Background
Microbiology
- Thin, flagellated spirochete
- Best viewed with darkfield microscopy
- Species and serovars are divided into three broad categories within the genus Leptospira
- Pathogens: L. interrogans (multiple serovars, most common), L. noguchii, L. borgpetersenii, L. santarosai, L. kirschneri, L. weilii, L. alexanderi, L. alstonii, L. meyeri, L. wolffi, and L. kmetyi
- Non-pathogenic saprophytes: L. biflexa, L. wolbachii, L. vanthielii, L. terpstrae, L. yanagawae, and L. idonii
- Species of indeterminate pathogenicity: L. inadai, L. fainei, L. broomii, and L. licerasiae
- Within each species, there may be multiple serovars that are defined based on lipopolysaccharide (LPS) O-antigens
- A single species may have pathogenic and non-pathogenic serovars
Epidemiology
- Endemic worldwide
- More common during rainy seasons in tropical regions and late summer to fall in temperate regions
- More common after flooding, typhoons, or hurricanes
- In US, more common in Hawaii
- Major reservoir is as a chronic kidney infection in animals, especially rodents
- Also other small mammals, but livestock and companion animals
- Among livestock, may cause spontaneous abortions
- Most common risk factor is exposure to water or soil contaminated with animal urine
- Includes occupational exposures and direct contact
- High-risk occupations include farmers, slaughterhouse workers, pet traders, veterinarians, rodent catchers and sewer workers
- Leptospires can survive in water or soil for months, depending on the conditions
Pathophysiology
- Bacteria enter through cuts and abrasions, mucous membranes, conjunctivae, and inhalation
- After entering, it undergoes widespread hematogenous dissemination
- Essentially causes a vasculitis
- Human TLR 4 cannot bind leptospiral LPS
- Leptospirosis can non-specifically bind and activate T cells in some people
- Virulence factors
- Sphingomyelinase and hemolysin
- Also spirochete motility
- Also hooked ends
Clinical Manifestations
- Spectrum of severity, from asymptomatic seroconversion (most common) to nonspecific febrile illness to severe, life-threating multiorgan failure
- Asymptomatic disease is likely frequent, given high seroprevalence in some populations
- Incubation period 10 days (range 5 to 14 days)
- Acute febrile phase
- Acute phase lasts 5 to 7 days
- Starts with high fever, headache, chills, rigors, and myalgias
- Conjunctival injection is an identifying feature
- Muscle tenderness, especially in the calf and lumbar areas, is also characteristic
- Occasionally have a pretibial papular eruption
- Can also have lymphadenopathy, splenomegaly, and hepatomegaly
- Mild leukocytosis and neutrophilia, with thrombocytopenia and occasionally anemia
- Spirochetes detectable in blood and CSF, possibly urine
- Immune phase
- Lasts 4 to 30 days
- Corresponds with the appearance of IgM antibodies
- Spirochete is cleared from blood and CSF but detectable in other organs, including urine
- May develop jaundice, acute renal failure, arrhythmias, pulmonary symptoms, aseptic meningitis, non-purulent conjunctival injection, photophobia, eye pain, muscle tenderness, adenopathy, and Causes::hepatosplenomegaly
- Weil disease (liver and renal failure) may develop during or directly following the acute phase
- Liver injury is predominantly jaundice with elevated bilirubin and only mild liver enzyme rise
- Acute renal failure
- Nonoliguric hypokalemia with impaired sodium reabsorption and increased distal sodium delivery
- Selective loss of ENaC channels in proximal ubule
- Biopsy shows AIN
- Severe pulmonary hemorrhage syndrome (SPHS)
- May have frank hemoptysis, but not always
- Can show up as CXR lower lobe "snowflake-like" densities
- Arrhythmias, including atrial fibrillation and ventricular tachycardia
- Circulatory shock
- Rarely, acute heart failure from myocarditis
- Severe disease has high mortality from 5 to 40%
Differential Diagnosis
- Early in disease, it is essentially a non-specific febrile syndrome
- Viral
- Influenza
- Acute HIV
- Infectious mononucleosis (EBV/CMV)
- Flaviviruses: dengue virus, yellow fever virus, West Nile virus
- Alphaviruses: Chikungunya virus
- Bunyaviruses: Hantavirus, Lassa fever virus
- Other viral hemorrhagic fever virus
