| Literature DB >> 21766009 |
Katherine A Barraclough1, Nicole M Isbel, Christine E Staatz, David W Johnson.
Abstract
The incidence of BK virus infection in kidney transplant recipients has increased over recent decades, coincident with the use of more potent immunosuppression. More importantly, posttransplant BK virus replication has emerged as an important cause of graft damage and subsequent graft loss. Immunosuppression has been accepted as a major risk for BK virus replication. However, the specific contribution of individual immunosuppressive medications to this risk has not been well established. The purpose of this paper is to provide an overview of the recent literature on the influence of the various immunosuppressant drugs and drug combinations on posttransplant BK virus replication. Evidence supporting the various immunosuppression reduction strategies utilised in the management of BK virus will also be briefly discussed.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21766009 PMCID: PMC3134251 DOI: 10.1155/2011/750836
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transplant ISSN: 2090-0007
Factors other than immunosuppression associated with increased risk of posttransplant BKV replication.
| Risk factors | Reference |
|---|---|
| Older age |
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| Male gender | [ |
| Caucasian race |
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| Diabetes mellitus |
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| Deceased donor |
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| Greater HLA mismatches |
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| Absence of HLA-C7 in donor and recipient |
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| Acute rejection |
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| Recipient seronegativity |
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| Recipient seropositivity |
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| Donor seropositivity |
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| High donor antibody titre |
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| Poor cellular immune response |
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| Longer cold ischemic time |
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| Use of ureteral stent |
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| Delayed graft function |
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| More recent transplant year |
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| Lower centre transplant volume |
[ |
BKV: BK virus; HLA: human leukocyte antigen.
Clinical studies examining the influence of the calcineurin inhibitors and antimetabolites on risk of BKV replication.
| Study number | Number of participants | Study design | Primary maintenance immunosuppressive therapy* | Manifestation of BKV | Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 161 KTxRs | Retrospective | 73% CyA, MMF, pred; | 8 with BKVAN | 7 of 8 recipients with BKVAN receiving Tac, MMF, and pred | [ |
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| 2 | 70 KTxRs | Retrospective | 100% CyA, MMF, pred | 5 with BKVAN | BKVAN followed switch from CyA to Tac in all 5 cases | [ |
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| 3 | 483 KTxRs | Retrospective | Not specified | 100 with viruria; 5 with BKVAN | BKVAN followed switch from CyA to Tac in all 5 cases | [ |
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| 4 | 1276 renal biopsies | Retrospective | 45% CyA and pred; | 7 with BKVAN | 4 of 7 recipients with BKVAN were receiving Tac, MMF, and pred; use of this combination associated with an 8-fold higher incidence and 13-fold higher risk of BKVAN (multivariate odds ratio of 12.7 (95% CI 2.1–7.8))# | [ |
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| 5 | 880 KTxRs | Retrospective | 75% CyA, 16% Tac, 7% SLM; | 129 with viruria; 39 with BKVAN | Both Tac and MMF independently associated with increased risk of high-titre viruria (hazard ratios of 4.9 (95% CI 3.1–7.3) and 4.6 (95% CI 3.1–6.7) for the 2 drugs, resp.), and for BKVAN (hazard ratios of 3.3 (95% CI 1.5–7.6) and 3.5 (95%CI 1.6–7.5), for the 2 drugs, resp.). | [ |
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| 6 | 32 KTxRs | Prospective observational | 59% CyA, MMF, pred-based; | 20 with viruria | Higher rate and risk of viremia with Tac as compared to CyA (77% versus 33%, | [ |
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| 7 | 48,292 KTxRs | Retrospective | 20% CyA, 76% Tac, 4% no CNI; | 1474 treated for BKV replication | Lower adjusted hazard ratio for treatment of BKV replication with CyA-based as compared to Tac-based immunosuppression (0.53 (95% CI 0.45, 0.63); | [ |
*Refers to initial maintenance regimen employed at time of transplantation; not necessarily the regimen employed at time of diagnosis with BKV replication.
#For the analysis relating to the influence of immunosuppression on BKVAN, the KTxRs with BKVAN were compared to a control group (n = 42; matched for transplant date and baseline immunosuppression) rather than to study cohort as a whole.
Includes recipients in whom viruria and viraemia were simultaneously detected.
Aza: azathioprine; BKV: BK virus; BKVAN: BKV-associated nephropathy; CyA: cyclosporine; KTxRs: kidney transplant recipients; MMF: mycophenolate mofetil; pred: prednisolone; SLM: sirolimus; Tac: tacrolimus.
Clinical studies examining the relationship between BKV replication and drug exposure.
| Study number | Number of participants | Study design | Immunosuppression exposure measures | Manifestation of BKV | Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 38 pancreas Tx recipients | Retrospective | Tac C0 concentrations, MMF, and pred dose | 4 with viruria | Tac C0 higher in those with viruria at 1, 3 and 12 months post-tx (22 ± 3.1 versus 16 ± 0.9 ng/mL, | [ |
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| 2 | 33 KTxRs with BKVAN, 66 matched controls | Retrospective | Tac C0 concentrations, MMF, and pred dose | 33 with BKVAN | Higher Tac C0 and prednisolone dose associated with increased risk of BKVAN (OR 1.3. 95% CI 1.02–1.7; | [ |
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| 3 | 575 KTxRs | Retrospective | Tac C0 concentrations | 32 with BKVAN | Higher Tac C0 associated with higher incidence of BKVAN (10.5% versus 2.5%, | [ |
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| 4 | 7 KTxRs with BKVAN, 42 matched controls# | Retrospective | Tac C0 concentrations, MMF, and pred dose | 7 with BKVAN | No influence of Tac C0, MMF, or pred dose on BKVAN | [ |
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| 5 | 32 KTxRs | Prospective observational | CyA and Tac C0 concentrations | 20 with viruria*; 23 with viraemia | No influence of CyA or Tac C0 on viruria, viraemia or BKVAN | [ |
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| 6 | 120 KTxRs | Prospective observational | Tac C0 concentrations, tac, and pred dose | 37 with viruria | No influence of Tac C0 or tac or pred dose on viruria | [ |
*Includes recipients in whom viruria and viraemia were simultaneously detected.
#Matched for transplant date and baseline immunosuppression.
BKV: BK virus; BKVAN: BKV associated nephropathy; CI: confidence interval; CyA: cyclosporine; KTxRs: kidney transplant recipients; MMF: mycophenolate mofetil; OR: odds ratio; pred: prednisolone; Tac: tacrolimus.