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Calicivirus infection in pediatric small intestine transplant recipients: pathological considerations
Morotti, Raffaella A; Kaufman, Stuart S; Fishbein, Thomas M; Chatterjee, Nando K; Fuschino, Megan E; Morse, Dale L; Magid, Margret S
Human calicivirus (HuCV), a common cause of mild gastroenteritis in the general population, produces a prolonged diarrheal illness in pediatric recipients of small intestinal transplant (IT). By use of reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction to detect the viral RNA polymerase gene in stool and tissue from gastrointestinal biopsies, 5 pediatric IT recipients with high-volume diarrhea were diagnosed with HuCV enteritis. Histopathologic findings of biopsies obtained at different gastrointestinal sites were studied retrospectively to identify characteristic features of HuCV enteritis and to distinguish these changes from rejection. Controls were 8 pediatric IT recipients with high-volume diarrhea but negative HuCV reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction assays during the same time period. All HuCV biopsies showed increased mononuclear infiltrates in the lamina propria and villous blunting. Reactive disarray of surface epithelial cells and increased apoptosis in the surface epithelium and superficial lamina propria were characteristic features (in 4/5 patients). Increased glandular apoptosis was also present in 3/5 patients. Findings were more pronounced in jejunal allograft than ileal allograft, and were present in both graft and native bowel. In comparison with the control group, the architectural changes, surface epithelial reactive changes, and superficial apoptosis were characteristic of HuCV enteritis, while the presence of glandular apoptosis was a feature shared with cases of mild acute cellular rejection HuCV may cause severe allograft dysfunction after pediatric IT. Calicivirus infection has clinical and histological features that overlap with allograft rejection. Knowledge of the characteristic histologic features of HuCV enteritis aids in differential diagnosis.
PMID: 15492991
ISSN: 0046-8177
CID: 2129822
A 17-month-old boy with periorbital swelling
Ko, Jimmy; Magid, Margaret S; Benkov, Keith J; Chehade, Mirna; Nowak-Wegrzyn, Anna
PMID: 15478379
ISSN: 1081-1206
CID: 142103
Minor salivary gland biopsy in neonatal hemochromatosis [Case Report]
Smith, Shane R; Shneider, Benjamin L; Magid, Margret; Martin, Gregory; Rothschild, Michael
BACKGROUND: Neonatal hemochromatosis (NH), a rare disorder seen in newborns, is defined as liver failure with extrahepatic iron deposition that spares the reticuloendothelial elements. This disorder is considered the pathologic end point of a variety of diseases that result in prenatal liver failure, and mortality without aggressive treatment is common. However, ready diagnosis remains a problem. A liver biopsy specimen showing siderosis is not specific for hemochromatosis and may be risky in patients with coagulopathy. OBJECTIVE: To describe a safe and effective method for diagnosing NH that uses lower-lip minor salivary gland biopsy and can be readily performed even in the most severe cases of coagulopathy under local anesthesia. METHODS: Eleven neonates with suspected NH were identified. After informed consent, a biopsy specimen of lower-lip tissue was taken under local anesthesia by the otolaryngology team. RESULTS: Ten of the 11 neonates had minor salivary gland tissue present (or detected) by initial frozen-section analysis. One of the 11 patients required a second biopsy owing to a lack of sufficient minor salivary gland tissue on the initial specimen, underscoring the importance of frozen-section analysis. Six of 7 neonates with NH had positive biopsy findings and the seventh had a false negative. There were 4 true negatives. Three of 7 children with NH survived, 1 requiring liver transplantation and 2 with medical treatment only. CONCLUSION: Minor salivary gland biopsy is a safe and effective way to quickly diagnose NH, a rapidly progressive, often fatal condition.
