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 Zambia HIV National Guidelines
 


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 Guide Editors
 Editor In Chief
    Joel E. Gallant, MD, MPH

Pharmacology Editor
    Paul Pham, PharmD, BCPS

Zambia Guideline Team
   Peter Mwaba MMed PhD FRCP
   Alywn Mwinga MMed
   Isaac Zulu MMed MPH
   Velepie Mtonga MMed
   Albert Mwango MBChB
   Jabbin Mulwanda MMed FCS
 

 

 

Pathogens>Bacteria>
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Rhodococcus equi

Eric Nuermberger, MD
02-14-2008

  • Organism has been isolated from soil and animal feces in Zambia.
  • No published data on incidence of infection in Zambia, but several cases in HIV+ pts reported from Uganda and Zimbabwe.
  • Not commonly diagnosed in Zambia due to similarities with clinical TB presentation and difficulties with Cx and identification of the organism.
  • Rx: vancomycin not generally available, so could use PO regimen mentioned below: rifampin + either macrolide, tetracycline or fluoroquinolone.
Zambia Information Author: David Riedel, M.D.

MICROBIOLOGY

  • Pleomorphic gram-positive bacillus, weakly acid-fast
  • Grows well on ordinary media, but may be mistaken as diphtheroid contaminant
  • Rarely isolated from healthy persons, suspect immunosuppressive condition
  • Soil inhabitant; infection typically via inhalation, but may be via inoculation or ingestion
  • Recognized equine pathogen, but only 20-30% of infected humans have contact with horses

CLINICAL

  • CXR: unilobar nodular infiltrate or consolidation, often upper lobe, frequently cavitates, TB mimic; may see multilobar involvement or pleural effusion
  • High-resolution chest CT also may show ground-glass opacities, centrilobular nodules or tree-in-bud appearance
  • Dx may require invasive procedure, but blood Cx positive in up to 2/3 of HIV+ pts
  • Histopathology: dense histiocytic infiltrate with necrosis, intracellular bacteria; may see PAS+ macrophages or malakoplakia (histiocytic aggregates with basophilic cytoplasmic inclusions laminated with calcium, iron)
  • 2/3 of R. equi infections are in HIV+ pts; CD4 typically <100
  • Mortality 55% in pre-HAART era
  • Rare OI, incidence: 3/1000 in hospitalized AIDS pts

SITES OF INFECTION

  • Lung: most common site (approx 80%); often insidious fever, cough, fatigue, weight loss
  • Cutaneous: nodule, abscess, ulcer at inoculation site or with disseminated disease
  • Musculoskeletal: osteomyelitis, septic arthritis, psoas abscess
  • Adenitis: cervical, mesenteric
  • Less common: nodule or abscess in brain, liver, spleen, kidney, prostate after dissemination
  • DDx: TB, other mycobacterial infections, fungal infections, actinomycosis, nocardiosis, lung abscess, lung cancer, lymphoma, metastatic neoplasm

TREATMENT

General Principles

  • No treatment standard established
  • Susceptibility testing recommended to guide therapy and to investigate treatment failures
  • Combination therapy strongly recommended to prevent emergence of resistance
  • Begin with 2-3 parenteral agents for 2-4 wks, then change to two-drug oral regimen for at least 6 mos and 1-2 mos beyond resolution of disease
  • In largest series (ref 2), mostly pre-HAART era, 43% died of the disease or progressed despite treatment, only 15% cured
  • For pts with AIDS, relapse occurs frequently enough that lifelong suppressive therapy with 1-2 oral agents is recommended beyond treatment of active disease unless immune reconstitution achieved
  • HAART confers survival benefit
  • Consider surgical drainage or resection of large cavities or abscesses should in those who fail to respond to ABx
Parenteral agents

  • Most commonly reported: vancomycin + 1-2 of the following: carbapenem, aminoglycoside or rifampin
  • Vancomycin 1g IV bid
  • Amikacin 15 mg/kg IV qd or gentamicin 5-7 mg/kg IV qd
  • Imipenem 500 mg IV q6h or meropenem 1g IV q8h
  • Rifampin 600 mg IV qd (not for monotherapy)
  • Consider fluoroquinolone for pts intolerant to 2 or more of the above agents: moxifloxacin 400 mg IV qd or levofloxacin 750 mg IV qd, or levofloxacin 500 mg IV qd
Oral agents

Drug Comments

DrugRecommendations/Comments
Amikacin Bactericidal agent that is virtually always active. Good choice for combining with a cell wall-active agent (vancomycin or carbapenem in initial therapy. Substitute cheaper gentamicin if supported by susceptibility testing.
Azithromycin Erythromycin is most commonly used macrolide in the literature, but azithromycin and clarithromycin are active in vitro, more convenient to take and better tolerated. Clarithromycin is most potent in vitro. Resistance expected to be more likely in patients that develop Rhodococcus infection while receiving these agents for MAC prophylaxis.
Clarithromycin Erythromycin most commonly used macrolide in the literature, but azithromycin and clarithromycin are active in vitro, more convenient to take and better tolerated. Clarithromycin is most potent in vitro. Resistance expected to be more likely in patients that develop Rhodococcus infection while receiving these agents for MAC prophylaxis.
Imipenem/Cilastatin Bactericidal agent that is virtually always active and could be included in initial parenteral regimens. Imipenem is carbapenem used most commonly in case reports. However, meropenem appears similarly active and would be favored for CNS infections and patients on dialysis given lower risk of seizures.
Minocycline The tetracycline with best activity against gram-positive bacteria, although doxycycline also appropriate. These are inexpensive drugs to pair with rifampin for oral therapy once susceptibility is established.
Moxifloxacin Probably the most potent fluoroquinolone against Rhodococcus although levofloxacin is a reasonable alternatives. Unclear whether newer fluoroquinolones provide any additional benefit over a macrolide or tetracycline to justify their expense. Also, long-term safety profiles of moxifloxacin has not been well established.
Rifampin Nearly always active and good choice for parenteral and oral combination therapy. Should not be used as monotherapy due to selection of resistant mutants. Many drug interactions with PIs and NNRTIs
Trimethoprim + Sulfamethoxazole Alternative for oral or parenteral regimens, but use should be supported by susceptibility testing. Resistance expected to be more likely in pts receiving this agent for PCP prophylaxis.
Vancomycin Virtually always active. Potent activity in mouse model. A recommended agent for initial parenteral regimens.

FOLLOW UP

  • As with TB, failure to respond to Rx (improved symptoms and CXR) after 2 mos should prompt sputum Cx and susceptibility testing
  • Recommended treatment duration is at least 6 mos and 1-2 mos after all disease manifestations resolve
  • Lifelong suppressive therapy recommended for pts w/AIDS unless immune reconstitution achieved

OTHER INFORMATION

  • Simultaneous OIs are common
  • 2 cases of apparent person-to-person transmission suggest that other immunocompromised pts should not share room with pts with cavitary or sputum Cx-positive disease. Need for airborne isolation unclear.

REFERENCES


 
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