Toxoplasma gondii: Difference between revisions

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Toxoplasma gondii
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*As with other immunocompetent people, it is largely asymptomatic
 
*As with other immunocompetent people, it is largely asymptomatic
  +
*Refer to [[Toxoplasmosis in pregnancy]]
*Only half of women can identify a significant risk factor [[CiteRef::boyer2011un]]
 
*Risk of transmission to fetus is with parasitemia associated with primary infection, so women who are seropositive are ''not'' at risk of having a child with congenital infection
 
   
 
===Congenital===
 
===Congenital===
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*Not routinely done
 
*Not routinely done
*May be helpful from CSF or vitreous humour
+
*May be helpful from CSF, vitreous humour, or amniotic fluid
 
*Not helpful on brain biopsy tissue
 
*Not helpful on brain biopsy tissue
   
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===Pregnancy===
 
===Pregnancy===
   
  +
*Refer to [[Toxoplasmosis in pregnancy#Management|Toxoplasmosis in pregnancy]]
*To treat active disease in mother:
 
**[[Is treated by::Pyrimethamine]] is relatively contraindicated in pregnancy as it is toxic before 14 weeks gestation
 
**If life-threatening, should likely need treatment and consider abortion (if early in pregnancy)
 
*To prevent congenital toxoplasmosis:
 
**[[Is treated by::Spiromycin]] 1 g q8h is safe throughout pregnancy, and decreases transmission to fetus, but is not enough to treat CNS disease
 
**After fetal infection is confirmed around 18 weeks, [[pyrimethamine]] 50 mg bid for 2 days then 50 mg daily, plus [[sulfadiazine]] 75 mg/kg/d split bid for 2 days then 50 mg/kg bid, plus [[leucovorin]] 10-20 mg daily
 
   
 
==Prevention==
 
==Prevention==

Revision as of 08:31, 15 September 2020

  • Protozoan parasite associated with cats and raw beef mostly known for causing opportunistic infections and congenital infections

Background

Microbiology

  • Protozoan parasite
  • Organized into twelve haplotypes

Epidemiology

  • Zoonotic disease with worldwide distribution
  • Modes of transmission
    • Ingesting tissue cysts in meat, or oocytes in food or water
    • Solid organ transplantation, especially heart
    • Vertical or transplacental transmission
    • Case reports of lab-acquired needlestick transmission
    • Theoretical risk with blood transfusion
  • Seroprevalence around 10-18% in Canada 12
    • As high as 60% in Nunavut, however 3
  • There are large parts of South and Central America, as well as Pacific Islands, that have very high seroprevalence 4

Life Cycle

  • The only definitive hosts are in the Felidae family, essentially housecats and their relatives
  • Intermediate hosts are many, and include birds and rodents
  • An infected cat sheds oocytes into the environment (for 1 to 3 weeks), where they spend 1 to 5 days sporulating
    • Each sporulated oocyst contains two sporocysts, and each sporocyst contains four sporozoites
  • Intermediate hosts ingest the sporozoites, where they mature into tachyzoites
  • Tachyzoites migrate to brain and muscle, where they encyst and become bradyzoites
  • Bradyzoites are ingested by a cat, completing the life cycle

Pathophysiology

  • Following ingestion, bradyzoites and sporozoites invade the small intestinal mucosa and develop into tachyzoites within the gut epithelium
  • There, they insert themselves into monocytes and other nucleated cells
  • Infected cells travel throughout the body, carrying the tachyzoite with them
  • Infection triggers a Th-1 response

Clinical Manifestations

Immunocompetent

  • Asymptomatic in 80% of primary infections
  • Symptoms, when they occur, can involve fever, cervical lymphadenopathy (painless and rubbery), myalgias, and weakness/fatigue
  • Can also cause chorioretinitis
  • Severity of illness depends in part on genotype, with strain II in North America and Europe being less severe
    • Rarely, unusual strains may cause pneumonitis, myocarditis, meningoencephalitis, or polymyositis, and can lead to death

