Epstein-Barr virus: Difference between revisions

From IDWiki
()
()
Line 6: Line 6:
   
 
=== Epidemiology ===
 
=== Epidemiology ===
  +
* Acquired via oral secretions, e.g. by kissing or sharing of food
* Seroprevalence about 95% in adults
 
  +
* Seroprevalence about 90-95% in adults, with about half of 5 year-olds already being seropositive
   
 
== Clinical Presentation ==
 
== Clinical Presentation ==

Revision as of 08:28, 24 October 2019

Background

Microbiology

  • A gamma-1 herpesvirus
  • Double-stranded DNA inside an icosahedral protein nucleocapsid surrounded by a lipid envelope with glycoproteins
  • 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

Clinical Presentation

  • In childhood, mostly asymptomatic or mild febrile illness

Infectious mononucleosis

  • Causes about 80% of mononucleosis, with the rest being CMV

Complications

  • Linked to a number of malignancies, including Burkitt lymphoma, nasopharyngeal carcinoma, and lymphoproliferative disorders

Diagnosis

Serology

  • Anti-VCA (viral capsid antigens): most useful
    • Anti-VCA IgM: appears early and disappears within 4 to 6 weeks
    • 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
  • Monospot test: cross-reacts with many other conditions, and is often falsely negative in children

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 ± ++ ± + ± ± ±

References

  1. ^  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.