveolar-Filling with Respiratory Failure
Pulmonary edema Infection Autoimmune Idiopathic Malignant

13 Differential Dx of Alveolar-Filling with Respiratory Failure
Pulmonary edema Infection Autoimmune Idiopathic Malignant Water Pus Blood Cells

14 Alveolar-Filling with Subacute Respiratory Failure
Infection Autoimmune Pulmonary hemorrhage syndromes Wegener’s Granulomatosis Microscopic polyangitis Goodpasture’s Syndrome Systemic Lupus Erythematosis Idiopathic Malignant

15 Alveolar-Filling with Subacute Respiratory Failure
Infection Autoimmune Pulmonary hemorrhage syndromes Wegener’s Granulomatosis Goodpasture’s Syndrome Systemic Lupus Erythematosis Microscopic polyangitis Idiopathic Idiopathic BOOP Eosinophilic Pneumonia Desquamative Interstitial Pneumonitis Pulmonary Alveolar Proteinosis Malignant

16 Alveolar-Filling with Subacute Respiratory Failure
Infection Autoimmune Pulmonary hemorrhage syndromes Wegener’s Granulomatosis Goodpasture’s Syndrome Systemic Lupus Erythematosis Microscopic polyangitis Idiopathic Acute Interstitial Pneumonia (Hamman Rich) Eosinophilic pneumonia Desquamative Interstitial Pneumonitis Pulmonary alveolar proteinosis Malignant Alveolar cell carcinoma lymphoma

17 Most Likely Diagnosis: Infection
Case-specific requirements for infectious agent: Able to infect with near-normal immunity Subacute (weeks) presentation Bilateral upper lobe interstitial/nodular infiltrates Exacerbated by steroids, progress to resp failure Unresponsive to typical broad-spectrum antibiotics Can have BOOP or BOOP-like pathology Not routinely cultured, culture difficult or takes time

18 Infections that Reasonably Fit
Bacteria Nocardia asteroides* Mycobacterium tuberculosis Nontuberculous mycobacteria Fungi Cryptococcus neoformans * Histoplasma capsulatum Blastomyces dermatitis Coccidioides immitis (Pneumocystis jiroveci *) Virus Cytomegalovirus * *Associated with BOOP on lung biopsy

19 Differential Dx: My Short List
Cryptococcus Nocardia Cytomegalovirus Progressive Disseminated Histoplasmosis Mycobacteria tuberculosis (or M. kansasii) (Pneumocystis)

20 If BOOP was present on lung biopsy:
Cryptococcus Nocardia Cytomegalovirus

21 If BOOP was not present on lung biopsy:
Favor Histoplasmosis because of calcified lung nodule

22 Histoplasmosis Most common endemic mycosis in US
After inhalation, transient RES dissemination Can see lower lobe calcified histoplasmoma Latent infection until immunity suppressed Upper lobe reactivation mimics TB Exacerbated by steroids, may not see granulomas Pericarditis and endocarditis with arrhythmias Dismukes et al. Disseminated histoplasmosis in corticosteroid-treated patients. JAMA 240: , 1978 Kauffman C. Histoplasmosis. Clin Chest Med 30:217-25, 2009


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