Home Home Home Inbox Home Search

View Abstract

When a Consolidated Lung Does Not Lead to a Consolidated Diagnosis: Antisynthetase Syndrome Presenting with Organizing Pneumonia

Description

.abstract img { width:300px !important; height:auto; display:block; text-align:center; margin-top:10px } .abstract { overflow-x:scroll } .abstract table { width:100%; display:block; border:hidden; border-collapse: collapse; margin-top:10px } .abstract td, th { border-top: 1px solid #ddd; padding: 4px 8px; } .abstract tbody tr:nth-child(even) td { background-color: #efefef; } .abstract a { overflow-wrap: break-word; word-wrap: break-word; }
A1576 - When a Consolidated Lung Does Not Lead to a Consolidated Diagnosis: Antisynthetase Syndrome Presenting with Organizing Pneumonia
Author Block: A. Z. Alkhathlan1, A. Syed1, C. Donatelli2, C. V. Teba2; 1Internal Medicine, University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center, Cleveland, OH, United States, 2Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center, Cleveland, OH, United States.
Introduction Organizing pneumonia (OP) is a form of non-infectious pneumonia with characteristic clinical, radiological, and histopathological findings. The diagnosis is often considered after multiple antibiotics have failed to treat a presumed infectious pneumonia. Antisynthetase syndrome (AS) is one of the rarest causes of OP and is associated with myositis, antisynthetase antibodies, and systemic manifestations. Case Presentation A 73-year-old female non-smoker, with controlled hypothyroidism and previously feeling well, was evaluated in an outpatient clinic for progressive dyspnea and cough despite antibiotic for community-associated pneumonia. Initial exam noted pulse oximetry 94% on ambient air, bibasilar crackles, and skin ulcerations mainly on 2nd and 3rd digits. Further questioning revealed several months of dry eyes, mouth, and scaly skin primarily on her hands. Chest x-ray demonstrated bilateral basilar opacities. Chest computed tomography showed dense bilateral lower lobe and lingula consolidations, enlarged mediastinal and hilar lymph nodes (Figure). Pulmonary function tests showed restriction, a reduced diffusing capacity, and oximetry testing showed desaturation with exertion to 79%, requiring 2 L/min. Diagnostic workup included bronchoscopy, bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL), cytobrushings, and transbronchial biopsies from the left lower lobe. BAL revealed 588 nucleated cells with 37% neutrophils, 18% lymphocytes, 40% monocytes and 5% eosinophils. Cultures and cytology samples were negative for infection and malignant cells, lung biopsy showed acute and chronic inflammation consistent with organizing pneumonia. Serum lab tests including ANA, C-ANCA, P-ANCA, and anti-histone antibody were negative. Erythrocyte sedimentation rate was normal, and C-reactive protein of 1.2 mg/dL was equivocal. Creatine kinase was 1323 U/L and aldolase 27 U/L—both significantly elevated. Rheumatology evaluation confirmed mechanic’s hands, no muscle weakness, and myositis panel was positive for anti-threonyl-tRNA synthetase (anti-PL-7) antibody, diagnostic of antisynthetase syndrome presenting with organizing pneumonia. High-dose corticosteroids were initiated and slowly tapered, with significant clinical and radiographic improvement at eight-months follow-up and she was eventually started on steroid-sparing agent azathioprine. Discussion This case is a rare presentation of anti-PL-7 AS presenting with biopsy-proven OP. Prior cases describe anti-PL-7 AS manifesting as nonspecific interstitial pneumonia. Idiopathic inflammatory myopathies are rare disorders characterized by muscle inflammation and involvement of other organ systems. A combination of polymyositis or dermatomyositis, antisynthetase antibody, with lung involvement, and other systemic symptoms is the antisynthetase syndrome. This case highlights the need for a high index of suspicion for OP in patients who fail antibiotic therapy for presumed pneumonia and have systemic signs concerning for mixed connective tissue disorders.
Home Home Home Inbox Home Search