Epstein-Barr virus: Difference between revisions
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==Background== |
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= Diagnosis = |
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===Microbiology=== |
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*A member of the ''Gammaherpesvirinae'' subfamily within the [[Herpesviridae]] family |
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* '''Anti-VCA''' (viral capsid antigens): most useful |
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*Double-stranded DNA inside an icosahedral protein nucleocapsid surrounded by a lipid envelope with glycoproteins |
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** Anti-VCA IgM: appears early and disappears within 4 to 6 weeks |
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*Two strains (type 1 and 2) are serologically identical, but have unique epitopes |
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** Anti-VCA IgG: appears in acute phase, peaks at 2 to 4 weeks, then declines but remains positive for life |
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*Infection can remain quiescent in B cells for life |
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* '''Anti-EA''' (early antigen) IgG: appears in acute phase and falls to undetectable within 3 to 6 months (but may persist for years) |
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** Least useful test |
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* '''Anti-EBNA''' (EBV nuclear antigen): negative during acute phase converts after 2 to 4 months and stays positive for life |
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* '''Monospot''' test: cross-reacts with many other conditions, and is often falsely negative in children |
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===Epidemiology=== |
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== Serology in immunocompetent hosts == |
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*Acquired via oral secretions, e.g. by kissing or sharing of food |
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![Graph of serology](EBV serology.jpg) |
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*Seroprevalence about 90-95% in adults, with about half of 5 year-olds already being seropositive |
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**Acquired earlier in low-income countries |
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*Highest morbidity is with young adults who develop infectious mononucleosis during primary disease |
|||
**Includes barracks and universities |
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===Pathophysiology=== |
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{| |
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!align="center"| VCa-IgM |
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*Acquired through mucous membrane contact of oral secretions |
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!align="center"| VCA-IgG |
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*Immune response primarily with cytotoxic T cells and NK cells |
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!align="center"| EBNA-IgG |
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**Atypical lymphocytosis develops from CD8 cells |
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! Interpretation |
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*Early response is against lytic antigens (including VCA and EA), and later response against latent proteins (EBNA1, EBNA2, EBNA3, and EBNALP) |
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*Response also creates IgM antibodies to sheep, horse, and cow RBCs, called '''heterophile antibodies''' |
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==Clinical Manifestations== |
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===Childhood=== |
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*In childhood, mostly asymptomatic or mild febrile illness |
|||
*May develop rashes, neutropenia, or pneumonia |
|||
*Can cause lymphadenopathy |
|||
*Heterophile antibody may be negative if young; about 80% are positive by 4 years, though |
|||
===Infectious Mononucleosis=== |
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*Caused by primary infection, typically in an adolescent or young adult |
|||
*EBV causes about 80% of mononucleosis, with the rest being [[CMV]] |
|||
*Incubation period [[Usual incubation period::30 to 50 days]], and can have asymptomatic viral shedding for up to a month before symptoms |
|||
*Symptoms include a triad of sore throat, fever, and lymphadenopathy (classically posterior cervical chain) |
|||
**Often preceded by prodromal symptoms of chils, sweats, anorexia, and malaise |
|||
**Can also have retro-orbital headaches, myalgias, and abdominal discomfort |
|||
**May have a rash which can take any form, and may have palatal petechiae |
|||
**Tonsils are sometimes exudative |
|||
**Often has splenomegaly, may have hepatomegaly, and rarely has jaundice |
|||
*With exposure to [[amoxicillin]], almost all patients develop a diffuse maculopapular rash |
|||
*May have transient heterophile antibodies (see Diagnosis, below), as well as [[Causes::atypical lymphocytosis]] |
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*Resolves over 2 to 3 weeks, with fevers lasting up to 14 days, and fatigue lasting months |
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===Complications=== |
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*Linked to a number of '''malignancies''', including Burkitt lymphoma, nasopharyngeal carcinoma, and lymphoproliferative disorders |
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*'''Neurologic''' complications include meningitis, encephalitis, Guillain-Barré syndromes, optic neuritis, retrobulber neuritis, cranial nerve palsies, mononeuritis multiplex, brachial plexus neuropathy, seizures, subacute sclerosing panencephalitis, transverse, myelitis, psychosis, demyelination, and hemiplegia |
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===Chronic Active EBV Disease=== |
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*See also [[Chronic active Epstein-Barr virus disease]] |
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*Classically in Japan and east Asia, possibly South America |
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*Progressive disease related to infection of NK or T cells rather than B cells |
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*Poor prognosis, with patients dying of progressive [[pancytopenia]], hypogammaglobulinemia, or NK/T cell nasal lymphoma within a few years |
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===Oral Hairy Leukoplakia=== |
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===EBV-Associated Malignancies=== |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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!Disease!!EBV!!Risk factors |
