Sarcoidosis Flashcards
Define sarcoidosis.
Sarcoidosis is a chronic granulomatous disorder of unknown aetiology, commonly affecting the lungs, skin, and eyes.
It is characterised by accumulation of lymphocytes and macrophages → non-caseating granulomas.
What is the epidemiology of sarcoidosis?
- Prevalence 5/100,000 and incidence of 1/100,000 worldwide
- Highest rates reported in northern European/Scandanavian and African-American individuals. Lowest in Japan.
- Two peaks in 3rd and 5th decade
- Usually sporadic (90%)
What causes sarcoid?
Unknown aetiology
Could be:
- genetic
- immunological
- infectious (e.g., viruses, Borrelia burgdorferi, Propionibacterium acnes, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, and Mycoplasma)
How is sarcoid commonly classfied?
According to organ/system involvement:
- Systemic sarcoidosis - characteristic
- Pulmonary sarcoidosis - usually predominates even in systemic involvement
- Cutaneous sarcoidosis: plaques; lupus pernio
- Ocular sarcoidosis: anterior uveitis
- Cardiac sarcoidosis: heart block; cardiomyopathy
- Neurosarcoidosis: headaches; seizures
What are the risk factors for sarcoidosis?
- age 20 to 40 years for initial presentation
- FHx sarcoidosis
- Scandinavian origin
- female gender
- non-smokers
- black ancestry (US): uveitis
- Puerto Rican origin: lupus pernio
- European origin: erythema nodosum
What is Lofgren syndrome?
Type of sarcoidosis which most commonly affects Scandanavian, Puerto Rican and Irish people.
Good prognosis.
Presents as a combination of erythema nodosum, bihilar lymphadenopathy, joint pain.
What are the common symptoms of sarcoidosis?
- Non-productive cough
- Dyspnoea
- Chronic factigue
- Arthralgia (knees, ankles, wrist but no synovial thickening)
- Photophobia (uveitis)
- Red painful eye - uveitis causing superficial punctuate keratitis
- Blurred vision - uveitis
Uncommon: headache (neurosarcoidosis), low-grade fever, modest unexplained weight loss, chest wall pain (costochondritis)
What are the signs of sarcoidosis on physical examination?
- Wheezing (bronchospasm)
- Rhonchi (continuous low pitched, rattling)
- Lymphadenopathy (cervical, submandibular)
- Erythema nodosum
- Lupus pernio (indurated plaques wih discoloration of nose, cheeks, lips and ears)
- Conjunctival nodules
- Facial palsy (uveoparotid fever i.e. uveitis/parotitis/facial palsy)
Uncommon: arrhythmias (atrial or ventricular), hepatomegaly.
What investigations would you do for sarcoidosis?
History - exclude beryllium exposure (sarcoid has similar presentation to berylliosis)
- CXR, ECG, PFTs
- FBC, serum urea, creatinine, liver enzymes, serum calcium
- purified protein derivative of tuberculin (PPD)
Other:
- CT
- flexible bronchoscopy w/ transbronchial biopsy, bronchoalveolar lavage, skin biopsy, endobronchial US- transbronchial needle aspiration.
- Serum ACE, 24hr urine calcium, gallium-67 scan
What is the CXR staging used in sarcoidosis? What else might you see on CXR of sarcoidosis?
- Stage 0: normal
- Stage I: bilateral hilar lymphadenopathy
- Stage II: bilateral hilar lymphadenopathy plus pulmonary infiltrates
- Stage III: pulmonary infiltrates without hilar lymphadenopathy
- Stage IV: extensive fibrosis with distortion.
Also: hilar/paratracheal adenopathy with upper lobe predominance, bilateral infiltrates, pleural effusions (rare) and egg shell calcifications (v rare)
What would you see in FBC/urea/creatinine/LFT/serum calcium/PFTs/PPD of sarcoid?
- FBC - anaemia in 4-20% and leukopenia in 40%
- Serum urea may be elevated*
- Creatinine may be elevated*
- Liver enzymes - elevated- asymptomatic aminotransferase (AST and ALT) elevation possible
- Serum calcium - hypercalcaemia due to dysregulated production of calcitriol by activated macrophages and granulomas.
- PFTs - restrictive/obstructive mixed patter but help monitor disease (FVC)
- PPD - negative (partial to complete anergy in sarcoidosis secondary to depressed cellular immunity)
*
What do these investigations show in sarcoid?
CT/BAL/bronch biopsy/ACE/gallium-67scan
- CT scan - same as CXR but ground glass(=reversible) and cystic architectual distortion (=irreversible). Calcified hilar/mediastinal lymph nodes in patients with longstanding disease.
- Bronchoscopy - usually essential for diagnosis, shows non-caseating granulomas
- BAL (lavage) - BAL lymphocytosis, with CD4-to-CD8 ratio >3.5
- Serum ACE - quite unreliable but usually elevated
- galliium-67 scan - panda sign and lambda sign (panda = lacrimal+parotid gland uptake; lambda= parahilar, infrahilar,right paratracheal/azygos node)
Briefly, how do you treat ongoing sarcoid?
- If without progressive adenopathy: observe.
- If progressive: oral/inhaled corticosteroids for 1-3months then taper
- Second line agents are cytotoxics e.g. methotrexate, azathioprine, hydroxychloroquine
- Rare: end stage lung disease → lung transplant
Non-lung manifestations are also treated with topical/oral corticosteroids first line.
What are the complications of sarcoidosis?
- Haemoptysis
- Pulmonary arterial hypertension
- Glaucoma, cataract, vascular retinitis, vision loss, optic atrophy
- CHF, heart block, ventricular arrhythmias,
- Meningeal disease, CNS parenchymal disease, spinal canal disease, neuropathy, cranial neuropathies, pituitary lesions
- Myopathy
- Corticosteroid related - hyperglycaemia, osteoporosis, infection
- Cytotoxic related - hepatic toxicity, BM toxicity,
What is the prognosis with sarcoidosis?
Spontaneous remission in 55-90% with stage I disease and 20% with stage III
No remissions expected in stage IV