Chapter 56 Mycobacterial Diseases of the Eye MICHELE TRUCKSIS and JAMES P. DUNN Table Of Contents |
CAUSATIVE ORGANISMS PATHOGENESIS ANIMAL MODELS CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS HISTOPATHOLOGY LABORATORY DIAGNOSIS TREATMENT REFERENCES |
Mycobacteria are uncommon causes of ocular disease, but proper recognition
of the organism is essential if the disease is to be treated appropriately. There
are more than 50 species. Mycobacterium tuberculosis, which causes tuberculosis, and Mycobacterium leprae, which causes leprosy (Hansen's disease), are for several reasons
usually discussed separately from the remaining species, which are commonly
referred to as “atypical,” “nontuberculous,” or “mycobacteria other than tubercle bacilli.” Tuberculosis
and leprosy have been recognized clinically for hundreds of years, whereas
nontuberculous mycobacteria were considered saprophytic organisms
until the middle of this century. Tuberculosis and leprosy are
systemic diseases, with ocular involvement (most commonly uveitis) resulting
from hematogenous dissemination to the eye. Nontuberculous mycobacteria
rarely cause intraocular disease, but they may cause keratitis
and other external infections after trauma or surgery. Tuberculosis
and leprosy are spread by human-to-human contact, whereas nontuberculous
mycobacteria are ubiquitous and can be found in soil, water, and other
sources. The resurgence of tuberculosis in the 1980s led to renewed
interest in mycobacterial diseases in general. Recent advances in mycobacteriology
have expanded our understanding of the clinical syndromes
associated with these organisms. This chapter reviews the epidemiology, pathogenesis, and animal models of mycobacterial eye diseases and summarizes the clinical features, laboratory diagnosis, and treatment of these diverse diseases. |
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Mycobacterium is the only genus of the family Mycobacteriaceae, which is a member of
the order Actinomycetales. Mycobacteria are obligate, aerobic, intracellular
bacilli, 3 to 5 μm long and 0.2 to 0.4 μm in diameter. They
are readily killed by heat but are generally resistant to drying and
chemical agents such as chlorine. M. leprae was identified by Hansen in 1874 and M. tuberculosis by Koch in 1882. Mycobacterium fortuitum and Mycobacterium chelonae were not identified until 1938 and 1953, respectively. The cell wall of mycobacteria, like that of Nocardia and Corynebacterium, contains type A peptidoglycan, in which there is direct cross-linking between m-diaminopimelic acid and D-alanine. The peptidoglycan is covalently linked to a polysaccharide composed of arabinose and galactose. The presence of arabinogalactan results in immunologic cross-reactivity among the three genera. Mycobacteria are characterized by large amounts of lipid and true waxes (up to 40% to 60% of the total dry weight of mycobacteria, compared to 20% in gram-negative bacteria and 1% to 4% in gram-positive bacteria) in their cell walls. The high lipid content accounts for their unusual growth and staining characteristics. After staining with carbol fuchsin, mycobacteria are resistant to decolorization with acid alcohol and are therefore termed “acid-fast.” One class of lipids, the mycosides, is composed of mycolic acids bound to carbohydrates as glycolipids and is unique to acid-fast organisms.1 Mycolic acid is a large α-branched, β-hydroxy fatty acid that varies in size from one species of mycobacterium to another. Wax D (not a true wax) is a large mycoside in which 15 to 20 molecules of mycolic acid are esterified to a large polysaccharide composed of arabinose, galactose, mannose, glucosamine, and galactosamine. Wax D, the active ingredient in Freund's complete adjuvant, acts to increase the antibody response to an antigen. As a result, antigens that by themselves are poorly immunogenic, such as tuberculoprotein, induce host delayed-type hypersensitivity. Unlike some bacteria, the virulence of pathogenic mycobacteria is not related to the secretion of toxins or the presence of a capsule. Cord factor is a mycoside in which two molecules of mycolic acid are esterified to the disaccharide 6,6'-dimycolytrehalose. It is found in virulent mycobacteria and is responsible for the phenomenon in which individual bacteria grow parallel to each other to form large serpentine cords. Cord factor inhibits the migration of polymorphonuclear leukocytes in vitro. Nonvirulent mycobacteria do not grow in cords, and when cord factor is extracted from cells they lose their