| Literature DB >> 26293687 |
Nirupama Gupta1, Robert M Lawrence2, Cuong Nguyen3, Renee F Modica4.
Abstract
BK virus (BKV) is a human polyomavirus with a seroprevalence of 60-80 % in the general population. In renal transplant patients, it is known to cause renal failure, ureteric stenosis and hemorrhagic cystitis. In bone marrow transplant patients, it is evident that BKV can also cause hemorrhagic cystitis along with BK virus nephropathy (BKVN) in the native kidneys, with subsequent renal failure. However, little is known about BVKN in non-transplanted immune-compromised patients, such as systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) who may have underlying nephritis and have a compromised immune system due to therapy and/or systemic illness. Thus, this article will focus on the clinical aspects of BKV and its association in patients with SLE.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26293687 PMCID: PMC4545992 DOI: 10.1186/s12969-015-0033-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Rheumatol Online J ISSN: 1546-0096 Impact factor: 3.054
Fig. 1A native renal biopsy with multiple intranuclear BK viral inclusions (a) and positive staining for SV40 T antigen (b) in the tubular epithelial cells (identified by the arrows). There is also extensive interstitial fibrosis and tubular atrophy, along with prominence of inflammatory cells in the interstitium and tubular cells
Studies of BK Virus in SLE patients
| Type of Study [Reference] | Number of SLE Patients | Subject Characteristics (Female/Male) | Method of Detection | Prevalence | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BK viruria (SLE vs healthy controls) | BK viremia (SLE vs healthy controls) | ||||
| Case series [ | 2 | Adults | Cytopathic effect and Hemagglutinin in prototype BKV-infected cultures; decoy cells | Present | Not performed |
| Cross-sectional and prospective study [ | 44 | Adults | PCR analysis of the NCCR region of BKV and JCV | 16 % vs 0 % (BKV) | Not performed |
| Study: (41/3) | 11 % vs 21 % (JCV) | ||||
| Control: (82/6) | |||||
| Co-detection of BKV and JCV was not present | |||||
| Cross-sectional and prospective study [ | 20 | Adults | PCR analysis of the NCCR region of BKV | 43 % vs 4 % | Not performed |
| Study: 20 | |||||
| Matched Control: 16a | |||||
| Cross-sectional study and prospective study [ | 5 | Adults | Nested PCR analysis for BKV DNA | 40 % vs 16 % | Not performed |
| Study: (4/1) | Target: VP1 | ||||
| Control: (25/0)b | Primers: BKV-P1, BKV-P5, BKV-P2 | Co-detection of BKV and JCV was present 4 % vs 0 % | |||
| Cross-sectional study [ | 40 | Adultsc | Semi-quantitative BKV DNA PCR analysis (serum and urine) | 32 % vs 17.2 % | 15 % vs 13.8 % |
| Study: (29/11) | Target BKV: pBK 385 | ||||
| Matched Control: 29d | Positive if BKV PCR >1000 copies/ml (viruria and viremia) | ||||
| Simultaneous BK viruria and viremia 10 % vs 3.4 % | |||||
| Cross-sectional study [ | 7 | Adults | Co-localization of anti-dsDNA and anti-T-antigen to glomeruli by immune electron microscopy | Not performed | Not performed |
| Study: Renal biopsies | |||||
| No control | |||||
| Cross-sectional study [ | 95 | Children and Adults | Quantitative-real time BKV DNA PCR analysis | 71.6 % vs 18.6 % | Not performed |
| Study: 95 | Target BKV: viral capsid protein (VP1) | ||||
| Healthy Control: 32 | Positive if BKV PCR >50,000 copies/ml (viruria) | ||||
| Cross-sectional study [ | 50 | Children | Nested PCR analysis for BKV DNA | BKV: 32 % | Not performed |
| Study: (41/9) | Primers: JC/BK_433F, JC/BK_4390F | JCV: 16 % | |||
| No control | |||||
| Co-detection of BKV and JCV was not present | |||||
| Case Report [ | 1 | Female Adolescent | Decoy cells in bright field microscopy | Present with 556 billion copies/ml | |
