Chapter 98 Autoimmune Diseases
Diagnosis, Treatment, and Life-Threatening Complications
Approximately 1 child in 250 has a rheumatologic condition. In the adult rheumatology patient population, approximately 10% to 25% of all patients who visit emergency departments for a rheumatic disease require hospital admission, and approximately one third of the hospitalized patients need intensive care.1 Although the number of pediatric patients with rheumatologic diseases who require intensive care management is unknown, early diagnosis and rapid treatment can significantly decrease mortality and morbidity.2,3 Patients may present to the intensive care unit (ICU) with life-threatening manifestations of new-onset disease, and a high index of suspicion is necessary in patients who present with constitutional symptoms, unexplained elevated inflammatory markers, and multisystem involvement. Patients with known rheumatologic diseases may be admitted to the ICU with life-threatening complications of the disease process itself or complications secondary to therapies.4 This chapter provides an overview of the most common pediatric rheumatologic diagnoses followed by a discussion of the most common conditions encountered by the intensivist.
Rheumatologic Diseases: Clinical Presentation, Diagnosis, and Treatment
Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis
Juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) is the most common childhood rheumatic disease (Box 98-1).5 Most children are managed as outpatients, but the disease or its complications occasionally require intensive care.
Box 98–1 Criteria for Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis
From Petty RE, Southwood TR, Manners P et al: International League of Associations for Rheumatology classification of juvenile idiopathic arthritis: second revision, J Rheumatol 31:390–392, 2001.
Enthesitis-Related Arthritis
Arthritis and enthesitis or arthritis or enthesitis with at least two of:
Complications
Chest radiographs may show cardiomegaly or pleural effusions. An echocardiogram may detect subclinical effusions and identify signs of cardiac wall compromise. Most will respond to medical management, but occasionally aspiration and drainage of effusions is necessary.
Management
Children with complications of active S-JIA should be treated aggressively with pulse methylprednisolone, usually 30 mg/kg/day up to 1 g/day administered over 1 hour for 3 consecutive days, then maintained at 2 to 3 mg/kg/day divided into 2 to 3 doses/day until symptoms resolve or until other steroid sparing agents are introduced with consultation from a pediatric rheumatologist. It is prudent to cover for infections at the same time because these massive doses of steroids compromise neutrophil function. Sodium and fluid retention, hypertension, gastric upset, and hyperglycemia are other short-term complications.6
Systemic Lupus Erythematosus
Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is a multisystem disease characterized by loss of self-tolerance resulting in development of autoantibodies and formation of immune complexes.7 The organs targeted by the autoantibodies and sites of immune complex deposition determine the disease presentation. Females in peripubertal and postpubertal years are most likely to be affected; however, both males and younger children can develop the disease. To make a diagnosis of SLE, 4 of 11 criteria must be met (Box 98-2).8 However, lupus can be regarded as a medical example of Murphy’s law—what can go wrong, will—so any organ system may be affected and in ways not always listed in the criteria. Therefore a thorough evaluation of all organ systems and serologic tests for antibodies and other markers commonly found in SLE is essential if this diagnosis is being considered.
Box 98–2 Revised SLE Classification Criteria
From Hochberg MC: Updating the American College of Rheumatology revised criteria for the classification of systemic lupus erythematosus, Arthritis Rheum 40:1725, 1997.
Clinical Presentation
Central Nervous System Disease
Seizures and psychosis are included in the criteria; however, strokes, severe migraines, and an encephalopathic picture are among other central nervous system (CNS) findings. CNS disease can occur with minimal serologic changes.9 CNS disease is related to antiphospholipid (APL) antibodies that can cause either thrombotic or embolic phenomena. These findings may be mistaken for or occur concurrently with infections, including opportunists such as nocardia. The eye can be involved in a number of ways (conjunctivitis, scleritis, episcleritis, uveitis, retinal vasculitis), and a careful eye exam is warranted in any possible rheumatic disease.
Pulmonary Involvement
Many patients have pulmonary signs and symptoms.10 Pleuritis is included in the clinical criteria and may be severe, causing respiratory compromise. Pulmonary hemorrhage is one of the most serious complications of pulmonary involvement in SLE and may be precipitated by vasculitis or infection. Dyspnea, hemoptysis, and an otherwise unexplained drop in hemoglobin make this diagnosis obvious, but are not always present. More subtle hemorrhage may be detected by pulmonary function testing, specifically elevation of the diffusion capacity if the patient is stable and able to cooperate. Radiographs or chest computed tomography (CT) of the lungs will reveal patchy ground glass infiltrates.
