KAWASAKI DISEASE
I. Definitions and pathophysiology
- aka "Mucocutaneous lymph node syndrome"
- A multisystem vasculitis
- Incidence limited to children
II. Clinical features
- Epidemiology
- 50% occurs before 2.5 y; 35% 2.5-5y, rare >10y
- Most common in kids of Asian or African descent
- Male > Female
- Fatal in 0.5% of cases, more likely to be fatal
in boys and pts < 3yo
- Presents with fever, usually > 5d
- Usually tachycardic; may have mildly prolonged PR
interval, TWI or flattening, and nonspecific ST changed.
- Labs: usually have high WBC w/left shift, high platelet
counts, high ESR and CRP; sterile pyuria and albuminuria
sometimes noted
- Can cause coronary vasculitis and aneurysms with fatal
complications
- Other cardiac abnormalities reported: AR, MR, conduction
system dysfunction, myocardial dysfunction, and
myocardial fibrosis
- Diagnostic criteria--Need fever x > 5d
& four of the following, w/o evidence of other cause
for the sx. If coronary aneurysms are documented, only 3
of the following are required for dx:
- Conjunctival injection (bilateral, nonexudative)
- Oropharyngeal lesions (red or cracked lips,
strawberry tongue, or injected mucosae)
- Erythematous rash (usually "blotchy")
- Erythema, edema, or desquamation of hands or feet
- Cervical lymphadenopathy (50-75% of pts)
III. Treatment
- ASA--continue until all lab abnormalities are resolved
- Intravenous Immune Globulin (IVIG)--helps reduce symptoms & risk of coronary aneurysms,
but can cause fever, chills, hypotension, and rarely,
hemolytic anemia
- Corticosteroids
- 39 pts with Kawasaki's randomized to methylprednisolone 30mg/kg IV; all pts also received ASA and were randomized to receive IVIG. Compared with the ASA-IVIG-alone group, the ASA-IVIG-steroid group had sig. shorter mean duration of fever (1.0 vs. 2.4d) and mean duration of hospital stay (1.9 vs. 3.3d) (J. Peds. 142:611, 2003--abst)
- In a meta-analysis of 8 randomized studies of corticosteroids vs. placebo in pts with Kawasaki's disease, incidence of coronary artery aneurysms was sig. lower in corticosteroid recipients (OR 0.55); only 3 of these studies included IVIG as part of standard therapy, though steroids were found to be beneficial in an analysis of just those three studies as well (Peds. 116:989, 2005--JW)
- In a study in 178 pts with Kawasaki disease, all of whom were
treated with IVIG, randomized to prednisolone 2mg/kg/d vs. placebo
until temperature and CRP were normal, there was no sig. diff. in
prevalence of coronary artery abnormalities at 1mo, though
prednisolone group had sig. faster resolution of fever and high CRP
(J. Peds. 149:336, 2006--JW)
- In a study in in 199 children with Kawasaki disease and fever for
10d randomized to methylprednisolone 30mg/kg IV x 1 vs. placebo (all
received IVIG + ASA), there were no sig. diffs. at 1wk or 5wks in
various measures of coronary disease though IV steroid recipients had
shorter initial hospitalization stays (NEJM 356:659, 2007--JW)
- Follow-up echocardiography recommended by AHA (as of 2004) 6-8wks after
initial presentation and again 6-12mos later; however, the latter was not
likely to show abnormalities in pts whose first f/u echo was normal in one
retrospective study (Am. J. Cardiol. 88:328, 2001--AFP)
(Source: West. J. Med. 168:23, 1998--AFP and others...)