virulence. Cord factor is not the only component of mycobacteria that has been correlated with virulence, however, as other lipids are also toxic to macrophages. M. leprae contains a species-specific cell wall component known as phenolic glycolic lipid 1 (PGL-1), which enhances intracellular survival and limits antimicrobial penetration.2 Both PGL-1 and the glycoprotein lipoarabinomannan may induce immunologic unresponsiveness of lymphocytes and macrophages in lepromatous leprosy.3 Mycobacteria are slow-growing organisms (particularly M. leprae), with doubling times measured on the order of days to weeks. This slow growth accounts for the long incubation periods for tuberculosis and leprosy as well as the indolent course of most nontuberculous mycobacterial keratitides. Most mycobacteria grow best at 37°C. M. tuberculosis and the nontuberculous mycobacteria can be grown on artificial media, but no in vitro method of culturing M. leprae exists. Runyon and others classified the nontuberculous mycobacteria into four groups based on pigment production, rate of growth, and colony morphology:
Differentiation of species by morphologic, physiologic, and biochemical characteristics is listed in Table 1. Mycobacterium avium and Mycobacterium intracellulare are not distinguishable by these tests and are therefore referred to together as M. avium complex.
TABLE 56-1. Distinguishing Laboratory Characteristics of Medically Important
Mycobacteria
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PATHOGENESIS |
Infection with M. tuberculosis occurs primarily by inhalation of airborne bacilli. The number of bacilli
necessary to establish infection depends on host immunity, the ability
of the organism to multiply within macrophages, and the genetic resistance
of the recipient. In the early stages of infection, alveolar
macrophages nonspecifically ingest and either kill or suppress growth
of the bacilli. After several weeks, delayed-type hypersensitivity to
wax D and tuberculoprotein causes tubercle formation, in which caseous
necrosis surrounds and destroys the nonactivated macrophages harboring
growing bacilli. CD4+ T lymphocytes predominate in delayed-type
hypersensitivity. Both tumor necrosis factor-α and transforming
growth factor-β are involved and contribute to the associated tissue
damage.4 Tubercle bacilli can survive but cannot multiply within the anoxic and acidic caseating necrosis. Cell-mediated immunity, driven primarily by interferon-γ and possibly other cytokines secreted by activated lymphocytes, helps to destroy any bacilli that escape areas of caseation. Both CD4+ (helper) T lymphocytes and CD8+ (suppressor) T lymphocytes are involved.5 Nontuberculous mycobacteria are found in soil, water, and dust. They may infect tissue if local resistance is compromised. In the eye, this may occur as a result of trauma, surgery (e.g., penetrating keratoplasty or radial keratotomy), or contact lens wear. Pulmonary infections have been reported, but person-to-person transmission does not occur. Inoculation of the corneal stroma stimulates both acute and chronic granulomatous inflammation, which limits spread of the infection.6 The use of topical corticosteroids suppresses the granulomatous response and worsens the keratitis. There is a wide range to both the clinical and histopathologic manifestations of leprosy.7 At one end of the spectrum is tuberculoid leprosy, characterized by strong cell-mediated immunity and little humoral immune response. Affected patients have cutaneous and peripheral nerve trunk involvement; histopathologically, there is a granulomatous reaction with only a few organisms noted. At the other end of the spectrum is lepromatous leprosy, characterized by disseminated infection with minimal cell-mediated immunity. Currently, six classes of leprosy are recognized: indeterminate (I), tuberculoid (T), borderline tuberculoid (BT), borderline (BB), borderline lepromatous (BL), and lepromatous (LL). The World Health Organization also uses skin smear results to classify patients. Paucibacillary patients have negative skin smears for acid-fast bacilli and encompass the I, T, and BT classes. Multibacillary patients have positive skin smears and are classified as BB, BL, or LL. Finally, acute reactional (inflammatory) states may occur in leprosy and may cause extensive tissue destruction. The type I lepra (reversal) reaction represents a delayed hypersensitivity reaction against bacillary antigens. It may occur after initiation of treatment causes an increase in cell-mediated immunity (“upgrading