Overwhelming post-splenectomy infection


An overwhelming post-splenectomy infection is a rare but rapidly fatal infection occurring in individuals following removal of the spleen. The infections are typically characterized by either meningitis or sepsis, and are caused by encapsulated organisms including Streptococcus pneumoniae.
Another source of infection are varieties of babesia, which are tick-borne parasites that cause babesiosis. Capnocytophaga canimorsus can trigger infection after dog bites.

Mechanism

The spleen contains many macrophages, which are immune cells that phagocytose and destroy bacteria. In particular, these macrophages are activated when bacteria are bound by IgG antibodies or the complement component C3b. These types of antibodies and complement are immune substances called opsonizers, molecules that bind to the surface of bacteria to facilitate phagocytosis.
When the spleen is no longer present, IgG and C3b are still bound to bacteria, but they cannot be removed from the blood circulation due to the loss of the splenic macrophages. Hence the bacteria are free to cause infection.
Patients without a spleen often need immunizations against pathogens that normally require opsonization and phagocytosis by macrophages in the spleen. These include common human pathogens with bacterial capsules. Capsules made of polysaccharides permit bacteria to evade phagocytosis by macrophages alone, since only proteins are directly recognized by macrophages in phagocytosis. So humoral immunity in forms of IgG and complement proteins is the human immune system's response against bacterial capsules.

Vaccination

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's annual vaccine recommendations includes specifics for individuals without a functioning spleen.
The CDC recommends against live vaccines and has specific advice for travelers, which includes malaria avoidance for asplenic individuals.

Prognosis

The risk of OPSI is 0.23-0.42 percent per year, with a lifetime risk of 5 percent. Most infections occur in the first few years following splenectomy, but the risk of OPSI is lifelong. OPSI is almost always fatal without treatment, and modern treatment has decreased the mortality to approximately 40-70 percent. Individuals with OPSI are most commonly treated with antibiotics and supportive care. Measures to prevent OPSI include vaccination and prophylactic antibiotics.