Abstracts
OBJECTIVES: To report a rare case of congenital toxoplasmosis from an immunocompetent mother with chronic infection who had reactivation of ocular disease during pregnancy. DESCRIPTIONS:The newborn was asymptomatic at birth and identified by neonatal screening (IgM anti-Toxoplasma gondii in dried blood) among other 190 infants with congenital toxoplasmosis during a 7-month period. His mother had had a non-treated episode of reactivation of toxoplasmic retinochoroiditis during pregnancy, with stable IgG titers and negative IgM results. Results of IgM and IgG in the newborn’s serum, as well as IgG immunoblotting were positive and active retinochoroidal lesions were detected in his peripheral retina. The neonate was treated with sulfadiazine, pyrimethamine and folinic acid. At 14 months of life, the child remained asymptomatic, with regression of retinochoroidal lesions and persistence of IgG. COMMENTS: It is possible that systematic neonatal screening in areas with high prevalence of infection may identify these cases.
Congenital toxoplasmosis; vertical transmission; neonatal screening; chorioretinitis; pregnancy
OBJETIVO: Apresentar um caso raro de toxoplasmose congênita de uma mãe imunocompetente com infecção crônica que teve reativação da doença ocular durante a gestação. DESCRIÇÃO: O recém-nascido estava assintomático no nascimento e foi identificado através de triagem neonatal (IgM anti-Toxoplasma gondii em sangue seco) entre outros 190 bebês com toxoplasmose congênita durante um período de 7 meses. Sua mãe tinha tido um episódio não tratado de reativação de retinocoroidite toxoplásmica durante a gestação, com títulos de IgG estáveis e resultados negativos para IgM. Os resultados de IgM e IgG no soro do recém-nascido e o teste de immunoblotting para IgG foram positivos, e detectou-se lesões retinocoroideanas ativas na periferia da retina. O recém-nascido foi tratado com sulfadiazina, pirimetamina e ácido folínico. Aos 14 meses de vida, a criança permanecia assintomática, com regressão das lesões retinocoroideanas e persistência de IgG. COMENTÁRIOS: É possível que a triagem neonatal sistemática em áreas com alta prevalência de infecção possa identificar esses casos.
Toxoplasmose congênita; transmissão vertical; triagem neonatal; coriorretinite; gestação
BRIEF COMMUNICATION
Congenital toxoplasmosis from a chronically infected woman with reactivation of retinochoroiditis during pregnancy
Gláucia M. Q. AndradeI;Daniel V. Vasconcelos-SantosII;Ericka V. M. CarellosIII;Roberta M. C. RomanelliIV;Ricardo W. A. VitorV; Ana C. A. V. CarneiroVI;Jose N. JanuarioVII
IPhD. Departamento de Pediatria, Núcleo de Apoio em Pesquisa e Apoio Diagnóstico (NUPAD), Faculdade de Medicina, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais (UFMG), Belo Horizonte, MG, Brazil
IIPhD. NUPAD, Setor de Uveítes, Hospital São Geraldo, Hospital de Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina, UFMG, Belo Horizonte, MG, Brazil
IIIMSc. NUPAD, Faculdade de Medicina, UFMG, Belo Horizonte, MG, Brazil
IVPhD. NUPAD, Faculdade de Medicina, UFMG, Belo Horizonte, MG, Brazil
VPhD. Departamento de Parasitologia, Instituto de Ciências Biológicas (ICB), UFMG, Belo Horizonte, MG, Brazil
VIMSc. Departamento de Parasitologia, ICB, UFMG, Belo Horizonte, MG, Brazil
VIIMSc. NUPAD, Departamento de Clínica Medica, Faculdade de Medicina, UFMG, Belo Horizonte, MG, Brazil
Correspondence
ABSTRACT
OBJECTIVE: To report a rare case of congenital toxoplasmosis from an immunocompetent mother with chronic infection who had reactivation of ocular disease during pregnancy.
DESCRIPTION: The newborn was asymptomatic at birth and identified by neonatal screening (IgM anti-Toxoplasma gondii in dried blood) among other 190 infants with congenital toxoplasmosis during a 7-month period. His mother had had a non-treated episode of reactivation of toxoplasmic retinochoroiditis during pregnancy, with stable IgG titers and negative IgM results. Results of IgM and IgG in the newborn's serum, as well as IgG immunoblotting were positive and active retinochoroidal lesions were detected in his peripheral retina. The neonate was treated with sulfadiazine, pyrimethamine and folinic acid. At 14 months of life, the child remained asymptomatic, with regression of retinochoroidal lesions and persistence of IgG.