PMID: 15210559
ISSN: 0886-4470
CID: 2130212
Medication adherence in pediatric and adolescent liver transplant recipients
Shemesh, Eyal; Shneider, Benjamin L; Savitzky, Jill K; Arnott, Lindsay; Gondolesi, Gabriel E; Krieger, Nancy R; Kerkar, Nanda; Magid, Margret S; Stuber, Margaret L; Schmeidler, James; Yehuda, Rachel; Emre, Sukru
OBJECTIVE: Nonadherence to medications is a leading cause of morbidity in children and adolescents who have had a transplant, yet there are no published data about the use of different methods for detecting whether these children are taking their medications. There are also no published data about the age of transition at which a child assumes responsibility over taking the medications. This information is important if interventions to improve adherence are contemplated. METHODS: We present an analysis of data obtained in the first year of the implementation of an adherence assessment protocol at a pediatric liver transplant clinic in a tertiary medical care center. Data were obtained for children and adolescents who had a liver transplant at least 1 year before the assessments took place. We used 5 adherence detection methods. The 4 subjective methods were self-reported, scaled questionnaires answered by nurses, physicians, caregivers, and patients. For the objective method, a standard deviation (SD) was calculated for tacrolimus blood levels obtained from each patient over time. A higher SD suggests increased variation among patients' blood levels and hence more erratic medication taking. We also asked the patients and caregivers who is responsible for taking the medications and what are the reasons for not taking them. The medical outcome measures were biopsy-proven rejection episodes, number of biopsies regardless of the results, number of hospital admissions, and number of in-patient days. RESULTS: An analysis of 81 cases (258 assessments) revealed that the only method that predicted the medical outcome variables (biopsy-proven rejection and number of biopsies) was the SD of medication blood levels. Patients', clinicians', and caregivers' reports were not predictive. Clinicians' ratings of adherence were not correlated with patients' or caregivers'. The transition of responsibility for medication taking occurred approximately at the age of 12 years. Forgetfulness was cited as the most common reason for nonadherence by patients and caregivers; medication side effects were not frequently cited. CONCLUSIONS: Our results indicate that clinical impression is not sufficient to determine whether children and adolescents are taking their medications after they have had a liver transplant. An objective assessment method should be used. Interventions targeting adherence should address the child's increasing role beginning in early adolescence. A clinical protocol incorporating objective assessments of adherence could potentially be implemented in other settings. It could form the basis for the evaluation of efficacy of interventions seeking to improve adherence to medications.
PMID: 15060234
ISSN: 1098-4275
CID: 2129832
Histological criteria for the identification of acute cellular rejection in human small bowel allografts: results of the pathology workshop at the VIII International Small Bowel Transplant Symposium
Ruiz, P; Bagni, A; Brown, R; Cortina, G; Harpaz, N; Magid, M S; Reyes, J
Acute cellular rejection remains a serious and frequent complication during the posttransplant course of small bowel allograft recipients. Currently, small bowel biopsies are the optimal method to identify this form of rejection. The morphological criteria for this diagnosis have been known for some time; however, no consensus study has classified these changes. To address issues in bowel transplant pathology, several pathologists experienced in this particular subdiscipline participated in a Pathology Workshop preceding the VIIIth International Small Bowel Transplant Symposium in Miami, Florida. Among the results of this workshop was the development a standardized grading scheme for acute cellular rejection in small bowel transplants.