Immunocompromised

  • May be from primary infection or, more commonly, reactivation
  • Unlike in immunocompetent people, it is always a serious infection in the immunocompromised
  • Major risk factor is cellular immunodeficiency, as in HIV and some immunosuppressive medications
    • In HIV, beware with CD4 < 100
  • Typically presents with CNS involvement as encephalitis
    • Symptoms include fever, headache, lethargy, incoordination, ataxia, hemiparesis, loss of memory, dementia, or seizures
  • Can also present with pneumonitis (especially with bone marrow transplant), chorioretinitis, or myocarditis, and rarely involves essentially any other organ

Pregnancy

Congenital

Diagnosis

  • Immunocompetent or pregnant women with primary infection: IgG/IgM serology, possibly with avidity testing for pregnant women
  • Fetus, to rule out congenital infection following maternal primary infection: PCR of amniotic fluid
  • Newborn, to rule out congenital infection: PCR of placenta or cord, or serology
  • Immunocompromised patient, to diagnose cerebral or disseminated disease: PCR of blood, CSF, BAL, or tissue
  • Patient with chorioretinitis: Parallel serologies from aqueous humour and serum, or PCR of aqueous humour

Serology

  • Serology is the mainstay of diagnosis5
  • IgM antibodies
    • Detectable within 1 week, and titres plateau within 1 month and start decreasing after 1 to 6 months
    • IgM is still detectable for months or years after infection
      • Rarely, lost within 3 months
      • 25% lost within 7 months
      • Often detectable for more than a year
  • IgG antibodies
    • Detectable 2 to 4 weeks after infection, and plateaus within 2 to 3 months
    • Declines but persists lifelong
  • IgG avidity testing can help to assess how recently the infection was acquired
    • Provides a measure of how tightly the antibodies bind, which is highest in early infection
    • A high avidity ratio (weak binding) suggests that the infection was acquired at least 4 months prior
    • Treatment delays avidity
    • Most useful during the first trimester of pregnancy, when high avidity effectively rules out acquisition during pregnancy

PCR

  • Not routinely done
  • May be helpful from CSF, vitreous humour, or amniotic fluid
  • Not helpful on brain biopsy tissue

Management

HIV

Pregnancy

Prevention

  • Cats: hand hygiene after handling cat, use gloves and wash hands when handling litter, wash litter tray with hot >60ºC water, keep litter out of kitchen
  • Soil: use gloves for gardening, wash hands after soil contact
  • Water: avoid tap water in highly endemic countries, avoid ingestion of lake and river water
  • Food: avoid raw oysters/clams/mussels, wash all vegetables/fruits/herbs, cook meat well down

Further Reading

  • Epidemiology of and Diagnostic Strategies for Toxoplasmosis. Clin Microbiol Rev. 2012;25(2):264. doi: [10.1128/CMR.05013-11]

References

  1. ^  Samar Shuhaiber, Gideon Koren, Rada Boskovic, Thomas R Einarson, Offie Porat Soldin, Adrienne Einarson. Seroprevalence of Toxoplasma gondiiinfection among veterinary staff in Ontario, Canada (2002): Implications for teratogenic risk. BMC Infectious Diseases. 2003;3(1). doi:10.1186/1471-2334-3-8.
  2. ^  EL Ford-Jones, I Kitai, M Corey, R Notenboom, N Hollander, E Kelly, H Akoury, G Ryan, I Kyle, R Gold. Seroprevalence of Toxoplasma Antibody in a Toronto Population. Canadian Journal of Infectious Diseases. 1996;7(5):326-328. doi:10.1155/1996/172651.
  3. ^  V. Messier, B. Lévesque, J.-F. Proulx, L. Rochette, M. D. Libman, B. J. Ward, B. Serhir, M. Couillard, N. H. Ogden, É. Dewailly, B. Hubert, S. Déry, C. Barthe, D. Murphy, B. Dixon. Seroprevalence of Toxoplasma gondii Among Nunavik Inuit (Canada). Zoonoses and Public Health. 2009;56(4):188-197. doi:10.1111/j.1863-2378.2008.01177.x.
  4. ^  Georgios Pappas, Nikos Roussos, Matthew E. Falagas. Toxoplasmosis snapshots: Global status of Toxoplasma gondii seroprevalence and implications for pregnancy and congenital toxoplasmosis. International Journal for Parasitology. 2009;39(12):1385-1394. doi:10.1016/j.ijpara.2009.04.003.
  5. ^ gangneux2012ep