DESCRIPTION
- Tick-borne, infectious disease caused by intraerythrocytic protozoa of the genus
Babesia
, infects wide array of vertebrate animals, causes lysis of host RBCs
- Asymptomatic to severe, life-threatening infection depending on the species of
Babesia
and the immune status of the patient
- Asymptomatic infection:
- 50% of children and 25% of adults with infection have no symptoms
- Mild–moderate disease:
- Usually immune competent patients
- Infections typically self-limited or resolve with antibiotic therapy
- Mortality usually <5%
- Severe disease:
- Defined as hospitalization >2 wk, ICU stay >2 days, or ending in death
- Typically associated with immune compromise: Splenectomy; cancer; HIV; hemoglobinopathy; chronic heart, lung, or liver disease
- Other groups at higher risk for severe disease: Neonates, >50 yr old, on immune-suppressive drugs (e.g., rituximab or anticytokine therapy [e.g., etanercept, infliximab])
- Mortality can be as high as 21% among immune-suppressed patients
- Complications develop in approximately one-half of the hospitalized patients:
- ARDS, DIC most common
- Can also see CHF, coma, liver failure, renal failure, splenic rupture
- Co-occurrence with other tick-borne diseases should be considered in endemic regions under the following conditions:
- Lyme disease (
Borrelia burgdorferi
) – associated rash
- Human granulocytic anaplasmosis (
Anaplasma phagocytophilum
) – protracted symptoms with leukopenia
ETIOLOGY
- Babesia
:
- Species causing human disease:
- Babesia microti
– Northern and Midwestern US (most common cause of disease in US)
- Babesia divergens
– Europe
- Babesia duncani
– Northern US Pacific coast
- Case reports of Babesiosis in Asia, Africa, Australia, and South America
- Animal reservoirs:
- B. microti
– white-footed mouse, white-tailed deer
- B. divergens
– cattle, rats
- Transmission via
Ixodes
tick vector:
- Most common vector for transmission of babesiosis to humans
- Ixodes
requires blood meal from a vertebrate host to pass through each stage of life cycle (larva, nymph, adult)
- Most cases result from nymphal tick bites in late spring through summer, adult ticks can also transmit disease
- Pathogen life cycle, pathogenesis:
- Protozoa pass from tick salivary glands to mammalian bloodstream where they penetrate erythrocytes, mature and divide.
- Mature protozoa exit from RBC resulting in membrane damage, lysis, hemolytic anemia, and hemoglobinuria.
- Damaged RBCs become less deformable, enhancing removal by spleen; however, asplenic patients less able to clear infected RBCs, leading to more severe disease.
- Damaged RBCs may result in microvascular stasis with secondary ischemic organ injury to liver, spleen, heart, kidney, or brain.
- Transmission via transfusion of RBCs, platelets:
- >150 cases since 1979, 75% of these since 2000
- B. microti
is the most common pathogen
- Low-level parasitemia may not be visible on donor blood smears, yet can still transmit disease
- Often results in severe cases as recipients of blood products often immune compromised or have significant comorbidities
Pediatric Considerations
Transmission can occur in utero and during delivery; youngest reported case was a 4-wk-old infant.
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
Gradual onset of malaise and fatigue, associated with fever as high as 105°F (40.6°C), 1–4 wk after tick bite, or 1–9 wk after transfusion with contaminated blood products
- Common symptoms include chills and sweats, headache, anorexia, nonproductive cough, arthralgia, and nausea
- Less common symptoms include vomiting, sore throat, abdominal pain, conjunctival injection, photophobia, weight loss, emotional lability, depression, and hyperesthesia
History
- Febrile, flu-like illness in patients who
- live in, or traveled to an endemic area within past 2 mo (especially during spring, summer)
- have had blood product transfusions within past 6 mo
- Shock or sepsis presentation in patients with above history, especially in presence of risk factors for severe disease (see above)
Physical-Exam
- Fever (most common finding)
- Hepatosplenomegaly
- Pharyngeal erythema
- Jaundice
- Retinopathy with splinter hemorrhages
- Retinal infarcts
- Rash may be seen:
- Petechiae, ecchymosis
- Erythema chronicum migrans (suggests concurrent Lyme disease)
- Severe disease:
- Tachypnea
- Hypoxia
- Hypotension
- Altered mental status
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
- Microscopy of thin blood smear with Giemsa or Wright staining to demonstrate
Babesia
organisms
- When smears are negative, polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay can be used
- Indirect immunofluorescent antibody testing can be used to recognize babesial antigens when microscopy and PCR assays are negative
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
- Microscopy:
- Intraerythrocytic parasites can be round, oval, or pear shaped.