PMID: 15050150
ISSN: 0041-1345
CID: 2129842
Progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis, type 1, is associated with decreased farnesoid X receptor activity
Chen, Frank; Ananthanarayanan, M; Emre, Sukru; Neimark, Ezequiel; Bull, Laura N; Knisely, A S; Strautnieks, Sandra S; Thompson, Richard J; Magid, Margret S; Gordon, Ronald; Balasubramanian, N; Suchy, Frederick J; Shneider, Benjamin L
BACKGROUND & AIMS: The mechanisms by which mutations in the familial intrahepatic cholestasis-1 gene cause Byler's disease (progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis type 1) are unknown. METHODS: Interactions among the apical sodium-dependent bile acid transporter, the farnesoid X receptor (FXR), and familial intrahepatic cholestasis-1 were studied in the ileum of children with progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis type 1 and in Caco-2 cells. RESULTS: Increased ileal apical sodium-dependent bile acid transporter messenger RNA (mRNA) expression was detected in 3 patients with progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis type 1. Paradoxically, ileal lipid-binding protein mRNA expression was repressed, suggesting a central defect in bile acid response. Ileal FXR and short heterodimer partner mRNA levels were reduced in the same 3 patients. In Caco-2 cells, antisense-mediated knock-down of endogenous familial intrahepatic cholestasis-1 led to up-regulation of apical sodium-dependent bile acid transporter and down-regulation of FXR, ileal lipid-binding protein, and short heterodimer partner mRNA. In familial intrahepatic cholestasis-1-negative Caco-2 cells, the activity of the human apical sodium-dependent bile acid transporter promoter was enhanced, whereas the human FXR and bile salt excretory pump promoters' activities were reduced. Overexpression of short heterodimer partner but not of the FXR abrogated the effect of familial intrahepatic cholestasis-1 antisense oligonucleotides. FXR cis-element binding and FXR protein were reduced primarily in nuclear but not cytoplasmic extracts from familial intrahepatic cholestasis-1-negative Caco-2 cells. CONCLUSIONS: Loss of familial intrahepatic cholestasis-1 leads to diminished nuclear translocation of the FXR, with the subsequent potential for pathologic alterations in intestinal and hepatic bile acid transporter expression. Marked hypercholanemia and cholestasis are predicted to develop, presumably because of both enhanced ileal uptake of bile salts via up-regulation of the apical sodium-dependent bile acid transporter and diminished canalicular secretion of bile salts secondary to down-regulation of the bile salt excretory pump.
PMID: 14988830
ISSN: 0016-5085
CID: 2129852
Defining normal plasma citrulline in intestinal transplant recipients
Gondolesi, Gabriel E; Kaufman, Stuart S; Sansaricq, Claude; Magid, Margret S; Raymond, Kimiyo; Iledan, Liesl P; Tao, Ye; Florman, Sander S; LeLeiko, Neal S; Fishbein, Thomas M
Biopsy is the only means to identify intestinal graft rejection. Plasma citrulline (P-Cit) has been proposed as a marker for rejection after intestinal transplant (IT), but normative data is lacking. We analyzed P-Cit in IT recipients without rejection or other histological abnormalities. In 40 patients, P-Cit was measured with a Beckman amino acid analyzer within 24 h of protocol or clinically indicated endoscopic biopsy procured > 6 and < 360 days post-IT. Measurements included for analysis corresponded to normal (or minimally abnormal) biopsies that remained so for 7 days. These criteria were met by 145 samples from 10 adults and 14 children. Overall mean P-Cit (nmol/mL) was 34.0 +/- 19.9. Mean P-Cit was 22.2 +/- 13.2 between 6 and 30 days post-IT, 34.9 +/- 17.2 (p = 0.001) between 30 and 60 days, 43.6 +/- 15.8 between 60 and 90 days (p = 0.001), then stable until the end of the first year. Plasma citrulline was lower in 13 patients with body surface area (BSA) < or = 1 m2 vs. 11 patients with BSA > or = 1.1 m2 (p = 0.0001). Plasma citrulline increased linearly during the first 120 days in both BSA groups (r = 0.573 and r = 0.512; p = 0.0001). Within 3 months after IT, variations in P-Cit based on body size and postop interval should be considered when evaluating the need for histological confirmation of graft dysfunction
PMID: 14961995
ISSN: 1600-6135
CID: 62109
Isolated intestinal transplantation: proof of clinical efficacy
Fishbein, Thomas M; Kaufman, Stuart S; Florman, Sander S; Gondolesi, Gabriel E; Schiano, Thomas; Kim-Schluger, Leona; Magid, Margaret; Harpaz, Noam; Tschernia, Alan; Leibowitz, Andrew; LeLeiko, Neal S
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Isolated intestinal transplantation has been limited by poor patient and graft survival. If high survival could be achieved and if parenteral nutrition-associated liver disease were reversible, this procedure could be more widely applied, with early liver dysfunction indicating the need for transplant evaluation. METHODS: Twenty-six patients who had failed parenteral nutrition received 28 isolated intestinal transplants. We analyzed patient and graft survival, the effect of sirolimus on the severity and frequency of rejection, and the reversibility of liver dysfunction after transplant. RESULTS: Three-year actuarial patient and primary graft survival were 88% and 71%, respectively. Two patients underwent successful retransplants. Twenty-two patients are alive at a mean of 21+/-15 (median 18; range 3-51) months. Actuarial survival with freedom from parenteral support is 81% at 3 years (21 of 26 patients). Actuarial freedom from parenteral support among survivors is 95.5% at 3 years (21 of 22 patients). Early rejection was less frequent with sirolimus (34% vs. 70% without sirolimus) (P=0.007). Moderate and severe rejection was less frequent with sirolimus (1/11 episodes vs. 9/17 episodes without sirolimus) (P=0.05). No grafts were lost after introduction of sirolimus. In all four patients with advanced liver dysfunction, fibrosis and cholestasis regressed within 1 year. CONCLUSIONS: High patient survival and parenteral nutrition-free survival can be achieved after isolated intestinal transplantation. Sirolimus treatment has eliminated graft loss. Parenteral nutrition-associated liver disease is reversible with intestinal transplantation. Refractory liver dysfunction in patients receiving parenteral nutrition should prompt consideration for isolated intestinal transplantation.