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|- |
|- |
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|Lymphoproliferative disease||90%||Transplantation patients and immunosuppression |
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|align="center"| – |
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|align="center"| – |
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|align="center"| – |
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| Susceptible |
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|- |
|- |
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|Primary CNS lymphoma||100%||HIV with low CD4 and immunosuppression |
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|align="center"| – |
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|align="center"| – |
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|align="center"| + |
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| Past infection or non-specific |
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|- |
|- |
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|Hodgkin lymphoma||50%||Children and young adults |
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|align="center"| – |
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|align="center"| + |
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|align="center"| – |
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| Acute or past infection |
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|- |
|- |
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|Nasopharyngeal carcinoma||100%||Southern Chinese, Inuit |
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|align="center"| – |
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|align="center"| + |
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|align="center"| + |
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| Past infection |
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|- |
|- |
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|Gastric cancer||4 to 100%||Unknown |
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|align="center"| + |
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|align="center"| – |
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|align="center"| – |
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| Acute infection or non-specific |
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|- |
|- |
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|Endemic Burkitt lymphoma||95%||African children |
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|align="center"| + |
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|align="center"| – |
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|align="center"| + |
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| ?? |
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|- |
|- |
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|Sporadic Burkitt lymphoma||20%||HIV independent of CD4 |
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|align="center"| + |
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|align="center"| + |
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|align="center"| – |
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| Acute infection |
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|- |
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|align="center"| + |
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|align="center"| + |
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|align="center"| + |
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| Late primary infection or reactivation |
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|} |
|} |
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==Diagnosis== |
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== Serology in EBV-associated diseases == |
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===Point-of-Care Testing=== |
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*'''Monospot''' latex agglutination looking for '''heterophile antibodies''' |
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{| |
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**50% sensitive in the first week of illness, but up to 80-95% sensitive by the third week, and 98-100% specific, overall |
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! Disease |
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**Less sensitive (10-50%) in young children (<4 years; lowest in those less than 2 years), with much lower negative predictive power |
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!align="center"| VCA-IgM |
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**Peak 2 to 5 weeks after symptom onset then usually decline quickly, but can persist for up to 6 to 12 months |
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!align="center"| VCA-IgG |
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**False positives are rare but can happen with rheumatoid disease, [[SLE]], [[leukemia]], [[lymphoma]], and other infections including [[malaria]], [[HIV]], [[CMV]], [[rubella]], [[viral hepatitis]] and [[tularemia]], and after administration of [[anti-thymocyte globulin]] |
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!align="center"| VCA-IgA |
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!align="center"| EA(D)-IgG |
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===Serology=== |
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!align="center"| EA(R)-IgG |
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!align="center"| EA-IgA |
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*Reviewed in [[CiteRef::de paschale2012se]] |
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!align="center"| EBNA-IgG |
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*'''Anti-VCA''' (viral capsid antigens): most useful |
|||
**Anti-VCA IgM: appears by presentation and disappears within 4 to 6 weeks; most useful with acute and convalescent |
|||
**Anti-VCA IgG: appears in acute phase, peaks at 2 to 4 weeks, then declines but remains positive for life |
|||
*'''Anti-EA''' (early antigen) IgG: appears in acute phase and falls to undetectable within 3 to 6 months (but may persist for years) |
|||
**Least useful test |
|||
*'''Anti-EBNA''' (EBV nuclear antigen): negative during acute phase converts after 2 to 4 months and stays positive for life |
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====Immunocompetent Hosts==== |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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! align="center" |VCA-IgM |
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! align="center" |VCA-IgG |
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! align="center" |EBNA-IgG |
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!Interpretation |
