학술논문

Five‐year single‐center analysis of cytomegalovirus viremia in kidney transplant recipients and possible implication for novel prophylactic therapy approaches.
Document Type
Article
Source
Transplant Infectious Disease. Feb2024, Vol. 26 Issue 1, p1-6. 6p.
Subject
*BK virus
*DRUG side effects
*KIDNEY transplantation
*KIDNEY transplant complications
*BREAKTHROUGH infections
*VIREMIA
Language
ISSN
1398-2273
Abstract
Background: Cytomegalovirus (CMV) infections are a common complication after kidney transplantation (KTx) and negatively affecting patient outcome. Valganciclovir (VGC) prophylaxis is often limited by drug‐induced side effects and dose reduction due to decline in kidney function. Method: In the present study, episodes of CMV viremia in the first year after KTx in a cohort of 316 recipients were analyzed retrospectively to identify risk factors linked to persistent infections. Results: In the studied cohort, 18.7% of patients showed a high‐risk (HR) constellation (D+/R–) for CMV infections. CMV viremia affected 22% of our cohort, with HR patients being the most affected cohort (44.1%). Within this group, most viremic events (65.3%) occurred while patients were still on prophylactic therapy, showing significantly higher viral loads and a longer duration compared to seropositive recipients. Conclusion: The analysis at hand revealed that detection of viremia under ongoing antiviral prophylaxis bears an increased risk for sustained viral replication and antiviral drug resistance in HR patients. We identified low estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) and lower dose VGC prophylaxis post‐KTx as a risk factor for breakthrough infections in HR patients in our single center cohort. These patients might benefit from a closer CMV monitoring or novel prophylactic agents as letermovir. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]