4.6 Article

Massive mycobacterial choroiditis during highly active antiretroviral therapy - Another immune-recovery uveitis?

Journal

OPHTHALMOLOGY
Volume 109, Issue 11, Pages 2144-2148

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/S0161-6420(01)01048-X

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Funding

  1. NEI NIH HHS [EY03040] Funding Source: Medline

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Purpose: To describe the ocular presentation of disseminated mycobacterial disease occurring during immune-recovery in a patient with acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS). Study design: Case report and literature review. Participants: A 41-year-old AIDS patient with a prior diagnosis of cytomegalovirus retinitis. Methods: The patient developed progressive, bilateral multifocal choroiditis with panuveitis 2 months after beginning and responding to highly active antiretroviral therapy. His left eye became blind and painful and was enucleated. Pathologic examination revealed massive choroiditis with well-formed, discrete granulomas and multiple intracellular and extracellular acid-fast organisms within the choroidal granulomas. Culture and polymerase chain reaction of vitreous specimens revealed Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC). Results: Empiric, and later sensitivity-guided, local and systemic antibiotic therapy was used to treat the remaining right eye, but it continued to deteriorate. Despite medical therapy, three vitrectomies and repeated intravitreal injections of amikacin, a total retinal detachment ensued. One week after the third vitrectomy, the patient died from mesenteric artery thrombosis in the setting of disseminated mycobacterial disease. Conclusions: This is the first report of ocular inflammation as the presenting finding in the recently recognized syndrome of immune-recovery MAC disease. Pathogenesis of this entity is related to an enhanced immune response to a prior, subclinical, disseminated infection. The formation of discrete granulomas, normally absent in MAC infections in AIDS, reflects this mechanism. (C) 2002 by the American Academy of Ophthalmology, Inc.

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