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|- |
|- |
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| rowspan="4" align="center" |– |
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| Chronic active infection |
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|align="center" |
| rowspan="2" align="center" |– |
||
|align="center" |
| align="center" |– |
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|Susceptible |
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|align="center"| ± |
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|align="center"| + |
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|align="center"| ++ |
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|align="center"| – |
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|align="center"| ± |
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|- |
|- |
||
| align="center" | + |
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| Burkitt lymphoma |
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|Past infection or non-specific |
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|align="center"| – |
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|align="center"| ++ |
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|align="center"| – |
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|align="center"| ± |
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|align="center"| ++ |
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|align="center"| – |
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|align="center"| + |
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|- |
|- |
||
| rowspan="2" align="center" | + |
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| ENT carcinoma |
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|align="center" |
| align="center" |– |
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|Acute or past infection |
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|align="center"| ++ |
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|align="center"| + |
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|align="center"| ++ |
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|align="center"| ± |
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|align="center"| + |
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|align="center"| + |
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|- |
|- |
||
| align="center" | + |
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| Hodgkin lymphoma |
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|Past infection |
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|align="center"| – |
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|align="center"| ++ |
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|align="center"| – |
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|align="center"| + |
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|align="center"| – |
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|align="center"| – |
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|align="center"| + |
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|- |
|- |
||
| rowspan="4" align="center" | + |
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| Reactivation |
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|align="center" |
| rowspan="2" align="center" |– |
||
|align="center" |
| align="center" |– |
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|Acute infection or non-specific |
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|align="center"| ± |
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|- |
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|align="center"| + |
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|align="center"| |
| align="center" | + |
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|Uninterpretable |
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|align="center"| ± |
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|- |
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|align="center"| ± |
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| rowspan="2" align="center" | + |
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| align="center" |– |
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|Acute infection |
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|- |
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| align="center" | + |
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|Late primary infection or reactivation |
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|} |
|} |
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====EBV-Associated Diseases==== |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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!Disease |
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! align="center" |VCA-IgM |
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! align="center" |VCA-IgG |
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! align="center" |VCA-IgA |
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! align="center" |EA(D)-IgG |
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! align="center" |EA(R)-IgG |
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! align="center" |EA-IgA |
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! align="center" |EBNA-IgG |
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|- |
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|Chronic active infection |
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| align="center" |± |
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| align="center" | ++ |
|||
| align="center" |± |
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| align="center" | + |
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| align="center" | ++ |
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| align="center" |– |
|||
| align="center" |± |
|||
|- |
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|Burkitt lymphoma |
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| align="center" |– |
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| align="center" | ++ |
|||
| align="center" |– |
|||
| align="center" |± |
|||
| align="center" | ++ |
|||
| align="center" |– |
|||
| align="center" | + |
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|- |
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|ENT carcinoma |
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| align="center" |– |
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| align="center" | ++ |
|||
| align="center" | + |
|||
| align="center" | ++ |
|||
| align="center" |± |
|||
| align="center" | + |
|||
| align="center" | + |
|||
|- |
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|Hodgkin lymphoma |
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| align="center" |– |
|||
| align="center" | ++ |
