| Literature DB >> 18037945 |
M Ogata1, T Satou, R Kawano, K Goto, J Ikewaki, K Kohno, T Ando, Y Miyazaki, E Ohtsuka, Y Saburi, T Saikawa, J-I Kadota.
Abstract
Human herpesvirus 6 (HHV-6) causes life-threatening encephalopathy in recipients of allogeneic SCT, but no consensus has been reached regarding appropriate preventive methods. This study evaluated a plasma HHV-6 viral load-guided preemptive approach against HHV-6-associated encephalopathy. Plasma real-time PCR assay was performed once a week. Among 29 patients, 19 developed positive plasma HHV-6 DNA. Median maximum plasma HHV-6 DNA was 4593.5 copies/ml plasma (range, 150.0-127 891.0 copies/ml plasma). In one of eight events with low-level HHV-6 DNA (defined as <1000 copies/ml plasma) and four of seven events with mid-level HHV-6 DNA (1000-9999.5 copies/ml plasma), HHV-6 loads in plasma subsequently continued increasing. Ganciclovir was administered against six of nine patients with high-level HHV-6 DNA (> or =10,000 copies/ml plasma). High-level HHV-6 DNA resolved similarly in both groups with or without ganciclovir therapy. Among the nine patients with high-level HHV-6 DNA two developed encephalopathy. As encephalopathy developed before the detection of high-level HHV-6 DNA in plasma, these two patients had not received preemptive ganciclovir therapy. In conclusion, our preemptive approach against HHV-6-associated encephalopathy cannot prevent all cases of HHV-6 encephalopathy in SCT recipients due to the dynamic kinetics of plasma HHV-6 viral load.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 18037945 DOI: 10.1038/sj.bmt.1705907
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bone Marrow Transplant ISSN: 0268-3369 Impact factor: 5.483