reaction”) or in untreated patients in whom borderline leprosy shifts toward the lepromatous pole (“downgrading reaction”). The type II lepra reaction (erythema nodosum leprosum) is an immune complex reaction that follows a release of bacillary antigens from macrophages, triggering antigen-antibody reaction, complement fixation, and neutrophil infiltration. Although the skin is primarily affected in type II reactions, iridocyclitis, arthritis, proteinuria, orchitis, and lymphadenopathy can also occur. The mode of transmission of leprosy is unclear. Overcrowding, poverty, and poor hygiene are risk factors, so that the prevalence approaches 1 case per 1000 population in developing countries (15 million cases worldwide), compared to only about 7000 affected patients in the United States. Leprosy is only mildly infectious and causes a slow granulomatous reaction; most manifestations of the disease are a result of the host's immune response. Although person-to-person spread by nasal droplet infection remains the most likely source, soil contamination, insect vectors, and contact with infected armadillos all may contribute to infection in certain areas of the world. There are wide differences in the percentages of tuberculoid and lepromatous leprosy in different parts of the world, as well as in the ocular sequelae. Corneal disease is more common in Africa and India, whereas iridocyclitis is more common in Southeast Asia.8 Further, there are genetic and hormonal factors that affect disease expression. Lepromatous leprosy, for example, is more common in men than in women and is associated with HLA-MTI. Tuberculoid leprosy has been associated with HLA-DR3. As with tuberculous infection, most infected patients do not manifest clinical disease. |
ANIMAL MODELS |
Several animal models have been developed to study M. tuberculosis pathogenesis, to identify active drug treatments, and to evaluate potential
vaccine efficacy. The two most commonly used models involve the
guinea pig and the mouse. Susceptibility of the guinea pig to infection with the human tubercle bacilli is comparable to that of human infants or immunodeficient adults. A model using low-dose aerosol inoculation to approximate more closely the conditions for human infection has been developed.9 About 10 virulent tubercle bacilli are delivered via the respiratory route to the lungs. Twenty-eight days after infection, lesions are visible by x-ray and organisms can be recovered from excised lesions. The guinea pigs develop high tuberculin sensitivity and show considerable caseous necrosis on histopathology, which parallels the condition in immunocompetent humans. All animals infected with virulent organisms eventually die from their infection. This animal model has been used extensively to evaluate the response to chemotherapy9 and to investigate the protective effect of potential tuberculosis vaccine candidates.10 The mouse has a resistance to tuberculosis similar to that of immunocompetent humans. Unlike humans, mice develop only low degrees of tuberculin sensitivity and show little caseous necrosis. The mouse model is useful in the study of immunity and immunopathology associated with tuberculosis. Some mouse models use immunocompetent animals11; others use immunodeficient animals such as the nude mouse,12 the severe combined immunodeficiency mouse,11 or animals rendered immunodeficient by thymectomy followed by CD4+ T-cell depletion by means of the administration of purified anti-CD4 monoclonal antibody.13 Both aerosol and intravenous inoculations have been used. These models have been used to define the role of T cells, macrophages, and cytokines necessary for the development of acquired immunity. Because adult reactivation tuberculosis accounts for the majority of clinical tuberculosis cases in the world, an animal model that leads to the reactivation of dormant bacteria followed by the development of tuberculosis is desirable. The best documented animal model of dormancy is the Cornell model,14 in which mice are infected intravenously and then treated with isoniazid and pyrazinamide. After 12 weeks, the spleen and lungs are sterile. If the animals are left untreated, the disease will reactivate in 60%, who will develop tuberculosis 3 to 4 months later. This model may be used to evaluate potential therapeutic vaccines that target persons who are already infected with M. tuberculosis but do not have clinical disease. With the recognition of the impact of M. avium complex infections in patients with AIDS, an animal model for this