|||
| align="center" |– |
|||
| align="center" | + |
|||
| align="center" |– |
|||
| align="center" |– |
|||
| align="center" | + |
|||
|- |
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|Reactivation |
|||
| align="center" |± |
|||
| align="center" | ++ |
|||
| align="center" |± |
|||
| align="center" | + |
|||
| align="center" |± |
|||
| align="center" |± |
|||
| align="center" |± |
|||
|} |
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===PCR=== |
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*Useful for diagnosis of: |
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**Rare, [[chronic active Epstein-Barr virus disease]] |
|||
**Early [[post-transplant lymphoproliferative disease]] |
|||
**[[Nasopharyngeal carcinoma]] |
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*As well as monitoring response to treatment |
|||
[[Category:Herpesviridae]] |
[[Category:Herpesviridae]] |
Latest revision as of 20:20, 7 June 2023
Background
Microbiology
- A member of the Gammaherpesvirinae subfamily within the Herpesviridae family
- Double-stranded DNA inside an icosahedral protein nucleocapsid surrounded by a lipid envelope with glycoproteins
- Two strains (type 1 and 2) are serologically identical, but have unique epitopes
- Infection can remain quiescent in B cells for life
Epidemiology
- Acquired via oral secretions, e.g. by kissing or sharing of food
- Seroprevalence about 90-95% in adults, with about half of 5 year-olds already being seropositive
- Acquired earlier in low-income countries
- Highest morbidity is with young adults who develop infectious mononucleosis during primary disease
- Includes barracks and universities
Pathophysiology
- Acquired through mucous membrane contact of oral secretions
- Immune response primarily with cytotoxic T cells and NK cells
- Atypical lymphocytosis develops from CD8 cells
- Early response is against lytic antigens (including VCA and EA), and later response against latent proteins (EBNA1, EBNA2, EBNA3, and EBNALP)
- Response also creates IgM antibodies to sheep, horse, and cow RBCs, called heterophile antibodies
Clinical Manifestations
Childhood
- In childhood, mostly asymptomatic or mild febrile illness
- May develop rashes, neutropenia, or pneumonia
- Can cause lymphadenopathy
- Heterophile antibody may be negative if young; about 80% are positive by 4 years, though
Infectious Mononucleosis
- Caused by primary infection, typically in an adolescent or young adult
- EBV causes about 80% of mononucleosis, with the rest being CMV
- Incubation period 30 to 50 days, and can have asymptomatic viral shedding for up to a month before symptoms
- Symptoms include a triad of sore throat, fever, and lymphadenopathy (classically posterior cervical chain)
- Often preceded by prodromal symptoms of chils, sweats, anorexia, and malaise
- Can also have retro-orbital headaches, myalgias, and abdominal discomfort
- May have a rash which can take any form, and may have palatal petechiae
- Tonsils are sometimes exudative
- Often has splenomegaly, may have hepatomegaly, and rarely has jaundice
- With exposure to amoxicillin, almost all patients develop a diffuse maculopapular rash
- May have transient heterophile antibodies (see Diagnosis, below), as well as atypical lymphocytosis
- Resolves over 2 to 3 weeks, with fevers lasting up to 14 days, and fatigue lasting months
Complications
- Linked to a number of malignancies, including Burkitt lymphoma, nasopharyngeal carcinoma, and lymphoproliferative disorders
- Neurologic complications include meningitis, encephalitis, Guillain-Barré syndromes, optic neuritis, retrobulber neuritis, cranial nerve palsies, mononeuritis multiplex, brachial plexus neuropathy, seizures, subacute sclerosing panencephalitis, transverse, myelitis, psychosis, demyelination, and hemiplegia
Chronic Active EBV Disease
- See also Chronic active Epstein-Barr virus disease
- Classically in Japan and east Asia, possibly South America
- Progressive disease related to infection of NK or T cells rather than B cells
- Poor prognosis, with patients dying of progressive pancytopenia, hypogammaglobulinemia, or NK/T cell nasal lymphoma within a few years
Oral Hairy Leukoplakia
EBV-Associated Malignancies
Disease | EBV | Risk factors |
---|---|---|
Lymphoproliferative disease | 90% | Transplantation patients and immunosuppression |
Primary CNS lymphoma | 100% | HIV with low CD4 and immunosuppression |
Hodgkin lymphoma | 50% | Children and young adults |
Nasopharyngeal carcinoma | 100% | Southern Chinese, Inuit |
Gastric cancer | 4 to 100% | Unknown |
Endemic Burkitt lymphoma | 95% | African children |
Sporadic Burkitt lymphoma | 20% | HIV independent of CD4 |
Diagnosis
Point-of-Care Testing
- Monospot latex agglutination looking for heterophile antibodies
- 50% sensitive in the first week of illness, but up to 80-95% sensitive by the third week, and 98-100% specific, overall
- Less sensitive (10-50%) in young children (<4 years; lowest in those less than 2 years), with much lower negative predictive power
- Peak 2 to 5 weeks after symptom onset then usually decline quickly, but can persist for up to 6 to 12 months
- False positives are rare but can happen with rheumatoid disease, SLE, leukemia, lymphoma, and other infections including malaria, HIV, CMV, rubella, viral hepatitis and tularemia, and after administration of anti-thymocyte globulin
Serology
- Reviewed in 1
- Anti-VCA (viral capsid antigens): most useful
- Anti-VCA IgM: appears by presentation and disappears within 4 to 6 weeks; most useful with acute and convalescent
- Anti-VCA IgG: appears in acute phase, peaks at 2 to 4 weeks, then declines but remains positive for life
- Anti-EA (early antigen) IgG: appears in acute phase and falls to undetectable within 3 to 6 months (but may persist for years)
- Least useful test
- Anti-EBNA (EBV nuclear antigen): negative during acute phase converts after 2 to 4 months and stays positive for life
Immunocompetent Hosts
VCA-IgM | VCA-IgG | EBNA-IgG | Interpretation |
---|---|---|---|
– | – | – | Susceptible |
+ | Past infection or non-specific | ||
+ | – | Acute or past infection | |
+ | Past infection | ||
+ | – | – | Acute infection or non-specific |
+ | Uninterpretable | ||
+ | – | Acute infection | |
+ | Late primary infection or reactivation |
EBV-Associated Diseases
Disease | VCA-IgM | VCA-IgG | VCA-IgA | EA(D)-IgG | EA(R)-IgG | EA-IgA | EBNA-IgG |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chronic active infection | ± | ++ | ± | + | ++ | – | ± |
Burkitt lymphoma | – | ++ | – | ± | ++ | – | + |
ENT carcinoma | – | ++ | + | ++ | ± | + | + |
Hodgkin lymphoma | – | ++ | – | + | – | – | + |
Reactivation | ± | ++ | ± | + | ± | ± | ± |
PCR
- Useful for diagnosis of:
- As well as monitoring response to treatment
References
- ^ Massimo De Paschale. Serological diagnosis of Epstein-Barr virus infection: Problems and solutions. World Journal of Virology. 2012;1(1):31. doi:10.5501/wjv.v1.i1.31.