SCID-AI · 405 SNS Axis Business Space, Nanpura, Surat
Mon–Sat: 11–1 PM & 4–6 PM
 Symptom Guide · SCID-AI, Surat

Recurrent InfectionsWhy Does It Keep Coming Back?

Getting the same infection repeatedly is not bad luck. It is a signal that something is impairing the body’s ability to clear pathogens between episodes. The treatment is not more antibiotics — it is identifying and correcting the underlying immune defect. In India, uncontrolled diabetes is the most common cause, followed by HIV, haematological malignancy, and drug-induced immunosuppression.

The Question That Changes Everything:“Why Does This Keep Happening?”

Which site is infected repeatedly?

Urinary tract → diabetes. Lungs → HIV or hypogammaglobulinaemia. Skin → diabetes or neutropenia.

What organism is causing it?

Same organism repeatedly → biofilm, structural problem. Multiple different organisms → systemic immune defect.

How severe are the infections?

Unusually severe infections → cell-mediated immune defect (HIV, steroids). Opportunistic organisms → immunosuppression.

How long between episodes?

Very short intervals (weeks) → not fully treated. Longer intervals but predictable → structural + immune.

Understanding Recurrent Infections

When Infections Keep Coming Back — What It Means

Everyone gets infections. The question is whether the frequency, severity, or pattern of infections is abnormal for that person’s age, exposure, and general health. Recurrent infections — particularly when they occur at the same site, with the same organism, or with unusual severity — indicate that the body is not clearing pathogens normally between episodes.

The clinical significance of recurrent infections is not just the immediate illness — it is what the pattern reveals about the underlying immune state. Recurrent bacterial pneumonia in an adult suggests impaired antibody production (myeloma, CLL, CVID) or impaired phagocytosis (diabetes, neutropenia). Recurrent skin infections with Staphylococcus aureus suggest uncontrolled diabetes or neutrophil dysfunction. Recurrent herpes zoster in a young adult strongly suggests HIV. Opportunistic infections — Pneumocystis, cryptococcal meningitis — even once indicate severe T-cell immunodeficiency.

The treatment of recurrent infections is therefore not more antibiotics. It is identifying the immune defect, correcting it where possible (controlling diabetes, starting ART for HIV, stopping immunosuppressive drugs), and implementing prophylactic strategies where correction is not possible (cotrimoxazole prophylaxis in HIV, immunoglobulin replacement in CVID).

The Most Important Clinical Question

“I keep getting the same infection” is the symptom. “Why does my immune system keep failing to clear this pathogen?” is the question that leads to the diagnosis. Every patient with recurrent infections needs a systematic immune workup — not another prescription for the same antibiotic.

Infection Pattern — Diagnostic Clues

Pattern
Suggests
Investigate
Recurrent UTI
Diabetes, structural anomaly, stones
HbA1c, urine C&S, renal ultrasound
Recurrent pneumonia
HIV, myeloma, CVID, diabetes
HIV test, serum Ig, HRCT chest
Recurrent skin infections
Diabetes, neutrophil defect
HbA1c, neutrophil function tests
Recurrent oral/vaginal thrush
Diabetes, HIV, corticosteroids
HbA1c, HIV test, medication review
Recurrent shingles (HZV)
HIV — strong signal under 50
HIV test urgently
Opportunistic infection ×1
Severe T-cell defect
HIV test + full immunology
Recurrent sinusitis + pneumonia
Hypogammaglobulinaemia, CVID
Serum IgG, IgA, IgM
Recurrent liver/brain abscess
Neutrophil dysfunction, CGD
Oxidative burst assay, genetics
Recurrent infections immune workup SCID-AI Surat
Causes of Recurrent Infections

Why the Immune System Keeps Failing — The Causes

01

Uncontrolled Diabetes Mellitus

Most common cause in India — by far

Hyperglycaemia impairs immune function through multiple simultaneous mechanisms: neutrophil chemotaxis and phagocytosis are reduced — white cells can still find bacteria but cannot kill them efficiently; complement activation is impaired; glucose-rich tissues provide ideal bacterial growth conditions; and vascular disease reduces blood supply to peripheral tissues (feet, skin), reducing antibiotic and immune cell delivery. HbA1c above 9–10% produces clinically significant immune impairment.

