The risk of death due to infectious causes after kidney transplantation in Finland dropped by one half since the 1990s. Common bacterial infections remained the most frequent cause of infection-related mortality, whereas opportunistic viral, fungal, or unconventional bacterial infections rarely caused deaths after kidney transplantation.
Sequence variability, amplicon length, and non-encapsidated genomes obstruct standardization and commutability of CMV loads needed to develop thresholds for clinical research and management. Besides regular sequence surveys, matrix and extraction standardization, we propose developing reference calibrators using 100 bp amplicons.
In conclusion, CMV disease remains a common problem after kidney transplantation. Gastrointestinal symptoms were common, especially in patients with primary CMV infection, whereas bone marrow suppression, hepatopathy, or malaise were seen less frequently.
The risk of death associated with longer duration of dialysis has not decreased over time, but remains an independent predictor of patient death after kidney transplantation because of increased risk of death resulting from cardiovascular diseases.
Summary
The long‐term effects of cytomegalovirus (CMV) infections on kidney allografts are unknown. We examined the impact of persistent intragraft CMV infection on long‐term kidney allograft function and survival. CMV was diagnosed in 82/172 renal transplant recipients by antigenemia test and viral cultures. Biopsies from 48 of 82 patients taken after CMV infection and from 15 patients with no previous CMV infection detected were available for the immunohistochemical demonstration of CMV antigens and DNA hybridization in situ. Five‐year follow‐up data from these 63 patients were analysed. In 17 patients, CMV antigens and/or DNA persisted in the biopsy >2 months after the last positive finding in blood or urine. Patients with persistent intragraft CMV had reduced graft survival (P = 0.041) and Cox regression analysis showed persistent CMV as a risk factor for reduced graft survival (RR: 3.5). Recipients with persistent intragraft CMV had reduced creatinine clearance 1 and 2 years after transplantation (P = 0.007) and in multivariate logistic regression analyses including several potential pre‐ and posttransplant risk factors, persistent CMV was an independent risk factor for lower clearance at 1 and 2 years (OR: 4.4 and 4.9). Our novel findings show that persistent intragraft CMV infection was associated with reduced kidney allograft function and survival.
Prolonging cytomegalovirus (CMV) prophylaxis in CMV seronegative recipients of a kidney from CMV seropositive donor (D+/R-) may reduce the incidence of late infections. We analyzed late-onset primary CMV infections after 6 months valganciclovir prophylaxis. Symptomatic primary CMV infections were commonly detected also after prolonged valganciclovir prophylaxis.
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