disease has been desirable. The beige mouse is naturally immune deficient and develops uncontrolled infection when intravenously inoculated with M. avium complex organisms,15 but it is not clear whether the efficacy of drug therapy based on this model accurately predicts the therapeutic response in humans. Animal models of M. fortuitum6 and M. chelonae16 keratitis have been described that closely mimic human disease in their clinical and histopathologic features. These models are useful because of the limited correlation between in vitro drug sensitivities and clinical efficacy and have demonstrated that different species of atypical mycobacteria have different susceptibilites to various antimicrobial agents. The nine-banded armadillo, which has a low basal temperature that permits replication of M. leprae, is the most widely used animal model of leprosy.17 A full discussion of this model is beyond the scope of this chapter. |
CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS |
Ocular tuberculosis may affect any structure, but it is uncommon.18,19 One study noted ocular involvement in only 3 of 402 sites of extrapulmonary
tuberculosis.20 Phlyctenulosis results from a delayed-type hypersensitivity to tuberculoprotein, causing
an inflamed nodule (phlycten) of lymphoid tissue near
the limbus that causes tearing, photophobia, and pain. With the possible
exception of retinal vasculitis, other ocular manifestations of
tuberculosis are infectious. Granulomatous iridocyclitis and choroidal
tubercles are the classic manifestations. Tubercles most commonly occur
in miliary tuberculosis and may be the only sign of disseminated disease. They
are yellow or gray-white, one to two disc diameters in size, and
usually limited to the posterior pole of one eye. Larger, solitary
masses can also occur, typically with overlying serous retinal detachment. Eyelid, conjunctival, corneal, scleral, retinal, and orbital
lesions are less common. Neuro-ophthalmic disease most often results from
tuberculous meningitis, especially in HIV-infected patients. Sixth
and third cranial nerve palsies, optic neuritis, papilledema, and chiasmatic
arachnoiditis may result. Nontuberculous mycobacterial ocular disease usually takes the form of keratitis after trauma, surgery, or contact lens wear.21,22 Clinically, infection is usually apparent 2 to 8 weeks after exposure, but it may take as long as 2 years, by which time empiric therapy with corticosteroids or antibiotics may have modified the presentation. The keratitis is usually indolent, similar to that caused by fungi, anaerobic bacteria, or herpes simplex virus. Satellite lesions are common, but suppuration is usually only mild and corneal perforation is rare. A “cracked glass” appearance from separation of corneal lamellae by spreading organisms may occur early in the disease. Dendriform epithelial ulceration, ring infiltrates, and crystalline keratopathy have been reported. Scleritis, canaliculitis, dacryocystitis, orbital granuloma, and endophthalmitis have rarely been reported. M. avium complex species are frequently noted in the choroid of HIVinfected patients at autopsy but rarely cause clinical disease. Ocular involvement is common in leprosy.8,23,24 The ocular adnexae, external eye, and anterior segment are preferentially affected because their temperatures are lower than other parts of the eye. The cornea may be invaded by intraneural spread along limbal ciliary nerves or by hematogenous spread along pannus vessels. Acute hypopyon uveitis may occur during erythema nodosum leprosum. In chronic uveitis, progressive iris atrophy and scarring may occur in the absence of pain or redness. Iris pearls (small white or yellow clusters of bacilli within mononuclear cells without surrounding inflammatory reaction) are pathognomonic for leprosy. Secondary complications of acute and chronic uveitis include glaucoma and cataract. In addition, leprosy may cause loss of eyebrows and eyelashes (madarosis), corneal hypoesthesia with secondary infection and scarring, facial nerve palsy with lagophthalmos, decreased basal and reflex tearing, and trichiasis. Beading of corneal nerves, scleritis, and epiphora caused by nasolacrimal duct obstruction from nasal collapse may occur in lepromatous disease. Five percent to 10% of patients with ocular leprosy are blind.8 |
HISTOPATHOLOGY |
Conjunctival and corneal phlyctenules are characterized by a dense accumulation
of lymphocytes, histiocytes, and plasma cells. Neutrophils may
be seen in acute stages. Giant cells, eosinophils, follicles, and acid-fast