Recurrent UTIRecurrent cellulitisRecurrent carbunclesOral thrushVaginal candidiasisFoot infectionsRecurrent pneumoniaDiabetic foot osteomyelitis
02

HIV Infection

Progressive T-cell depletion — HIV test mandatory in all recurrent infection workups

HIV destroys CD4 T-helper cells — the coordinators of both cell-mediated and antibody-mediated immune responses. As CD4 falls, susceptibility to an increasingly wide range of pathogens grows. Recurrent bacterial infections occur at CD4 200–500; opportunistic infections appear below 200. Recurrent herpes zoster in a person under 50 is a specific signal for HIV — shingles at young age is unusual without immune impairment.

Recurrent shinglesRecurrent bacterial pneumoniaRecurrent oral thrushRecurrent sinusitisTB (especially extrapulmonary)PCP (CD4 <200)Cryptococcal meningitisCMV retinitis
03

Drug-Induced Immunosuppression

Corticosteroids, biologicals, chemotherapy — check all medications

Long-term corticosteroids (prednisolone ×2 weeks or more) impair every arm of immune defence. TNF inhibitors (adalimumab, etanercept, infliximab) dramatically increase risk of TB reactivation and opportunistic infections — TB screening is mandatory before starting these drugs. Chemotherapy causes neutropenia (low neutrophil count), making patients vulnerable to rapidly fatal bacterial and fungal infections. Calcineurin inhibitors (tacrolimus, cyclosporine) cause profound T-cell suppression post-transplant. Note: some Ayurvedic preparations in India contain unlabelled corticosteroids.

TB reactivation (steroids/TNFi)Fungal infectionsNeutropenic feverPCP (steroids)Bacterial sepsisViral reactivation (CMV, EBV)
04

Haematological Malignancy

Multiple myeloma, CLL, lymphoma, leukaemia

Multiple myeloma crowds out normal antibody-producing plasma cells, causing hypogammaglobulinaemia and recurrent bacterial pneumonia — often the presenting complaint. CLL similarly impairs antibody production. Lymphoma impairs cell-mediated immunity. Acute leukaemia causes neutropenia and rapidly life-threatening bacterial and fungal infections. Serum protein electrophoresis (M-band in myeloma), serum immunoglobulins, and full blood count differential are screening tests.

Recurrent bacterial pneumonia (myeloma)Recurrent sinusitisHerpes zoster (lymphoma)Neutropenic sepsis (leukaemia)Fungal infections
05

Primary Immunodeficiency (PID)

Genetic immune defects — often diagnosed in adulthood

Common Variable Immunodeficiency (CVID) — most common adult PID; low IgG, IgA, IgM with recurrent sinopulmonary bacterial infections. Often diagnosed in the 2nd–4th decade after years of recurrent infections. IgA deficiency — most common specific antibody deficiency; recurrent respiratory and GI infections. Complement deficiencies — particularly C5–C9 deficiency predisposes to recurrent Neisseria meningitidis and Neisseria gonorrhoeae infections. Serum immunoglobulins (IgG, IgA, IgM) are the first-line test for humoral PID.

