Tropheryma whipplei

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Tropheryma whipplei /
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Background

Microbiology

  • Fastidious Gram-positive bacillus

Epidemiology

  • Ubiquitous environmental organism, but rarely causes disease with only about 12 new cases diagnosed annually worldwide
    • Can be found in saliva of one third of healthy people
  • Disease is more common in white European (98%) males (85%)
  • Mean age at diagnosis is 40 to 60 years
  • Farming or occupational soil/animal/sewage exposures are common

Pathophysiology

  • Lack of host immune response

Clinical Manifestations

Classic Whipple Disease

  • Cardinal features include: arthralgias (80%), followed by weight loss (90%), diarrhea (75%), and abdominal pain (60%)
  • Arthralgias are typically migratory in the larger peripheral joints, including knees, ankles, and wrists, but can have essentially any presentation
    • May be present for up to 6 years before development of other symptoms
    • May be polyarticular or oligoarticular
    • Rarely destructive
  • The diarrhea is intermittent, with colicky abdominal pain
    • Diarrhea can be watery or have steatorrhea
    • Occasional GI bleeding (25%)
    • Malabsorption may lead to hypoalbuminemia, peripheral edema, and ascites
  • Also common are fevers (45%), myalgias (25%), lymphadenopathy (45%) (mainly mesenteric or mediastinal with non-caseating granulomas)
  • Bloodwork shows anemia (81%), leukocytosis (48%), thrombocytosis (56%), and elevated CRP (69%)

Transient Whipple Disease

  • Transient, acute presentation of fever and diarrhea
  • Occurs mainly in children in Africa

Asymptomatic Whipple Disease

  • Asymptomatic carriage of the bacterium, more common in sewage workers

Localised Whipple Disease

Other Symptoms

Immunosuppression

  • Likely related to reactivation of latent infection, often in the context of HIV and IRIS
  • Can present with any of the above syndromes

Diagnosis

  • Samples should be taken from involved sites, with a strong preference for small bowel biopsy if there are GI symptoms
    • At least 5, and ideally up to 7 to 10, biopsies from small bowel
    • Other possible sites include synovial fluid or joint tissue biopsy, lymph node biopsy, CSF or brain biopsy, aqueous humour, cardiac valves, intervertebral disk biopsy, or PCR of blood
  • Diagnosis is based on the presence of any of the following:
    • Presence of oculomasticatory or oculo-facial-skeletal myorhythmia
    • Periodic acid-Schiff-positive (PAS-positive) bacilli in macrophages on small bowel biopsy
    • Two different positive tests (PAS, PCR, or IHC) on a single sample
    • One positive test (PAS, PCR, or IHC) on two different samples
  • In Canada, PCR is done at the NML

Management

Syndrome Induction Maintenance
Initial
General ceftriaxone 2 g IV daily for 2 weeks TMP-SMX DS 1 tablet bid for 1 year
Endocarditis ceftriaxone 2 g IV daily for 4 weeks
CNS disease
β-lactam allergy meropenem 1 g IV q8h for 2 to 4 weeks
Sulfa allergy doxycycline 100 mg p.o. bid plus hydroxychloroquine 200 mg p.o. tid for 1 year
Relapse
All ceftriaxone 2 g IV q12h for 4 weeks TMP-SMX DS 2 tablets bid for 1 year
Sulfa allergy doxycycline 100 mg p.o. bid plus hydroxychloroquine 200 mg p.o. tid for 1 year

Prognosis

  • Clinical improvement takes 1 to 3 weeks of treatment
  • Neurologic sequelae may be permanent
  • Relapses after treatment, including of CNS disease, can happen in up to a third of patients