Respiratory Medicine Case Reports (Jan 2017)

Paradoxical response with increased tumor necrosis factor-α levels to anti-tuberculosis treatment in a patient with disseminated tuberculosis

  • Sho Watanabe,
  • Yugo Kaneko,
  • Hironori Kawamoto,
  • Tomoki Maehara,
  • Yuri Baba,
  • Ikumi Fujisaki,
  • Nayuta Saito,
  • Kai Ryu,
  • Aya Seki,
  • Tsugumi Horikiri,
  • Akira Kinoshita,
  • Hiroshi Takeda,
  • Keisuke Saito,
  • Kazuyosi Kuwano

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rmcr.2017.02.011
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. C
pp. 201 – 204

Abstract

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It has been reported that tuberculosis (TB) worsens after cessation of tumor necrosis factor-α inhibitors and starting anti-TB treatment. Little is known about the immunological pathogenesis of this paradoxical response (PR). We report the first case of a TB patient in whom PR occurred concurrently with elevation of circulating tumor necrosis factor-α (TNFα) levels. A 75-year-old woman, who had been treated with adalimumab for SAPHO syndrome, developed disseminated TB. Soon after administration of anti-TB treatment (isoniazid, rifampicin, pyrazinamide, and ethambutol), and after discontinuation of adalimumab, a PR occurred. Serial testing of serum cytokine levels revealed a marked increase in TNFα, and a decline in interferon-γ levels. Despite intensive treatment with antibiotics, prednisolone, noradrenaline, and mechanical ventilation, acute respiratory distress syndrome developed and she died. Thus, overproduction of TNFα after cessation of TNFα inhibitors may partially account for the pathogenesis of a PR. This supports preventative or therapeutic reinitiation of TNFα inhibitors when PR occurs. Serial monitoring of circulating inflammatory cytokine levels could lead to earlier identification of a PR.

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