| BKV tested by quantitative PCR | |||||
| Case Report [ | 1 | Female Adult | Urine cytology with decoy cells | Not performed | Not performed |
| Urine - qualitative PCR for BKV | |||||
| Bone marrow – Positive SV40 stained cells | |||||
JCV JC virus, BKV BK virus, NCCR Noncoding control region, PCR Polymerase chain reaction, PYV Polyoma virus
a4 subjects were rheumatoid arthritis patients
bOnly those with SLE nephritis
cAll control subjects were pregnant women
d11 subjects were health care workers
Infections associated with immune-modulatory drugs used in SLE
| Immuno-modulatory Drugs [References] | Mechanism of Action | Immune Target | Viral Infections | Bacterial Infections | Fungal Infections |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Glucocorticoids [ | Inhibition of NF-kB | Impact all immune cell types, nonspecific | CMV |
| Candida |
| HSV |
| Cryptococcus | |||
| VZV | PCP | ||||
| Measles | |||||
| Kaposi’s sarcoma | |||||
| Cyclophosphamide [ | DNA alkylating agent | Impact all immune cell types, nonspecific | CMV |
| PCP |
| HSV |
| ||||
| Viral hepatitis | |||||
| MMF [ | Inhibition of IMPDH/de-novo purine synthesis inhibitor | B and T cells | CMV | (No specific organism identified) | Aspergillus |
| HSV | Candida | ||||
| JC virus | Cryptococcosis | ||||
| VZV | Mucor | ||||
| PCP | |||||
| Rituximab [ | Chimeric human-mouse IgG1 anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody | B cells | BK virus |
| Aspergillus |
| CMV |
| Candida | |||
| EBV |
| Nonaspergillus mould | |||
| Enterovirus |
| PCP | |||
| HSV |
| Tinea corpis | |||
| Hepatitis B & C |
| ||||
| Influneza A |
| ||||
| JC virus, Parvovirus B19 | |||||
| RSV | |||||
| VZV | |||||
| West Nile virus | |||||
| Belimumab [ | Human IgG1 antibody that binds to soluble B-lymphocyte stimulator (BLyS or BAFF) | B cells | CMV |
| Coccidomycosis |
| Influenza |
| ||||
| Pneumonia | |||||
| UTI | |||||
| Cellulitis | |||||
| Abatacept [ | Fully human soluble fusion protein, Anti-CTLA4 | Antigen presenting cells | HSV |
| Aspergillus |
| VZV | Pneumonia | Candida | |||
| Sepsis | |||||
| Skin infections | |||||
| URI | |||||
| Methotrexate [ | Anti-folate synthesis inhibitor | B and T cells | CMV |
| Aspergillus |
| Hepatitis B virus |
| Histoplasma | |||
| HSV |
| PCP | |||
| JC virus | |||||
| VZV |
MMF Mycophenolic acid, VZV Varicella zoster virus, CMV Cytomegalovirus, HSV Herpes simplex virus, EBV Ebstein-Barr virus, VZV Varicella zoster virus, RSV Respiratory syncytial virus, UTI Urinary tract infection, PCP Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia, URI Upper respiratory infection
Treatment Options for BK virus infection from the renal transplant literature
| Drug [Reference] | Mechanism of action | Dose | Adverse effect |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cidofovir [ | Synthetic purine nucleotide analogue of cytosine viral DNA polymerase inhibitor | 0.25 to 1.0 mg/kg at 1–3 weekly intervals without probenecid | Nephrotoxicity |
| Leflunomide [ | De novo pyrimidine synthesis inhibitor | Loading dose of 100 mg for 5 days, then maintenance dose of 20–60 mg/day | Hepatic dysfunction Anemia |
| Target blood level of 50 to 100 ug/mL | |||
| Fluoroquinolones [ | DNA gyrase inhibitor (interferes with T antigen helicase activity in BKV) | Levofloxacin 500 mg/day x 1 month | Tendinitis |
| Ciprofloxacin 250 mg BID daily x 1 month | |||
| IVIG [ | Direct neutralizing activity and other immune-modulatory effects | Variable doses of 0.2 to 2.0 g/kg: | Osmotic nephropathy |
| 1) 600 mg/kg every 4–6 weeks | Headache | ||
| 2) 2 g/kg over 5–6 days | Aseptic meningitis | ||
| Thrombotic complication | |||
| Hemolysis |