Reactivation of dormant infections is increasingly recognised with immunosuppression for rheumatic diseases. Septic arthritis from dimorphic fungi is exceedingly rare in non-endemic settings. We describe the first Australian case of Histoplasma capsulatum septic arthritis in a man of Laotian descent who was receiving treatment for seropositive rheumatoid arthritis.
In March 2012, the patient noticed worsening right ankle pain with synovitis, and a joint aspirate showed inflammatory synovial fluid (white cell count, 5100 × 106/L) with negative results of bacterial cultures. Intra-articular corticosteroids provided symptomatic relief; however, the right ankle worsened in July 2012, and this time a repeat intra-articular corticosteroid injection failed to improve his symptoms. Due to ongoing synovitis in other joints and raised inflammatory markers, he was given a single 8 mg/kg dose of intravenous tocilizumab (a humanised, monoclonal, interleukin-6 receptor antibody). A repeat ankle aspiration and corticosteroid injection was performed concurrently. One week after the tocilizumab infusion, the right ankle synovitis became more prominent, and Histoplasma capsulatum was isolated from the most recent ankle aspirate. The diagnosis was confirmed by morphology of the yeast forms (Box, A), thermal dimorphism (mould phase converting to yeast form) (Box, B) and a panfungal polymerase chain reaction, which showed the same organism. He was systemically well with no fevers, sweats or weight loss. C-reactive protein was mildly raised at 10.4 mg/L (reference interval, < 5 mg/L). Arthrotomy with debridement and lavage of the ankle joint was performed, and surgical specimens also showed H. capsulatum. Computed tomography scans of his brain, chest and abdomen did not show any evidence of disseminated disease. Further history showed he had frequently travelled to rural Laotian communities as a tourist before his diagnosis of rheumatoid arthritis in 2010. After 2 weeks of induction therapy with intravenous liposomal amphotericin, treatment was maintained with oral itraconazole at therapeutic levels. Immunosuppression was minimised with cessation of methotrexate, leflunomide and tocilizumab, and gradual withdrawal of all corticosteroid treatment. He has made a steady recovery with no flare of his inflammatory arthritis to date.
We believe this is the first report of H. capsulatum septic arthritis in Australia. H. capsulatum is a thermally dimorphic soil fungus, growing as a mould in the environment and as yeast at body temperature.1 It is endemic to North America, parts of Europe and South-East Asia (where our patient was born). Infection occurs with inhalation of spores aerosolised during activities that disturb soil. Initial infection is transient and asymptomatic in most of the immunocompetent population, with fewer than 5% of people estimated to be symptomatic.2 Macrophages play a key role in clearing histoplasma infection, and this is why disseminated disease occurs mostly in immunocompromised patients. Disseminated histoplasmosis has increasingly been reported in endemic areas after use of tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α) inhibitors for rheumatoid arthritis.3 Histoplasmosis is three times more common than tuberculosis as a cause of serious infection in patients receiving TNF-α blockers.4 While a sterile immune-mediated polyarthritis is well recognised to occur in conjunction with symptomatic pulmonary histoplasmosis,5 localised septic arthritis is exceedingly rare, with only seven case reports in the literature.6
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