Background
Microbiology
- A gamma-1 herpesvirus
- 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 Presentation
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, 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 infection
- Classically in Japan and east Asia, possibly South America
- Progressive disease related to infection of NK cells rather than B cells
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
- 80-95% sensitive and 98-100% specific, overall
- Less sensitive (10-50%) in young children (<4 years), with much lower negative predictive power
- 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
- 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)
- 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:
- Rare, chronic infection
- Early post-transplant lymphoproliferative disease
- Nasopharyngeal cancer
- 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.