Renal Involvement
Renal disease is more common and more severe in children with SLE, occurring in about 80% of all cases. The spectrum varies from a silent disease identified only by abnormal urinalysis or by kidney biopsy to renal failure, severe nephrotic syndrome and malignant hypertension. Both nephritic and nephrotic patterns occur, loosely correlating with diffuse proliferative disease and membranous disease, respectively.11
Laboratory Studies
A hallmark of lupus is a positive test for ANAs in over 95% of cases; however, a positive ANA is found in many other conditions, including other rheumatic diseases and infections. It is therefore essential to support the diagnosis with clinical features and evidence of other autoantibodies and immune complex formation.12 Antibodies to double-stranded DNA (ds-DNA) are found in about 40% of patients at onset of their lupus and about 80% during the course of disease. These are quite specific to lupus and correlate with renal disease as the size and charge of the immune complex they form is filtered and deposited in the kidney, triggering an inflammatory response.
Neonatal Lupus Syndromes
Mothers who have autoantibodies, whether or not they are symptomatic, may transmit antibodies to the fetus causing antibody-related disease even before infants have the capacity to make antibodies of their own.13 usually causes neonatal heart block that is irreversible and requires a pacemaker. Anti-La, which mediates neonatal cutaneous lupus syndrome, usually causes a rash that erupts after light exposure, but is sometimes associated with hepatitis and other organ system involvement. Other maternal antibodies, such as antiplatelet or Coomb antibodies, may cause neonatal thrombocytopenia and hemolytic anemia. As the maternal antibody levels in the infant’s circulation decline, the signs usually resolve; however, exchange transfusion can remove antibodies causing serious adverse events.
Juvenile Dermatomyositis
Clinical Presentation
Juvenile dermatomyositis is an inflammatory disease characterized by rashes over the eyelids, face, “shawl” area, and extensor surfaces of the small joints of the hand, knees, and elbows (Gottron papules).5,14 The inflammation affects striated muscle, proximal more than distal muscle groups, and can cause profound weakness of hip and shoulder girdle groups as well the palate, pharynx and upper third of the esophagus, resulting in dysphagia, dysphonia, and aspiration risk. Respiratory failure may not be obvious as muscle weakness may mask typical signs. Nailfold capillary dilatation and dropout are markers for systemic vasculitis. Vasculitis targets the GI tract and may cause bleeding, necrosis and perforation. Pulmonary hemorrhage is another complication of systemic vasculitis, and the fundi and skin may also be affected. Cardiac muscle may be inflamed, and rarely myocarditis and conduction defects have been reported. The kidneys are not usually a primary target of vasculitis, but rhabdomyolysis with secondary renal impairment rarely occurs. Severely ill patients may also demonstrate findings of MAS. An underlying malignancy is extremely rare, unlike adult-onset dermatomyositis.
Mixed Connective Tissue Disease (Overlap Syndrome)
This condition displays features of more than one rheumatic disease, for example a rash and arthritis like lupus, muscle inflammation like dermatomyositis, and fibrosing lung disease like scleroderma. Serologically, these patients usually have very high titer ANAs and antibodies only to ribonucleoprotein. Management, besides general control of inflammatory features, depends on the clinical features identified and the organs affected.
Antiphospholipid Antibody Syndrome
Catastrophic thrombotic syndromes are caused by hypercoagulable states. Some are related to primary hematologic diseases, such as deficiencies of protein C and protein S, 5,10-methylene tetrahydrofolate reductase polymorphisms and factor V Leiden. However, APL antibody syndrome, either primary or secondary to autoimmune disease, is also a common cause of hypercoagulability.16 The syndrome is defined by recurrent arterial or venous thrombosis (often deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary emboli), thrombocytopenia, or, in women of child-bearing age, recurrent fetal loss. APL antibody syndrome also should be considered in the setting of severe neurologic manifestations such as stroke, transverse myelitis, seizures, or mononeuritis multiplex.
Laboratory Studies
Laboratory findings include prolongation of the partial thromboplastin time (PTT) that does not correct with a 1:1 mix (the antibody binds to the substrate, and adding normal serum with clotting factors does not affect this), false-positive syphilis test result, and the presence of antibodies to cardiolipin and associated proteins measured by either functional coagulation assays (lupus anticoagulant) or antibody titers (anticardiolipin and β2-glycoprotein). Sometimes transient APL antibodies can be triggered by intercurrent infectious illnesses, and abnormal values three months apart are required to confirm APL syndrome.16