Recurrent sinusitis (CVID)Recurrent pneumonia (CVID)Recurrent GI infections (IgA def)Recurrent meningococcal disease (complement def)
06

Structural and Anatomical Causes

Obstruction, biofilm, or abnormal anatomy allowing infection to persist

Structural causes produce recurrent infections at a specific site rather than systemic immune failure. Urinary stones — calculi harbour bacteria that seed recurrent UTIs; never fully cleared by antibiotics alone. Prostatic hypertrophy — residual urine pools and becomes infected repeatedly. Bronchiectasis — dilated airways harbour bacterial biofilm; recurrent chest infections until the underlying bronchiectasis is diagnosed and managed. Nasal polyps and deviated septum — impaired sinus drainage leads to recurrent sinusitis. These are identified with imaging — renal ultrasound, HRCT chest, CT sinuses.

Recurrent UTI (stones/BPH)Recurrent chest infections (bronchiectasis)Recurrent sinusitis (polyps/DNS)Recurrent cholangitis (biliary stones)
Infection Types & Immune Defects

Which Infection Type Points to Which Immune Defect

Recurrent Bacterial Infections

Pneumonia, sinusitis, meningitis, sepsis

Recurrent bacterial infections — particularly with encapsulated bacteria (Streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae) — suggest impaired antibody production (B-cell defects). These bacteria require opsonising antibodies to be efficiently phagocytosed. Without adequate IgG, they cause recurrent sinusitis and pneumonia. Investigate: serum IgG, IgA, IgM; vaccine antibody titres (anti-pneumococcal); serum protein electrophoresis (myeloma); bone marrow biopsy if haematological malignancy suspected. Also: diabetes and HIV, which impair phagocyte function.

Recurrent Viral Infections

Shingles, recurrent HSV, recurrent EBV

Frequent or severe viral reactivations — recurrent herpes zoster (shingles), recurrent herpes simplex (HSV), recurrent EBV — indicate impaired T-cell-mediated immunity. T cells are responsible for controlling reactivation of latent viruses. Recurrent zoster in an adult under 50 is a strong HIV indicator — test urgently. Other causes: corticosteroids, lymphoma, post-chemotherapy. Investigate: HIV test, CD4 count (if HIV positive), lymphocyte subset panel, lymphoma workup (LDH, CT) if no HIV found.

Recurrent Fungal Infections

Oral thrush, vaginal candidiasis, tinea, cryptococcal meningitis

Recurrent mucocutaneous candidiasis (oral, oesophageal, vaginal) points primarily to uncontrolled diabetes or HIV — both common in India. Invasive fungal infections (cryptococcal meningitis, disseminated aspergillosis, PCP) indicate severe T-cell immunodeficiency — HIV with low CD4 is by far the most common cause in India. Mucormycosis — the black fungus — is strongly associated with uncontrolled diabetes and recent steroid use. Investigate: HbA1c first, then HIV; CD4 count if HIV positive; serum cortisol if steroids suspected.

Opportunistic Infections

PCP, cryptococcal meningitis, disseminated TB, CMV — even once

An opportunistic infection is caused by an organism that does not cause serious disease in a normal immune system. Even a single episode of an opportunistic infection — Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia (PCP), cryptococcal meningitis, CMV retinitis, disseminated MAC, disseminated candidiasis — mandates a full immunodeficiency workup. In India, HIV is by far the most common underlying cause. Other causes: corticosteroids, post-transplant immunosuppression, lymphoma, or rarely primary immunodeficiency. No opportunistic infection should be treated without establishing why it occurred.
Infection pattern immune workup SCID-AI

 Bring to Your Appointment

List of all infections in the past 2–3 years with dates
All culture results — the organism and its sensitivities matter
All antibiotic courses taken — name, dose, duration
All current medications including steroids and supplements
Any previous blood tests including CBC and HbA1c
Family history of similar recurrent infections or immune problems

Culture Before Antibiotics

For every episode of the recurring infection, culture before starting the antibiotic. This identifies the organism, detects emerging resistance, and guides definitive treatment. Do not repeat the same antibiotic empirically.

Investigation at SCID-AI

The Immune Workup — Finding Why, Not Just What

Investigation of recurrent infections aims to identify the underlying immune defect — not just treat the current episode. The workup follows the pattern of infections and clinical probability.