bacilli are absent. The conjunctival lesions heal without scarring, but
corneal phlyctenules heal with focal scarring. Tubercles are the characteristic lesions of primary tuberculosis. They begin as an acute inflammation marked by accumulation of polymorphonuclear leukocytes. After the development of hypersensitivity, the leukocytes are replaced by lymphocytes and macrophages as a granulomatous reaction develops. Central caseation is surrounded by a ring of epithelioid cells, which may fuse to form multinucleated giant cells (Fig. 1). Peripherally are found lymphocytes, macrophages, and proliferating fibroblasts. Skin biopsies from leprosy patients reveal numerous acid-fast bacilli, which may form clumps called globi. Hematoxylin and eosin staining of lepromatous skin biopsies show numerous foam cells, highly vacuolated macrophages laden with acid-fast bacilli. Skin biopsies from tuberculoid patients show few or no acid-fast bacilli, but granulomatous invasion of dermal nerves, with or without caseation, is pathognomonic. Biopsies of ocular tissues (Fig. 2) show numerous organisms inside macrophages, endothelial cells, nerves, pigment epithelium, and smooth muscle cells. There is infiltration of the conjunctiva, cornea, iris, and ciliary body with macrophages, lymphocytes, and plasma cells. Miliary lepromata are seen in iris pearls and around corneal nerves.8 |
LABORATORY DIAGNOSIS |
Mycobacteria have traditionally been identified with the Kinyoun modification
of the Ziehl-Neelsen technique, in which staining with a phenolic
solution of carbol-fuchsin is followed by decolorization with 95% ethanol-3% hydrochloric
acid. The slide is then counterstained with methylene
blue, so that the acid-fast mycobacteria appear red against a blue
background. The bacilli often appear beaded because of the presence
of glycogen and polymetaphosphate bodies. A newer technique used for
screening clinical samples uses the auramine-rhodamine fluorescence stain, which
stains mycobacteria as yellow fluorescing rods on a dark background. Between 5 × 103 and 1 × 104 acid-fast bacilli per milliliter of tissue must be present to be detected
by microscopy. The two tests have comparable sensitivity on tissue
specimens, although fluorescence testing on sputum specimens is easier
and more sensitive. A positive fluorescence stain is confirmed with
the Kinyoun method. Neither test distinguishes between different mycobacteria. As noted above, no in vitro culture medium has been developed for M. leprae. Cultures of other mycobacteria may be obtained using either egg-based media (e.g., Löwenstein-Jensen) or agar-based media (e.g., Middlebrook-Cohn 7H10 or 7H11). Malachite green dye is typically added to the agar to inhibit growth of nonmycobacterial contaminants. Agar-based media support growth more quickly and offer better visualization of colony morphology. The high lipid content of mycobacteria gives the cultures a waxy, dry, and wrinkled surface (Fig. 3). Virulent and avirulent strains cannot be distinguished by colony morphology. Cultures usually take 2 to 4 weeks to grow, although Runyon group IV mycobacteria may grow as early as 3 to 7 days. Cultures are at least 10-fold more sensitive than stains. More recently, radiometric detection of growth in 1 to 2 weeks has been achieved with Middlebrook 7H12 broth, available as BACTEC 12B vials (Becton Dickinson Diagnostic Instrument Systems, Cockeysville, MD). Nonetheless, a culture should be reported as negative only if the Löwenstein-Jensen slants show no growth after 8 weeks of incubation. DNA probes are used in many laboratories to speciate the mycobacteria. Commercially available probes have been used to identify M. tuberculosis, M. avium complex, Mycobacterium kansasii, and Mycobacterium gordonae, but the sensitivity, reproducibility, and predictive value of these tests remain uncertain. Molecular epidemiology, using DNA fingerprint analysis of M. tuberculosis isolates by restriction fragment length polymorphisms, has been used to characterize tuberculosis transmission patterns in large populations, to document false diagnoses of tuberculosis caused by laboratory cross-contamination, and to distinguish reinfection from relapse.25 Skin testing with purified protein derivative is used to determine tuberculous infection. Tuberculin hypersensitivity is mediated by T lymphocytes and determined in part by the patient's immunologic status. Although a full discussion of skin testing is beyond the scope of this chapter, it must be understood that results based on the