Mononucleosis is no stranger to most clinicians, who know it is most often caused by Epstein-Barr virus. Still, it presents diagnostic and management difficulties.
Consider a 12-year-old with 4 days of fever, headache, severe sore throat, and fatigue. Your exam detects bilateral, mildly tender, swollen (greater than 1 cm) anterior cervical lymph nodes and white tonsillar exudate, but no splenomegaly, which you know is only present in about 50% of children with EBV. Other EBV signs, such as supraorbital edema or maculopapular rash are absent, although they are seen in about 15%–20% of cases. A negative rapid streptococcal antigen and throat culture point to a virus (although 5%–25% of patients with EBV can have concomitant group A streptococcus). Now, how do you go about confirming EBV?
▸ Pitfall 1. Laboratory confirmation is unlikely until at least the second week of EBV illness. It is tempting to order serology (monospot-like test or EBV-specific serology) plus a CBC when the patient feels lousy and parents want answers. But keep in mind that in the first week negative serology doesn't rule out EBV and complete blood count results are usually nonspecific.
Not until the second week (or maybe even later), after illness onset, does the picture become clearer. At this point, nonspecific viral illnesses will usually have resolved and EBV infection becomes more likely if fever, sore throat, and cervical adenopathy continue (although they may be diminished), while fatigue is increasing. Splenomegaly also may develop in the interim with more generalized symmetrically bilateral adenopathy (groin, axilla, or posterior cervical).
Now, a CBC could suggest EBV mono via lymphocytosis (greater than 50% lymphocytes), and more than 10% atypical lymphocytes. In the case above, this result would allow a correct clinical diagnosis of EBV even without serology 90% of the time. However, not all patients with EBV will have this CBC result.
▸ Pitfall 2. Monospot-like tests have limitations. When the CBC is not sufficiently consistent with EBV but the clinical picture still suggests EBV mono in the second week of illness or later, then it's time for a nonspecific but quick and inexpensive serology—a monospot-like test. Contrary to what its name suggests—and to what one might believe—it does not detect EBV-specific antibody. Rather, it detects heterophile antibody, a low-affinity, highly cross-reactive IgM produced when EBV infects uncommitted B cells. Some of this nonspecific antibody cross-reacts with membrane antigens on mammalian red blood cells. (“Heterophile” refers to the cross-species affinity).
Monospot-like tests may not turn positive for up to 4 weeks. Moreover, children younger than 8 years are less likely to ever produce heterophile antibody, so the test isn't useful in that age group. In addition, a positive monospot isn't always caused by currently active mononucleosis. A rare individual can have persistent heterophile antibody years after recovery.
Also, some individuals who had EBV mono in the past may have a positive monospot because of amnestic responses while ill with an alternative virus, such as rubella. Other causes of false-positive monospots include malaria, autoimmune hepatitis, systemic lupus erythematosus, leukemia, pancreatic cancer, or, rarely, primary HIV infection (Am. J. Med. 2001;111:192-4). Of course, primary HIV is far less common than EBV, but should be kept in mind.
Still, EBV mono is the most likely diagnosis in a patient with a positive monospot who has had the classic symptoms.
▸ Pitfall 3. Specific EBV serology panels can be confusing. An EBV-specific antibody panel is the next step in the persistently ill patient with a negative monospot test. It not only nails down the diagnosis but also can tell us where the patient is in the course of infection. Depending on the laboratory, either three or four antibodies are included in the EBV panel:
The first is IgM to viral capsid antigen (VCA). It is initially positive in the second or third week of infection. It usually wanes by 2–4 weeks and may not develop at all in young children.
Next is IgG to VCA. It is initially positive in second to fourth week of infection and detectable for life.
Third is an antibody to early antigen (EA). It is usually present during EBV replication. (This is the one that some labs omit.)
Fourth is an antibody to EBV nuclear antigen (EBNA). Its presence coincides with recovery and arises beyond 6 weeks.
A positive IgM to only VCA confirms that the patient is early in course of EBV mono. A positive IgG to VCA, with or without a positive IgM to VCA, is also diagnostic of currently active mono.