- Viral hepatitis
- Measles virus, with cough and conjunctivitis
- Bacterial
- Parasitic
Diagnosis
- In general, use PCR if early in disease (<7 days) and ELISA IgM followed by confirmatory MAT if further in disease (≥7 days)
Method | Sens | Spec |
---|---|---|
Culture | 5-50% | 100% |
Darkfield microscopy | 40% | 60% |
Microscopic agglutination test (MAT) | 90% | >90% |
ELISA IgM | >90% | 88-95% |
Latex agglutination | 92% | 95% |
Lateral flow assay | 81% | 96% |
PCR | 100% | 93% |
Microscopy
- Leptospires can be seen directly under darkfield microscopy
- Low sensitivity and specificity of blood and urine samples, even if spirochetes are seen (as spirochetes can also be normal flora)
Culture
- Can get positive cultures from blood and CSF, ideally when collected while febrile and before antibiotics
- Can inoculate one to blood drops directly into culture at bedside
- Urine can be cultured after the first week of illness, but need to be processed quickly
- Use Fletcher's medium (commercial version)
- Not very sensitive, and cultures can take weeks
Serology
- Detects IgM antibodies, which appear around day 5 to 7 and likely last for years to decades1
- IgM ELISA, needs confirmation by MAT (Sn 90%, Sp 90%)
- Microscopic agglutination test (MAT) for antigen detection (Sn 90%, Sp 90%)
- Leptospira antigens are mixed with serum and monitored for agglutination
- Monitor for a four-fold rise in titres from acute-phase to convalescent phase (repeat 4 to 6 weeks), or a single titre of at least 1:800
- May cross-react with syphilis, relapsing fever, Lyme disease, viral hepatitis, HIV, Legionella, and autoimmune diseases
- Cross-reacts between different serogroups
- Latex agglutination test, needs confirmation by MAT (Sn 80%, Sp 95%)
- Lateral flow test, needs confirmation by MAT (Sn 80%, Sp 95%)
PCR
- Loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) assays and other PCR assays exist
- Unclear sensitivity and specificity, but has the potential to diagnose disease before antibodies develop
- Usually done from blood, but can try in urine as well
- In Canada, available through the NML with a turnaround time of 21 days
Faine's Criteria
- Faine's criteria use clinical, epidemiological, and laboratory findings to diagnose leptospirosis
Management
- Treat empirically early in disease course, usually before diagnosis
- Consider empiric doxycycline if rickettsioses are on the differential
- Usual treatment is penicillin G 1.5 MU IV q6h, if severe, or doxycycline 100 mg po bid, if mild
- May be able to use amoxicillin, ampicillin, ceftriaxone, or azithromycin as alternatives
- It is also likely that ertapenem, cefepime, and norfloxacin are also effective2
- May develop a Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction during treatment (only with β-lactams)
- Duration is 5 to 7 days (except 3 days for azithromycin)
- May be able to use amoxicillin, ampicillin, ceftriaxone, or azithromycin as alternatives
- Close monitor and intensive supportive therapy required for severe patient
- In the immunologic phase, mostly focus on supportive care
- May need hemodialysis, but usually recovers renal function
- SPHS is managed as ARDS with lung-protective ventilation
Prevention
- Mostly avoidance of high-risk exposures
- Immunization is possible but rarely done, and covers only specific serovars
- Even if immunizing animals, it prevents disease but not asymptomatic carriage
- Can do chemoprophylaxis of high risk occupations with doxycycline 200 mg PO once weekly
References
- ^ Eleanor M. Rees, Colleen L. Lau, Mike Kama, Simon Reid, Rachel Lowe, Adam J. Kucharski. Andre Alex Grassmann. Estimating the duration of antibody positivity and likely time of Leptospira infection using data from a cross-sectional serological study in Fiji. PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases. 2022;16(6):e0010506. doi:10.1371/journal.pntd.0010506.
- ^ Wenlong Zhang, Naisheng Zhang, Wei Wang, Fei Wang, Yue Gong, Haichao Jiang, Zecai Zhang, Xiaofei Liu, Xiaojing Song, Tiancheng Wang, Zhuang Ding, Yongguo Cao. Efficacy of cefepime, ertapenem and norfloxacin against leptospirosis and for the clearance of pathogens in a hamster model. Microbial Pathogenesis. 2014;77:78-83. doi:10.1016/j.micpath.2014.11.006.