학술논문

Monthly screening for BK viremia is an effective strategy to prevent BK virus nephropathy in renal transplant recipients.
Document Type
Article
Source
Transplant Infectious Disease. Apr2011, Vol. 13 Issue 2, p101-108. 8p. 1 Diagram, 3 Charts, 1 Graph.
Subject
*KIDNEY transplantation
*VIRAL disease treatment
*ARBOVIRUS diseases
*NUCLEIC acids
*VIREMIA
Language
ISSN
1398-2273
Abstract
C. Alméras, F. Vetromile, V. Garrigue, I. Szwarc, V. Foulongne, G. Mourad. Monthly screening for BK viremia is an effective strategy to prevent BK virus nephropathy in renal transplant recipients. Transpl Infect Dis 2011: 101-108. All rights reserved BK polyomavirus virus (BKV) nephropathy (BKVN) is the most common viral infection that affects renal allografts. Because a specific antiviral therapy is lacking, BKVN may result in graft dysfunction and/or loss. We prospectively analyzed whether monthly nucleic acid testing (NAT) for BKV replication in blood and immediate reduction of immunosuppression (IS) could prevent BKVN. NAT was performed at monthly intervals for 6 months and then at 12 months in 119 de novo renal transplant recipients. In viremic patients (presumptive BKVN), a graft biopsy was systematically performed and IS was immediately reduced. BKV viremia occurred in 13 (10.9%) patients after a median time of 90 days (23-241); 77% of patients were viremic before month 4. After reduction of IS, viral load was undetectable in 11 patients, remained low in 1, and continued to increase in 1 patient who developed definitive BKVN despite reduction of IS, and finally returned to dialysis 6 months after transplantation. BKV infection is an early complication. Monthly NAT in blood during the first 6 months and immediate reduction of IS in viremic patients almost completely prevent definitive BKVN. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]