PMID: 12973101
ISSN: 0041-1337
CID: 2128842
Adenovirus infection in pediatric small bowel transplantation recipients
Pinchoff, Rebecca J; Kaufman, Stuart S; Magid, Margret S; Erdman, Dean D; Gondolesi, Gabriel E; Mendelson, Meryl H; Tane, Kliti; Jenkins, Stephen G; Fishbein, Thomas M; Herold, Betsy C
BACKGROUND: The purpose of this study was to determine the prevalence of adenoviral infection in pediatric small bowel transplantation (SBT) recipients, examine risk factors for progression to histologic disease, and examine the impact of adenovirus on outcome. METHODS: Beginning in July 2000, all SBT recipients had viral cultures for adenovirus, cytomegalovirus (CMV), and herpes simplex virus (HSV) obtained routinely during graft biopsies. The medical records were retrospectively reviewed for frequency and site of viral culture, types and doses of immunosuppressive drugs, episodes of rejection, histology of allograft biopsies, and other infections. Adenoviral isolates were typed by polymerase chain reaction and type-specific neutralization assays. RESULTS: All 14 SBT recipients who met enrollment criteria had evidence of adenoviral infection (intestinal graft, 13; liver graft, 1). Eight of 14 developed histologic disease with identifiable adenoviral intranuclear inclusions. In contrast, CMV enteritis was identified in only one patient, who subsequently also developed adenoviral disease. No other viruses were detected. Adenoviral cultures were first positive within 30 days of transplant in nine. Patients with histologic disease were more likely than those without to have received intensive corticosteroid therapy (P<0.007), had virus isolated from more than one site (P=0.03), and had persistent positive cultures (P<0.01). CONCLUSIONS: Adenovirus was commonly isolated from children undergoing intestinal transplantation. Progression to disease may be associated with more intensive immunosuppressive therapy and inability to clear virus.
PMID: 12865807
ISSN: 0041-1337
CID: 2129862
Calicivirus enteritis in an intestinal transplant recipient [Case Report]
Kaufman, Stuart S; Chatterjee, Nando K; Fuschino, Meghan E; Magid, Margret S; Gordon, Ronald E; Morse, Dale L; Herold, Betsy C; LeLeiko, Neal S; Tschernia, Allan; Florman, Sander S; Gondolesi, Gabriel E; Fishbein, Thomas M
Protracted diarrhea of uncertain etiology is a significant problem following intestinal transplantation. We report an infant who developed severe secretory diarrhea 178 days after intestinal transplantation that persisted for more than 120 days. Repeated allograft biopsies demonstrated only nonspecific inflammation. Enzyme immunoassay (for rotavirus), culture, and reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction [calicivirus (Norwalk-like virus)] were used to identify the allograft viral infection. A heavy density of calicivirus RNA nucleotide sequences (genogroup II, strain Miami Beach) was isolated from the jejunal and ileal allograft. Following a reduction in immunosuppressive therapy, diarrhea and enteritis remitted in association with the disappearance of all calicivirus RNA sequences. Calicivirus may cause severe allograft dysfunction in intestinal transplant recipients.
PMID: 12780570
ISSN: 1600-6135
CID: 2129872