Multisystem granulomatous (type IV) disorder to an unknown antigen
Aetiology
- May occur at any age but is usually seen in adults under the age of 50 years
- Occurs more frequently in Afro-Caribbean patients, who are also more likely to develop extrapulmonary or chronic disease
- Higher incidence in females
Pathophysiology
- Inhalation of unknown antigen stimulates alveolar macrophages, CD4+ T cells, CD8+ T cells and B cells
- Failure to clear antigen → persistent stimulation and granuloma formation → tissue damage and fibrosis
Clinical presentation
- Typically presents with bilateral hilar lymphadenopathy, pulmonary infiltration and skin or eye lesions
- Up to 50% of patients are asymptomatic and were diagnosed on the basis of routine CXR
Symptoms
- Constitutional - fever, weight loss, fatigue
- Respiratory - cough, dyspnoea, wheeze, chest pain
- Wide range of other non-pulmonary signs e.g. hepatomegaly, splenomegaly, uveitis, erythema nodosum, skin infiltration
Signs
- Crackles on lung auscultation
Investigations
- Bloods - elevated serum ACE level, raised CRP, hypercalcaemia
- CXR may show bilateral hilar or paratracheal lymphadenopathy
- High-resolution CT scanning is often used to detect interstitial lung disease
- Lung function tests show restrictive defect in severe, progressive cases
- Transbronchial biopsy - non-caseating granulomata
Management
Acute
- Oral steroids if vital organ affected
Chronic
- Oral steroids usually needed
- May need immunosuppression e.g. methotrexate, azathioprine
Monitoring
- Monitor both acute and chronic disease with CXR and PFTs for several years - often relapses