RESPIRATORY

Sarcoidosis 

  • Multisystem disorder of unknown etiology
  • Affects young adults worldwide
  • Presents with noncaseating granulomas in various organs
  • Characterized by bilateral hilar lymphadenopathy and reticular opacities in the lungs
  • Major sites: lungs, skin, eyes, joints
  • Variable expression in musculoskeletal system, reticuloendothelial system, exocrine glands, heart, kidney, CNS

Etiology

  • Inflammatory disease of unknown cause
  • Associations:
    • Occupational/environmental exposures (beryllium, dust)
    • Microorganisms (mycobacteria, propionibacteria)
  • Possible infective etiology post-transplantation
  • Genetic components linked to MHC antigens (DR alleles)
  • Cytokines involved: Th1, IL-2, IL-6, IL-8, IL-12, IL-18, IL-27, IFN-gamma, TNF-alpha

Epidemiology

  • Incidence:
    • 11 cases per 100,000 in whites
    • 34 cases per 100,000 in African Americans
  • Lifetime risk: 2.4% in the US
  • Extrapulmonary sarcoid: 25-30% of patients
  • Gender differences:
    • Cardiac involvement more common in males
    • Skin and eye features more common in females

Pathophysiology

  • Poorly understood; genetic and environmental factors implicated
  • Key role of T cells (inverted CD4/CD8 ratio)
  • Noncaseating granuloma: macrophages, giant cells, epithelioid cells, lymphocytes, monocytes, mast cells, fibroblasts
  • Increased TNF and TNF receptors
  • B cell hyperreactivity with immunoglobulin production
  • Elevated ACE levels and HLA class I antigens

Histopathology

  • Noncaseating granulomas in biopsy of lymph nodes

History and Physical

  • Symptoms: persistent dry cough, fatigue, shortness of breath
  • Other symptoms: painful red skin lumps, uveitis, hoarseness, palpable lymph nodes, swollen joints, hearing loss, seizures, psychiatric disorders
  • Cutaneous manifestations: papular, maculopapular, nodular, subcutaneous, hypopigmented, plaque sarcoidosis
  • Common skin lesions: papular sarcoidosis on the face and neck, lupus pernio
  • Ocular involvement: uveitis in 50% of patients
  • Cardiac involvement: heart block, sudden death, ICD recommended
  • CNS manifestations: diabetes insipidus, hyperprolactinemia
  • Poor quality of life, psychiatric symptoms

Evaluation

  • Lab Tests: FBC, LFTs, BUN, creatinine, glucose, electrolytes, serum calcium, ESR, CRP, serum ACE, adenosine deaminase, serum amyloid A, soluble IL-2 receptor
  • Radiographic Tests: chest radiograph, CT, FDG-PET, gallium-67, thallium-201, MIBI-Tc, SPECT
  • Pulmonary function tests: decreased DLCO, restrictive pattern, obstructive pattern in advanced cases
  • Radiographic Stages:
    • Stage I: Bilateral hilar adenopathy
    • Stage II: Bilateral hilar adenopathy and reticular opacities
    • Stage III: Reticular opacities with shrinking hilar nodes
    • Stage IV: Reticular opacities with fibrosis
  • Histopathology: noncaseating granulomas without mycobacteria and fungi

Treatment / Management

  • Asymptomatic pulmonary sarcoidosis: no treatment, monitor symptoms, chest radiograph, pulmonary function
  • Symptomatic pulmonary sarcoidosis: oral glucocorticoids, steroid tapering, steroid-sparing agents (methotrexate, azathioprine, infliximab, leflunomide, antimalarials)
  • Lung transplant for end-stage lung disease

Differential Diagnosis

  • Tuberculosis
  • Cat scratch disease
  • Lung cancer
  • Lymphoma
  • Occupational lung disease
  • Fungal infection

Prognosis

  • Asymptomatic patients: stable for years
  • Symptomatic patients: guarded prognosis, common relapse, dyspnea, pulmonary hypertension
  • Overall mortality rate: 5% for untreated patients
  • Prolonged corticosteroid treatment: common adverse effects

Complications

  • Pulmonary hypertension
  • End-stage lung disease

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