Fatal Pneumococcal Meningitis in a 7-Year-Old Girl with Interleukin-1 Receptor Activated Kinase Deficiency (IRAK-4) Despite Prophylactic Antibiotic and IgG Responses to Streptococcus Pneumoniae Vaccines

IRAK-4 deficiency causes IL-1R and TLR signaling failure, resulting in minimal clinical features despite invasive bacterial infection. We report the course of a 7-year-old IRAK-4-deficient girl presenting in the first year with multiple occult Staphylococcus aureus lymphadenitis. She was managed wit...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of clinical immunology 2014-04, Vol.34 (3), p.267-271
Hauptverfasser: McKelvie, Brianna, Top, Karina, McCusker, Christine, Letenyi, Duncan, Issekutz, Thomas B., Issekutz, Andrew C.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:IRAK-4 deficiency causes IL-1R and TLR signaling failure, resulting in minimal clinical features despite invasive bacterial infection. We report the course of a 7-year-old IRAK-4-deficient girl presenting in the first year with multiple occult Staphylococcus aureus lymphadenitis. She was managed with antibiotic prophylaxis (sulfa/trimethoprim/PenV, then – due to neutropenia – Cefprozil), pneumococcal vaccination (PCV-7, Pneumovax23, PCV-13) and vigilance. Pneumococcal-specific IgG levels were monitored. No bacterial infections occurred on prophylaxis for 6 years after initial presentation. IgG response to pneumococcal polysaccharide was satisfactory but short-lived, requiring frequent boosting. At age 7, patient developed a morning headache and vomited once. Cefprozil was administered and re-dosed. Over 12 h, she was fatigued without other symptoms. Low fever accompanied another emesis. A few hours later she was confused, and purpuric rash appeared. Emergency physicians diagnosed sepsis/meningitis and started vancomycin-ceftriaxone. Respiratory failure and cerebellar herniation occurred
ISSN:0271-9142
1573-2592
DOI:10.1007/s10875-014-9996-4