COMMENTS: It is possible that systematic neonatal screening in areas with high prevalence of infection may identify these cases.
Keywords: Congenital toxoplasmosis, vertical transmission, neonatal screening, chorioretinitis, pregnancy.
Introduction
Congenital toxoplasmosis resulting from the reactivation of chronic infection in immunocompetent pregnant women is considered a rare event. Reported cases have been linked to a possible decreased cellular response during pregnancy, which might interfere with the parasite control and the clinical course of maternal infection and subsequently increase the risk of vertical transmission.1-3
The impact of reinfection on the occurrence of human congenital toxoplasmosis is also largely unknown. Cases resulting from reinfection have also been reported,4 with the detection of IgM, and especially IgA antibodies due to the immune response of the gastrointestinal tract to the ingestion of oocysts.5-7 Fetal involvement is variable.4,8
In the Brazilian State of Minas Gerais, neonatal screening of 146,307 newborns from November 2006 to May 2007 identified 190 cases of congenital toxoplasmosis (prevalence of 1/770 liveborns).9 Among these, there was an infant whose mother was chronically infected and had a clinical and serological picture consistent with reactivation of toxoplasmic retinochoroiditis during pregnancy. The purpose of this paper is to report this case and review the literature on the subject.
Case description
In 2006, a primiparous woman gave birth to a male infant at 39 weeks of gestation. At birth, his weight was 3,410 g, length 50 cm, and head circumference 37 cm. A pediatric examination found no abnormalities. The mother reported an episode of toxoplasmic retinochoroiditis in the left eye 10 years before pregnancy. She referred serological tests which were consistent with the diagnosis, and was treated with standard antiparasitic drugs, as well as oral and topical corticosteroids. She had no apparent immunodeficiency neither used immunosuppressive drugs. In the 24th week of gestation, she had reactivation of retinochoroiditis in her left eye, with further decreased vision and a satellite lesion at the margin of a perimacular pigmented scar. She was then treated only with topical corticosteroids. The serological screening for toxoplasmosis in the 25th and 28th weeks showed low and stable IgG levels and no IgM antibodies (Table 1). In the 25th week, HIV tests had negative results. Ten days after birth, as part of a research project on neonatal screening, a dried blood sample from her infant tested positively for anti-Toxoplasma gondii IgM antibodies. Confirmatory serological tests for toxoplasmosis on the infant yielded positive results for IgG and IgM (Table 1). Clinical examination revealed splenomegaly and transfontanel ultrasound and hearing assessment were unremarkable. One month after birth, ophthalmologic examination of the baby revealed multiple active retinochoroidal lesions in the peripheral retina of both eyes. Two weeks later, the mother experienced slightly decreased vision and floaters in the right eye and examination disclosed active toxoplasmic retinochoroiditis in the superior periphery of the right eye. The left eye had a large pigmented perimacular scar. The mother was initially treated only with topical steroid and mydriatic. However, vision further decreased in the right eye, requiring classical treatment (sulfadiazine, pyrimethamine and folinic acid) with oral prednisone (1 mg/kg). The lesion eventually healed, with recovery of visual acuity, but 1 year later she developed further decreased vision in the left eye, with choroidal neovascularization at the margins of the old perimacular scar in the left eye (Figure 1).
Despite the positive serologic results (IgM and IgG), the sera collected from mother and offspring (1 and 2 months after birth) were also analyzed by immunoblotting as described by Gavinet et al.6 The IgG antibodies of the newborn recognized three T. gondii proteins (87 kDa, 54-58 kDa e 31-33 kDa) which were not recognized by the mother, confirming infection of the offspring.
Two blood samples from the infant (collected 5 and 8 weeks after birth) were also tested by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) targeting T. gondii B1 gene as described by Vidigal et al.,10 with negative results. Blood from the same samples was also inoculated in Swiss-Webster mice. The animals were evaluated daily, having their peritoneal fluid analyzed under the microscope for tachyzoites, and being sacrificed after 30 days. A serologic test for T. gondii was performed and the brain was examined for tissue cysts. These tests also gave negative results.
The child was treated with sulfadiazine, pyrimethamine, and folinic acid for 12 months,5 and is now under follow-up without ophthalmologic, auditory or neurologic sequelae.