 Book Immune Workup
1

First-Line — All Patients (Day 1)

 CBC + differential HbA1c HIV test ESR + CRP LFT + RFT Serum IgG, IgA, IgM Urine C&S (if UTI) Chest X-ray Blood culture (if febrile) Serum protein electrophoresis
2

Diabetes-Specific (If HbA1c Elevated)

 Fasting + post-prandial glucose Renal ultrasound (if recurrent UTI) Urine C&S + sensitivity Foot examination + ABI Ophthalmology referral Endocrinology referral
3

HIV-Specific (If HIV Positive)

 CD4 count + % HIV viral load TB exclusion (GeneXpert + IGRA) Toxoplasma IgG CMV serology Cryptococcal antigen (CD4 <100) ART initiation discussion
4

Antibody / Complement Deficiency Workup

 Vaccine antibody titres (anti-pneumococcal) CH50 (total complement) C3 + C4 Lymphocyte subsets (CD4/CD8/CD19/NK) Neutrophil oxidative burst assay Bone marrow biopsy (if malignancy suspected) PET-CT (lymphoma workup)
5

Structural Causes (Site-Specific)

 Renal ultrasound (urinary tract) HRCT chest (bronchiectasis) CT sinuses (sinus disease) Cystoscopy (bladder structural) Prostate assessment (PSA + TRUS) CECT abdomen (abscess, biliary)
Why See Dr. Savaj

Why Recurrent Infections Need an Infectious Disease Specialist

The challenge of recurrent infections is not treating the current episode — it is finding why the patient keeps getting infected and correcting the underlying defect. This requires the skills of an infectious disease specialist who can synthesise the infection pattern, the microbiology, and the immune workup into a management plan.

Pattern Recognition Across Specialities

Recurrent infections can reflect problems in diabetology, haematology, rheumatology, urology, or pulmonology. An infectious disease specialist trained across these domains identifies where in the immune system the defect lies and coordinates the right specialist referral.

Culture Before Every Antibiotic

Recurrent infections drive antibiotic resistance. At SCID-AI, culture and sensitivity is sent before every antibiotic course — identifying the organism, documenting resistance patterns, and guiding the definitive treatment rather than repeating the empirical antibiotic that failed previously.

Prophylaxis and Prevention

For patients with established immune defects, prophylactic strategies prevent recurrent infections: cotrimoxazole prophylaxis in HIV with low CD4; immunoglobulin replacement in CVID; antibiotic prophylaxis for recurrent UTI; vaccination against encapsulated bacteria. Prevention is more effective than repeated treatment.

TB + HIV Exclusion as Standard

Every patient with recurrent infections at SCID-AI has HIV tested and TB systematically excluded — non-negotiable. Both are treatable. Both are frequently missed. Both allow other recurrent infections to occur. Missing either means treating the infection without treating the cause of the susceptibility.

When to See Dr. Savaj

Triggers for Specialist Assessment

Same infection recurring 2+ times per year — UTI, pneumonia, skin infection, sinusitis
Any opportunistic infection — even once: PCP, cryptococcal, CMV, disseminated fungal
Recurrent herpes zoster (shingles) in a patient under 50 — HIV until proven otherwise
Infections not responding to the correct antibiotic — raises concern for resistant organism or immune defect
Unusually severe infection for the organism — e.g. pneumococcal meningitis without prior risk factor
Recurrent infections in a patient on long-term steroids, biologicals, or post-chemotherapy
Family history of recurrent serious infections or early unexplained deaths — possible primary immunodeficiency
Recurrent infections with no cause found by the treating doctor — systematic immune workup needed
Patient Reviews

Patients Who Came With Recurrent Infections

My husband had shingles three times in two years. He is 38. His regular doctor said he was just unlucky. Dr. Savaj told us on the first visit that recurrent shingles at this age means HIV testing is mandatory. He was HIV positive — CD4 of 240. ART was started. His immune system has recovered. He has had no infections in 14 months. Dr. Savaj’s clinical instinct found what others had missed.