- Parasites in budding tetrad formation (Maltese cross) are pathognomonic for babesiosis, but not commonly seen.
- Most common finding is intraerythrocytic round or oval (pyriform) rings with pale blue cytoplasm and red-staining nucleus.
- Extracellular parasites may be seen with high levels of parasitemia.
- Parasitemia levels are generally between 1% and 10%, but can be as high as 80%; may be <1% in early stages of disease.
- Ring forms may appear similar to
Plasmodium falciparum
(malaria); in babesiosis there are no pigment deposits (hemozoin) that are usually seen with malaria.
- PCR:
- Amplification of babesial 18s rRNA gene is more sensitive than microscopy
- Results can be available within 24 hr
- Useful in cases with low levels of parasitemia
- Serology:
- Indirect immunofluorescent antibody testing may be useful when microscopy and PCR testing are negative.
- IgM antibody usually detectable 2 wk after onset of illness
- IgG titers ≥1:256 suggest active or recent infections; IgM titers ≥1:64 suggest acute infection.
- Nonspecific lab abnormalities that may be seen in babesiosis:
- Mild-to-moderate hemolytic anemia (low hematocrit/hemoglobin, low haptoglobin, elevated reticulocyte count, elevated lactate dehydrogenase, elevated total bilirubin)
- Thrombocytopenia is common
- LFTs (elevated alkaline phosphatase, transaminases, lactate dehydrogenase, bilirubin)
- Urinalysis (hemoglobinuria, proteinuria)
- Elevated BUN, creatinine suggests renal insufficiency
- Hyperkalemia may result from massive hemolysis
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
- Malaria
- Other tick-borne diseases:
- Lyme disease
- Human granulocytic anaplasmosis
- Ehrlichiosis
- Rocky Mountain spotted fever
- Colorado tick fever
- Q fever
- Tularemia
- Relapsing fever
- Typhoid fever
- Acute hemolytic anemia
TREATMENT
PRE HOSPITAL
- Ensure a patent airway in patients with respiratory distress.
- Provide supplemental oxygen and ventilatory assistance as needed.
- If patient presents in shock, establish IV access and administer a fluid bolus of 0.9% NS 500 mL (peds: 20 mL/kg) IV.
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
- Airway management, ventilatory support for patients with acute respiratory distress
- IV access should be established in patients with evidence or risk factors for severe disease.
- IV fluids, pressor support for patients in shock
- Cardiac monitor: Patients with severe disease may develop cardiac ischemia, arrhythmias.
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
- Antipyretics for fever
- Start antibiotic therapy in symptomatic patients after confirming diagnosis on microscopy or PCR
- Mild–moderate disease:
- Oral atovaquone + azithromycin for 7–10 days is the regimen of choice.
- Clindamycin + quinine is an effective alternative, but associated with significant side effects (tinnitus, vertigo, gastroenteritis) that may require reduced dosing or stopping medication in up to one-third of patients.
- Severe disease:
- IV clindamycin + oral quinine for 7–10 days is regimen of choice (IV quinine may be used, but may cause ventricular arrhythmias and requires QT monitoring)
- RBC exchange transfusion is indicated in patients with parasitemia >10%; hemoglobin <10 g/dL; or pulmonary, renal, or hepatic complications.
- Persistent or relapsing disease may be seen in immunocompromised patients; these patients should receive antibiotic therapy for at least 6 wk, continuing for 2 wk after the last positive blood smear; can use standard combinations (see above).
- Asymptomatic infection:
- Antibiotics are not indicated unless parasitemia on blood smears persists >3 mo.
MEDICATION
- Acetaminophen: 500 mg (peds: 10–15 mg/kg, do not exceed 5 doses/24 h) PO q4–6h, do not exceed 4 g/24 h
- Atovaquone: 750 mg (peds: 20 mg/kg; max. 750 mg/dose) PO BID for 7 days
- Azithromycin: 500 mg (peds: 10 mg/kg; max. 500 mg) PO on day 1, followed by 250 mg (peds: 5 mg/kg; max. 250 mg) PO per day: 6 days
- Clindamycin: 300–600 mg (peds: 7–10 mg/kg q6–8h) IV q6h; 600 mg (peds: 7–10 mg/kg q6–8h) PO q8h for 7–10 days
- Ibuprofen: 400 mg (peds: 20–40 mg/kg/d) PO q6–8h PRN
- Quinine: 650 mg (peds: 25 mg/kg/d) PO q8h for 7–10 days
FOLLOW-UP