Chronic and reactivated dengue infection in an immunocompromised host: insights from a case report.

IF 3.5 Q1 TROPICAL MEDICINE
Ludovic Di Ascia, Etienne Frumence, Nicolas Traversier, Cécile Saint-Pastou, Gilda Grard, Henri Vacher-Coponat, Xavier de Lamballerie, Marie-Christine Jaffar-Bandjee
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Abstract

Background: Dengue, a viral infection transmitted by mosquitoes, is a growing global health concern, particularly as its spread now puts half of the world's population at risk. While dengue usually resolves after the primary infection, persistent or chronic cases can occur in immunocompromised individuals.

Case presentation: This case study reports a 43-year-old woman with lupus nephritis and end-stage kidney disease who experienced symptomatic dengue reactivation nearly three years after her initial infection. Despite low viral loads, dengue RNA was detectable in her blood multiple times between 32 and 34 months after the initial detection. Genomic analysis confirmed that the same DENV-1 strain persisted, suggesting chronic infection rather than reinfection. The patient's immunosuppressive treatments, including rituximab, likely impaired her immune response to the initial infection, contributing to viral persistence. Additionally, her profound immunosuppressive state at the time of reactivation, potentially exacerbated by coinfections, may have triggered the virus to re-emerge.

Conclusion: This case highlights the rare but clinically relevant possibility of chronic dengue infection in immunocompromised patients. The confirmed persistence of the same viral strain over nearly three years challenges the conventional view of dengue as a strictly acute infection. It raises concern about the potential for reintroduction and re-emergence of previously circulating strains, as well as the detrimental tissue consequences of chronic infection by the virus. These findings have important implications for clinical management, diagnostic strategies, and public health surveillance, and underscore the need for further research to better understand the mechanisms of dengue chronicity-particularly those involving viral immune evasion and host immune dysfunction.

免疫功能低下宿主的慢性和再激活登革热感染:来自病例报告的见解。
背景:登革热是一种由蚊子传播的病毒感染,是一个日益严重的全球卫生问题,特别是它的传播现在使世界一半人口处于危险之中。虽然登革热通常在初次感染后消退,但免疫功能低下的个体可能出现持续或慢性病例。病例介绍:本病例研究报告了一名患有狼疮肾炎和终末期肾病的43岁妇女,她在初次感染近三年后经历了有症状的登革热再激活。尽管病毒载量很低,但在首次检测后32至34个月期间,在她的血液中多次检测到登革热RNA。基因组分析证实,相同的DENV-1株持续存在,表明慢性感染而不是再感染。患者的免疫抑制治疗,包括利妥昔单抗,可能损害了她对初始感染的免疫反应,导致病毒持续存在。此外,她在重新激活时的深度免疫抑制状态,可能因合并感染而加剧,可能引发病毒再次出现。结论:本病例强调了免疫功能低下患者慢性登革热感染的罕见但临床相关的可能性。同一病毒株已被证实持续了近3年,这挑战了将登革热严格视为急性感染的传统观点。它引起了人们对以前流行的毒株重新传入和再次出现的可能性以及该病毒慢性感染对组织的有害后果的关注。这些发现对临床管理、诊断策略和公共卫生监测具有重要意义,并强调需要进一步研究以更好地了解登革热慢性机制,特别是那些涉及病毒免疫逃避和宿主免疫功能障碍的机制。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Tropical Medicine and Health
Tropical Medicine and Health TROPICAL MEDICINE-
CiteScore
7.00
自引率
2.20%
发文量
90
审稿时长
11 weeks
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