amount of induration should not be interpreted simply as positive or negative. The American Thoracic Society and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have issued guidelines that take into account various risk factors, including concurrent infection with HIV. Cross-reactivity with nontuberculous mycobacteria can occur. The usefulness of nontuberculous mycobacterial skin tests, especially in patients with ocular disease, is limited. Diagnosis of ocular leprosy is made by microscopic evaluation of tissues.7,8 M. leprae is unique in that it loses its acid-fastness by pyridine extraction and has dopa oxidase activity. It grows best at temperatures less than 37°C, in part accounting for its predilection for the cooler areas of the body and its growth in the cold-blooded nine-banded armadillo. Viable M. leprae organisms stain brightly, whereas dead bacilli stain irregularly. The morphologic index, which measures the percentage of solidly staining bacilli in dermal skin smears and tissue sections, provides a measure of viability of the organism. The bacteriologic index, a logarithmic measurement of the numbers of acid-fast bacilli in the dermis, is useful in determining response to therapy. Although M. leprae does not grow in tissue culture, short-term cultures are available that allow determination of antimicrobial sensitivity.26 The lepromin intradermal skin test, which uses heat-killed M. leprae, is not diagnostically useful but is useful for classification. It is positive in tuberculoid patients and some treated lepromatous patients but negative in untreated lepromatous patients and falsely positive in some patients from endemic regions. A positive Fernandez reaction (induration detectable at 24 to 48 hours) indicates delayed-type hypersensitivity to M. leprae. A positive Mitsuda reaction (induration detectable after 3 to 4 weeks) indicates cell-mediated immunity. |
TREATMENT |
Tuberculous phlyctenulosis usually responds to topical corticosteroids. Ocular
tuberculosis must otherwise be treated systemically. Controlled
studies of the treatment of extrapulmonary tuberculosis (including ocular) are
lacking. For most patients, a four-drug regimen consisting
of isoniazid, rifampin, pyrazinamide, and either streptomycin or ethambutol
is recommended.27 The duration of therapy with each drug should be based on the rate of
drug resistance, sensitivity testing, severity of disease, and concurrent
medical problems, including HIV infection. Directly observed therapy
is highly effective and is associated with enhanced survival.28 Systemic corticosteroids are contraindicated, based on both clinical experience
and animal models.29 Adjunctive therapy with topical corticosteroids and antibiotics such as
amikacin my be useful for anterior segment involvement.30 Recommendations for the treatment of nontuberculous mycobacterial keratitis are limited by lack of experience and the relatively poor correlation between in vitro sensitivity profiles and clinical response. In general, topical amikacin 1% to 2% solution, one drop every half hour, should be started31 and may be supplemented by subconjunctival amikacin (20 mg in 0.5 ml). Topical fluoroquinolones such as ciprofloxacin have shown promise in animal models of M. fortuitum keratitis but are less effective against M. chelonae.16 Macrolide antibiotics such as clarithromycin have also shown promise because of their intraocular penetration. There are insufficient data to make specific recommendations for keratitis caused by nontuberculous mycobacteria other than M. fortuitum or M. chelonae, or for noncorneal infections. Debridement and local excision are usually indicated; therapeutic penetrating keratoplasty may be necessary in unresponsive keratitis. There is a theoretical concern that the use of ointments on the eye may enhance the virulence of nontuberculous mycobacteria because of reduced phagocytosis. As with tuberculosis, treatment of ocular leprosy requires systemic therapy, based on the disease type and the degree of resistance.7 Dapsone and rifampin are the initial drugs of choice; clofazimine is used in dapsone-resistant disease. Type I lepra reactions should be treated with oral corticosteroids. Thalidomide is the drug of choice for erythema nodosum leprosum but must not be used in women of childbearing age because of teratogenicity. Local ocular complications of leprosy such as keratopathy, trichiasis, iritis, and glaucoma must also be addressed. Topical and oral corticosteroids are helpful in acute iritis but less so in chronic iritis.32 |