KM
Kavita M.Recurrent shingles — HIV diagnosis · Surat

Four episodes of bacterial pneumonia in 18 months. My pulmonologist treated each episode successfully but never asked why it kept happening. Dr. Savaj checked serum immunoglobulins — IgG was very low. Serum protein electrophoresis showed an M-band. Multiple myeloma, diagnosed at a treatable stage. The recurrent pneumonia was the myeloma’s first presentation. Treating the myeloma has stopped the infections.

BP
Bhavin P.Recurrent pneumonia — myeloma · Surat
Frequently Asked Questions

Questions About Recurrent Infections

Answered by Dr. Pratik Savaj, FNB Infectious Diseases, SCID-AI, Surat.

How many infections per year count as 'recurrent'?
There is no single universal threshold, but clinical guidelines suggest investigation when adults have: more than 2 serious bacterial infections per year (pneumonia, meningitis, sepsis, osteomyelitis); more than 4 upper respiratory infections per year (sinusitis, otitis media) in adults without obvious anatomical cause; recurrent infections at unusual sites (liver abscess, splenic abscess, brain abscess); or infections with unusual or opportunistic organisms (Pneumocystis pneumonia, cryptococcal meningitis, disseminated fungal infections) — even a single such episode warrants immunodeficiency workup. The pattern and organism matter as much as the frequency.
Is diabetes the most common reason for recurrent infections in India?
Yes — by a significant margin. Uncontrolled diabetes mellitus is the single most common cause of recurrent infections in India. Hyperglycaemia impairs immune function through multiple mechanisms: reduced neutrophil chemotaxis and phagocytosis; impaired T-cell function; reduced complement activity; and glucose-rich tissue that provides an ideal growth medium for bacteria and fungi. The infections that most characteristically recur in diabetes: recurrent urinary tract infections; recurrent skin and soft tissue infections (furuncles, carbuncles, cellulitis); recurrent fungal infections (oral thrush, vaginal candidiasis, tinea infections); and recurrent pneumonia. HbA1c in every patient with recurrent infections is non-negotiable.
Can HIV cause recurrent infections even before AIDS?
Yes — HIV causes progressive immune impairment long before the CD4 count falls below 200 (the AIDS threshold). As CD4 cells decline, susceptibility to a widening range of infections increases progressively. At CD4 200–500: recurrent bacterial infections, recurrent pneumonia, recurrent herpes zoster (shingles), recurrent oral thrush. At CD4 below 200: Pneumocystis pneumonia (PCP), cryptococcal meningitis, disseminated TB, CMV retinitis. A patient having recurrent shingles in their 30s or 40s — an age where herpes zoster is uncommon — is a strong indicator for HIV testing. All HIV testing at SCID-AI is fully confidential.
What is a primary immunodeficiency and when should it be suspected?
Primary immunodeficiencies (PIDs) are genetic defects in specific immune system components — present from birth, but sometimes not diagnosed until adulthood. Suspect PID in adults when: recurrent serious infections began in childhood; there is a family history of similar problems or early unexplained deaths; infections occur with encapsulated bacteria (Streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae) suggesting B-cell or complement deficiency; or when recurrent infections occur in a patient with no identifiable secondary immunosuppression (no diabetes, no HIV, no steroids). Common adult PIDs: Common Variable Immunodeficiency (CVID — recurrent sinopulmonary infections with low immunoglobulins); IgA deficiency; and selective antibody deficiency. Serum immunoglobulins (IgG, IgA, IgM) are the first-line test.
Can medications cause recurrent infections?
