Meningitis Enterovirus Clinical Trial
Official title:
Study of the Inflammatory Response to Enterovirus Meningitis in Newborns, Infants and Children, as Assessed by Cytokine Levels in Blood and Cerebrospinal Fluid. Case-control Comparison Using an Existing Cohort.
Enteroviruses (EV) are the most frequent cause of acute meningitis in the paediatric population. Detection of enterovirus in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) specimens by Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) is the gold standard diagnostic test. Recently, our laboratory published the BLEDI study which highlighted the interest of detecting EV in the blood of the paediatric population : (i) EV was found in more than a quarter of cases in the blood of infants admitted to hospital with isolated fever and (ii) detection of EV was more frequent in the blood than in CSF in neonates and infants with isolated fever, sepsis or meningitis. However, the pathophysiology of EV infections is poorly understood and little work has been done on the inflammatory response to these infections. In EV meningitis, the inflammatory response has been studied primarily in children infected with enterovirus A71 (EV-A71). Indeed, in these children, inappropriate cytokine secretion (cytokine storm) leads to severe neurological and cardiopulmonary damage, which can progress to death. The study of the inflammatory response during meningitis due to other types of EV remains poorly The objective of BLEDI-CYTOKINES (ancillary study of the BLEDI study) is to study the inflammatory response during EV meningitis in neonates, infants and children, as assessed by cytokine levels in blood and cerebrospinal fluid, by comparing case-controls from an existing cohort.
EVs are characterized by their high genetic variability, with more than 120 types described to date. They are involved in mild infections, such as febrile syndromes that may be associated with respiratory and cutaneous manifestations. However, these viruses are also involved in more severe infections of the nervous system. In children infected with EV-A71, which causes mild epidemics of foot-and-mouth disease, inappropriate cytokine secretion (cytokine storm) leads to severe neurological and cardiopulmonary complications that can progress to death in children (<5 years of age) in Asia. Many studies have focused on the inflammatory response to EV-A71 infections: some cytokines (Tumor Necrose Factor (TNF), INterFeron (INF), InterLeukine (IL)1, IL6, IL10, eotaxin,...) dosed in CSF have been associated with severe EV-A71 infections (2,5,6). Recently, a Japanese study showed an overexpression of IL-6 in the blood of children with EV-A71 foot-hand-mouth syndrome. The authors defined that a level of IL-6 ≥ 66 pg/mL could be a prognostic marker of progression to aseptic meningitis (6). In EV (other than EV-A71) meningitis, pro-inflammatory cytokines such as IL6, IL8, and INF are produced in the acute phase in CSF to control the infection, and then they decline and anti-inflammatory cytokines such as IL10 are synthesized (7). In addition, studies have shown that the production of some cytokines is greater in severe EV infections: for example, the production of IL4 and IL5 is greater in EV encephalitis than in EV skin infections (8). However, there are very few comparative studies of cytokine expression in blood and CSF. In addition, little work has been done to study cytokine expression in meningitis due to EV other than EV-A71. In young children, these meningitis may also be complicated by encephalitis, myelitis, and even flaccid paralysis (including poliomyelitis) (2-4). The pathophysiology of these severe EV infections is currently unknown. In addition, no preventive vaccine is available against these infections (other than polio vaccine), nor are there effective curative antivirals for severe EV infections. ;