Secondary immune deficiences and HIV-1 infection Flashcards

1
Q

What diverse clinical features do immune deficiencies exhibit?

A

Infections, autoimmune conditions and allergic disease, persistent …, cancers

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2
Q

Common causes of secondary immune deficiencies

A

Malnutrition, measles, mycobacterium tuberculosis, HIV infection, SARS-CoV-2

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3
Q

Commonest cause of secondary immune deficiencies?

A

malnutrition

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4
Q

Immune defect from measles lasts how long?

A

Months to years, increased morbidity and mortality

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5
Q

What is mycobacterium tuberculosis?

A

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6
Q

What is HIV?

A

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7
Q

What drugs cause immune deficiency?

A
  • Small molecules: glucocorticoids and mineralocortioids

- cytotoxic agents: methotrexate, mycophenolate, cyclophosphamide and azathioprine ….

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8
Q

Can biologics and cellular therapies cause immune deficiency?

A

Yes, increasingly recognised as a cause

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9
Q

Biologic agents:

A

anti-CD20 monoclonals…

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10
Q

Cellular therapies:

A

anti-CD19/BCMA CAR-T cell therapy

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11
Q

Haematological cancers that can present with immune deficiency?

A

B and plasma cell cancers?

B cell: multiple myeloma, chrinic lymphocytic leukaemia, non-hodgkin’s lymphoma, monoclonal gammopathy of uncerain significance.

Goods’ syndrome ….

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12
Q

Consider FISH for an immunodeficiency! What does this consist of?

A

Full blood count, immunoglobulin (IgG, IgA, IgM, IgE), serum complement (C3, C4), HIV test (18 - 80 years).

Strategy will pick up 85% of all immune defects

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13
Q

Front line investigations for immune deficiency

A

Chemistry: renal and liver profile; calcium and bone profile; …

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14
Q

What does isolated reduction in IgG suggest?

A

Protein losing enteropathy. Prednisolone 10mg/day

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15
Q

What does reduction in IgG and IgM suggest?

A

Monitor for B cell neoplasm, history of exposu….

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16
Q

What is SPE?

A

Serum protein electrophoresis.

First line test. Detection of discrete bands: monoclonal identidfied by immunofixation with labelled I…

17
Q

What are second line tests to investigate immune deficiencies?

A

Tetanus toxoid (protein antigen) might be reduced.

Pneumova vacine (carbohydrate antigen)

If vaccine antibody levels low, offer test immunisation with pneumovax II and tetanus to investigate immune function

Can also do analysis of lymphocyte … cytometry

18
Q

What are third line investigations for immune deficienes

A

Analysis of naive and memory T and B cell subsets; assessment of igG subclasses; determination of anti-cytokine and complement antibodies: anti-type 1 interferon, anti-type 2 … etc etc.

19
Q

Management of secondary immune deficiencies

A

Treat underlying cause, advice to reduce exposure, immunisation and vaccines, education to treat bacterial infections, prophylactic ABx

20
Q

Five characteristic features of the immunology of IV-1 infection

A

CD4 T cell depletion, chronic immune activation, impairment of CD4 and CD8 T cell function, disruption of lymph node architecture and impaired ability to generate protective T and B cell immune responses, loss of antigen-specific humoral immune responses

21
Q

How to diagnose HIV-1?

A

4th gen combined HIV-1 antigen/antibody tests will detect infection 1 month post acquisition of infection, assay detect p24 antigen, gp41 from HIV-1, group O, gp160 …….

22
Q

Evaluation or management of HIV-1?

A
  1. Confirm what they know. 2. co-morbidities. 3. sexual health history, up-to-date vaccines, cervical screen. 4. discuss partner notification and u = undetectable -> untransmissable. 5. screen for factors that may impair adherence to ART (psychological issues, alcohol/drug dependency, accommodation, social support)
23
Q

HIV-1 specific tests

A

viral load, genotype … etc

24
Q

Anti-retroviral therapy available in the UK

A

Revers transc….

25
Q

use of ART

A

test and treat; treat to prevent infection; prophylaxis

26
Q

A 65 year-old male with a history of steroid dependent asthma, hypertension, Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus and osteoporosis presents with recurrent chest, sinus, and skin infections.

Past medical history of chemotherapy for follicular lymphoma and he has recently completed a 2 year maintenance therapy of 3 monthly rituximab.

Current oral medication includes Prednisolone 5mg OD, Losartan 50mg OD, metformin500mg BD, alendronic acid 70mg weekly.

Serum immunoglobulins are as follows
IgG – 3.9g/L (ref interval 6.4-16.0g/L)
IgA – 0.9g/L (ref interval 0.8-3.4g/L)
IgM – 0.1g/L (ref interval 0.5-2.0g/L)
IgE 200IU/ml (reference interval 3-120IU/ml)

Which of the following medication are most likely to have cause antibody deficiency 
A) Metformin 
B) Losartan 
C)  Prednisolone 
D)  Alendronic Acid
E)   Rituximab
A

Rituximab (oral prednisolone is less than 10mg)

27
Q

What is Good’s Syndrome?

A

28
Q

Question 3 Which of the following condition are more likely to present in patients with a CD4 T cell counts of more than 350cells/ul

A) CMV retinitis, Toxoplasma encephalitis, visceral Kaposi sarcoma

B) Herpes zoster, Pulmonary Tuberculosis, Pneumococcal pneumonia

C) Pneumocystis jirovecci pneumonia, disseminated MAC, ITP

D) EBV CNS lymphoma, oral candida, cryptococcal meningitis

E) Cutaneous Kaposi sarcoma, disseminated MAC, HSV infection

A

B?