Yes — medication-induced immunosuppression is an important and commonly missed cause of recurrent infections. High-risk medications: long-term oral corticosteroids (prednisolone, dexamethasone — the most common cause of drug-induced immunosuppression in India); biological agents (TNF inhibitors like adalimumab, etanercept — dramatically increase TB risk and risk of fungal infections); chemotherapy agents (neutropenia is the primary risk); calcineurin inhibitors (tacrolimus, cyclosporine — post-transplant); rituximab and other B-cell depleting agents (impair antibody production). Always take a complete medication history including supplements and traditional remedies — some Ayurvedic preparations contain corticosteroids.
Why do I keep getting urinary tract infections?
Recurrent UTIs (defined as 2 or more in 6 months or 3 or more in 12 months) have multiple causes that must be systematically assessed: In women: incomplete bladder emptying (pelvic organ prolapse, poor bladder habits); post-menopausal oestrogen deficiency (changes vaginal flora, reducing lactobacillus protection); uncontrolled diabetes (glucose in urine is a bacterial growth medium); urinary tract anatomical abnormalities; and antibiotic resistance (incomplete treatment courses selecting for resistant organisms). In men: prostate enlargement (benign prostatic hyperplasia — residual urine pools and becomes infected); urinary stones; diabetes. In both: HIV, structural urinary tract abnormality, renal stones. Urine culture + sensitivity before every antibiotic course — never empirical repeat treatment.
What is the connection between recurrent infections and cancer?
Certain haematological malignancies directly impair immune function and present with recurrent infections: Multiple myeloma — malignant plasma cells crowd out normal antibody-producing B cells, causing hypogammaglobulinaemia (low immunoglobulins). Recurrent bacterial pneumonia and sinusitis. Serum protein electrophoresis shows M-band. Chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL) — similarly causes hypogammaglobulinaemia + recurrent bacterial infections. Lymphoma — impairs cell-mediated immunity, increasing susceptibility to viral and fungal infections. Acute leukaemia — neutropenia from marrow replacement causes rapidly lethal bacterial and fungal infections. In any adult with recurrent serious bacterial infections without an obvious cause, LDH + serum protein electrophoresis + full blood count differential are part of the workup.
How is recurrent sinusitis different from chronic sinusitis?
Recurrent sinusitis: four or more separate episodes of acute sinusitis per year, with complete resolution between episodes. Each episode responds to antibiotics, but infections keep returning. This pattern suggests an underlying host factor (uncontrolled diabetes, immunodeficiency, allergic disease, anatomical abnormality like nasal polyps or deviated septum) that is not being addressed. Chronic sinusitis: persistent sinonasal inflammation lasting more than 12 weeks without complete resolution between episodes. Often driven by allergy, nasal polyps, or biofilm-forming bacteria. The clinical significance for SCID-AI: recurrent bacterial sinusitis (particularly with unusual organisms or spreading to the orbit or brain) in an adult may indicate hypogammaglobulinaemia or another immune defect. Serum immunoglobulins are part of the recurrent sinusitis workup.
Consult Dr. Pratik Savaj

Infections That Keep Returning? Find Out Why.

No referral needed. Bring all culture results and antibiotic history. Recurrent infections mean the underlying cause has not been identified. Dr. Pratik Savaj, FNB Infectious Diseases, SCID-AI, Nanpura, Surat provides a systematic immune workup — identifying why the body keeps failing to clear infections, and correcting the defect rather than prescribing another antibiotic course.

SCID-AI, Nanpura, Surat — 405 SNS Axis Business Space, Besides Mahavir Hospital, Surat 395001
Mon–Sat: 11 AM–1 PM & 4–6 PM · Sunday: Closed
+91 72839 34807 — Call or WhatsApp
Dr. Pratik Savaj
Dr. Pratik Savaj FNB Infectious Diseases
MBBS · DNB Medicine · Fellowship ID
P.D. Hinduja Hospital, Mumbai
Morning11:00 AM – 1:00 PM, Mon–Sat
Evening4:00 PM – 6:00 PM, Mon–Sat
Phone+91 72839 34807
 WhatsApp to Book