Discussion
We present a case of a woman with chronic infection who had a clinical and serological picture consistent with reactivation of toxoplasmic retinochoroiditis in her left eye during pregnancy and transmitted the disease to her offspring. The mother reported a first episode of ocular toxoplasmosis that was treated 10 years before conception, and results of serological tests during pregnancy evidenced only low IgG levels, with no IgM antibodies. Congenital infection was confirmed by serological tests (Table 1), as well as by comparative immunoblotting.
In immunocompetent pregnant women, only primary T. gondii infection is regarded to pose a significant risk of vertical transmission,5,11 although this primary infection may be acquired shortly before conception.3,12 Congenital toxoplasmosis resulting from chronically infected immunocompetent pregnant women is considered a rare event,2,10-12 being attributed to either reinfection or reactivation.3,5,13
Reinfection is accompanied by an intense immune response, often manifested by the elevation of IgG levels and the appearance of IgM antibodies. In an immunocompetent pregnant woman with a serological profile of latent infection (no IgM and IgA antibodies, and low IgG levels), indicators of acute toxoplasmosis (IgM and/or IgA results and high IgG levels) suggest reinfection, which might result in transmission to the fetus.6 Gavinet et al.6 reported a case of congenital infection from an immunocompetent mother in which early serological investigation during gestation suggested a chronic T. gondii infection. Sequential serological tests showed emergence of IgM and IgA and an increase in titers of IgG antibodies, suggesting a possible reinfection.
Two other publications reported cases of toxoplasmosis transmitted by chronically infected mothers with congenital infection diagnosed early in the neonatal period.7,8 Retrospective analysis of blood samples indicated that in both cases there was an increase in serum titers of IgG antibodies and the appearance of IgA antibodies. The maternal immune system was not compromised in either case and there was also no evidence of reactivation during pregnancy, so reinfection was the most likely explanation. Silveira et al.2 described a case of congenital toxoplasmosis diagnosed through a routine screening, in which the mother had been infected 20 years before pregnancy. They suggested the possibility of reinfection by the same or different strains of the parasite. Reinfection may be associated with exposure to a large number of parasites, to a more virulent strain or to a parasite of a different genotype. Lebas et al.4 reported a severe case of congenital toxoplasmosis in a woman infected before pregnancy and suggested that she may have been infected by a different parasite strain. Experimentally, chronically infected animals may deliver offsprings with congenital infection when they are reinfected with different strains of the parasite.14 Recently, natural mixed infections, resulting from coincident or sequential exposure to parasites of different genotypes have been observed in humans,15 although it is still unclear whether the protection triggered by the primary infection is genotype-specific.
In the present report, the mother was immunocompetent and had no serological evidence of recently acquired infection or of reinfection. Clinical history and ophthalmological examination were consistent with reactivation of retinochoroiditis during pregnancy, but reinfection cannot be definitely excluded. Reactivation of retinochoroiditis is more common during pregnancy,1 but is usually regarded to be a localized process, with no systemic implications and a presumed low risk of fetal infection.1 Immunocompromised pregnant women, especially those infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), are at higher risk of reactivation during pregnancy (about 1%), mainly in advanced stages of the disease,12 with the risk of fetal involvement estimated to range between 2 and 5%.3,5 Episodes of reactivation correlate with stable or increased serum IgG titers, but IgM antibodies are invariably not detected, as observed in our case. Interestingly, our patient also had an episode of active retinochoroiditis in the left eye 6 weeks after delivery. One year later, she developed choroidal neovascularization in the margins of the perimacular scar in her right eye.
In areas of high prevalence of toxoplasmosis, systematic neonatal screening may identify children with congenital toxoplasmosis caused by reinfection or reactivation during pregnancy, possibly indicating that such events might have been underestimated. This may influence the decision to treat reactivating ocular disease in pregnant women. We warn to the need for preventive education at the start of prenatal care, including monitoring of ocular symptoms, whether or not the patients are susceptible.
Acknowledgements
To Dr. Edilaine Fernandes for her contribution regarding part of the ophthalmologic data.
