PLoS ONE (Jan 2018)

Hypereosinophilia: Biological investigations and etiologies in a French metropolitan university hospital, and proposed approach for diagnostic evaluation.

  • Martin Peju,
  • Alban Deroux,
  • Hervé Pelloux,
  • Laurence Bouillet,
  • Olivier Epaulard

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0204468
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 9
p. e0204468

Abstract

Read online

OBJECTIVES:We aimed to evaluate the usefulness of biological investigations in cases of eosinophilia in our area (French Alps). METHODS:We retrospectively included all adult patients attending the infectious disease and internal medicine units between 2009 and 2015 with eosinophilia ≥1 G/l. RESULTS:We identified 298 cases (129 women and 169 men). In 139 patients, eosinophilia had not been addressed. In the 159 others, the cause of eosinophilia was identified in 118 (74.2%). The main identified causes at the time were drug reactions (24.5%, mostly β-lactams and allopurinol), infectious diseases (17.0%), vasculitis (8.2%), autoimmune diseases (6.9%), and malignant diseases (6.2%). In patients with a skin rash, eosinophilia was significantly more often investigated, and a diagnosis significantly more often made. Helminthosis were mainly diagnosed in tropical travelers (18/24) excepting toxocariasis (3 non-travelers). Stool examination for helminthosis was positive in 5/76 patients (6.6%) (all tropical travelers); 391 helminth serologies were performed in 91 patients, with 7.9% being positive (all but 3 positive cases were travelers). Anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCA) were positive in 26/112 patients (23.2%), with 9 cases of vasculitis identified. CONCLUSIONS:Drug-related eosinophilia is the main etiology. Search for helminthosis is not recommended among non-travelers (excepting toxocariasis). ANCA should be performed early so as not to overlook vasculitis.