1. Varicella vaccine meningoencephalitis in a child receiving autologous bone marrow transplantation.
- Author
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Coralie R, Ziad C, Christian R, Pierre T, Chantal B, Bruce T, and Philippe O
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Child, Infant, Bone Marrow Transplantation adverse effects, Retrospective Studies, Chickenpox Vaccine adverse effects, Herpesvirus 3, Human, Acyclovir therapeutic use, Vaccines, Attenuated, Chickenpox diagnosis, Chickenpox etiology, Herpes Zoster, Meningoencephalitis
- Abstract
Background: Varicella vaccine, a live-attenuated Oka-strain of varicella zoster virus (VZV), is a recommended childhood vaccine by many countries. As with wild varicella strain, after primary infection, the live-attenuated virus can establish latency in sensory ganglia and reactivate causing vaccine-strain illnesses: herpes zoster (HZ), visceral or peripheral and central nervous system dissemination. We report a case of early reactivation of live-attenuated virus-HZ and meningoencephalitis-in an immunocompromised child., Methods: This is a retrospective descriptive report of a case, in a tertiary pediatric hospital, CHU Sainte-Justine (Montréal, Canada)., Results: An 18 month-year old girl diagnosed with a primitive neuro-ectodermal tumor (PNET) received the day prior to diagnosis, a first varicella vaccine (MMRV). She received chemotherapy 20 days post MMRV vaccine and autologous bone marrow transplantation 3 months post vaccination. She was considered not eligible, to acyclovir prophylaxis prior transplantation (positive for VZV IgG and negative for herpes simplex virus IgG by ELISA). At day 1 post transplantation, she developed dermatomal HZ and meningoencephalitis. Oka-strain varicella was isolated, she was treated with acyclovir and foscarnet. Neurologic status improved in 5 days. Control of VZV viral load in cerebrospinal fluid showed a slow decrease to from 5.24 log 10 copies/mL to 2.14 log 10 copies/mL in 6 weeks. No relapse was observed. She recovered without neurological sequelae., Conclusions: Our experience highlights the importance of conducting a thorough medical history regarding vaccination and serological status of newly immunocompromised patients. Intensive chemotherapy succeeding live vaccine administration <4 weeks could have influenced early and severe viral reactivation. Early initiation of prophylactic antiviral treatment is questioned in such circumstances., (© 2023 The Authors. Pediatric Transplantation published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
- Published
- 2023
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