UFMG Congenital Toxoplasmosis Brazilian Group (UFMG-CTBG): Daniel Vitor Vasconcelos-Santos, MD, PhD. Danuza O. Machado Azevedo, MD, PhD. Wesley R. Campos, MD, PhD. Fernando Oréfice, MD, PhD. Gláucia M. Queiroz-Andrade, MD, PhD. Ericka V. Machado Carellos, MD, MSc. Roberta M. Castro Romanelli, MD, PhD. José Nélio Januário, MD, MSc. Luciana Macedo Resende, MSc. Olindo Assis Martins-Filho, MSc, PhD. Ana Carolina de Aguiar Vasconcelos Carneiro, MSc. Ricardo W. Almeida Vitor, MSc, PhD. Waleska Teixeira Caiaffa, MPH, PhD.
References
- 1. Garweg JG, Scherrer J, Wallon M, Kodjikian L, Peyron F. Reactivation of ocular toxoplasmosis during pregnancy. BJOG. 2005;112:241-2.
- 2. Silveira CAM, Ferreira R, Muccioli C, Nussenblatt R, Belfort-Jr R. Toxoplamosis transmitted to a newborn from the mother infected 20 years earlier. Am J Ophthalmol. 2003; 136:370-1.
- 3. Desmonts G, Couvreur J, Thulliez P. [Congenital toxoplasmosis. 5 cases of mother-to-child transmission of pre-pregnancy infection]. Presse Med. 1990;19:1445-9.
- 4. Lebas F, Ducrocq S, Mucignat V, Paris L, Mégier P, Baudon JJ, et al. Congenital toxoplasmosis: a new case of infection during pregnancy in an previously immunized and immunocompetent woman. Arch Pediatr. 2004;11:926-8.
- 5. Remington JS, McLeod R, Thulliez P, Desmonts G. Toxoplasmosis. In: Remington JS, Klein JO, Wilson CB, Baker CJ, editors. Infectious Diseases of the Fetus and Newborn Infant. 6th ed. Philadelphia: Elsevier Saunders; 2006. p. 947-1091.
- 6. Gavinet MF, Robert F, Firtion G, Delouvrier E, Hennequin C, Maurin JR, et al. Congenital toxoplasmosis due to maternal reinfection during pregnancy. J Clin Microbiol. 1997; 35:1276-7.
- 7. Hennequin C, Dureau P, N'Guyen L, Thulliez P, Gagelin B, Dufier JL. Congenital toxoplasmosis acquired from an immune woman. Pediatr Infect Dis J. 1997; 16:75-6.
- 8. Kodjikian L, Hoigne I, Adam O, Jacquier P, Aebi-Ochsner C, Aebi C, et al. Vertical transmission of toxoplasmosis from a chronically infected immunocompetent woman. Pediatr Infect Dis J. 2004;23:272-4.
- 9. Vasconcelos-Santos DV, Azevedo DOM, Campos WR, Oréfice F, Queiroz-Andrade GM, Carellos EVM et al. Congenital toxoplasmosis in southeastern Brazil: results of early ophthalmologic examination of a large cohort of neonates. Ophthalmology. 2009;116:2199-205.
- 10. Vidigal P, Santos DV, Castro F, Couto JC, Vitor RN, Brasileiro-Filho G. Prenatal toxoplasmosis diagnosis from amniotic fluid by PCR. Rev Soc Bras Med Trop. 2002;35:1-6.
- 11. Couvreur J. Le problème de la toxoplasmose congénitale: l'évolution sur quatre décennies. Presse Me. 1999;28:753-7.
- 12. Vogel N, Kirisits M, Michael E, al. E. Congenital toxoplasmosis transmitted from an immunologically competent mother infected before conception. Clin Infect Dis. 1996;23:1055-60.
-
13European collaborative study and research, network on congenital toxoplasmosis. Low incidence of congenital toxoplasmosis in children born to women infected with human immunodeficiency virus. Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Biology. 1996; 68:93-6.
- 14. Araujo F, Slifer T, Kim S. Chronic infection with Toxoplasma gondii does not prevent acute disease or colonization of the brain with tissue cysts following reinfection with different strains of the parasite. J Parasitol. 1997;83:521-2.
- 15. Elbez-Rubinstein A, Ajzenberg D, Dardé ML, Cohen R, Dumètre A, Yera H, et al. Congenital toxoplasmosis and reinfection during pregnancy: case report, strain characterization, experimental model of reinfection, and review. J Infect Dis. 2009;199:280-285.
Correspondência:
Publication Dates
-
Publication in this collection
25 Mar 2010 -
Date of issue
Feb 2010
History
-
Received
08 June 2009 -
Accepted
07 Aug 2009