| Literature DB >> 28129395 |
Fabian Schlott1,2, Dominik Steubl3, Dieter Hoffmann4, Edouard Matevossian2,5, Jens Lutz6, Uwe Heemann2,3, Volker Hösel7, Dirk H Busch1,2, Lutz Renders2,3, Michael Neuenhahn1,2.
Abstract
Human Cytomegalovirus (CMV) can lead to primary infection or reactivation in CMV-seronegative or -seropositive kidney transplant recipients, respectively. Complications comprise severe end-organ diseases and acute or chronic transplant rejection. Risk for CMV manifestation is stratified according to the CMV-IgG-serostatus, with donor+/recipient- (D+/R-) patients carrying the highest risk for CMV-replication. However, risk factors predisposing for primary infection in CMV-seronegative recipients are still not fully elucidated. Therefore, we monitored D+/R- high-risk patients undergoing kidney transplantation in combination with antiviral prophylaxis for the incidence of CMV-viremia for a median follow-up time of 784 days (156-1155 days). In this period, we analyzed the functional CMV-specific T cell response by intracellular cytokine staining and CMV-serology by ELISA. Only four of eight D+/R- patients developed clinically relevant CMV-viremia followed by seroconversion. Viremia triggered expansion of functional CMV-specific T cells correlating with protection against secondary CMV-reactivations. In contrast, all other patients remained permanently aviremic and showed no immunological correlate of infection after discontinuation of antiviral prophylaxis for up to three years. Comparing cold ischemic times (CIT) of viremic (median = 1020 min; 720-1080 min) and aviremic patients (median = 335 min; 120-660 min) revealed significantly (p = 0.0286) protracted CIT in patients with primary CMV-infection. Taken together, primary CMV-infection affects only a subgroup of D+/R- patients correlating with length of CIT. Therefore, patients with extended CIT should be thoroughly monitored for CMV-replication well beyond discontinuation of antiviral prophylaxis. In contrast, patients with short CIT remained permanently uninfected and might benefit from shorter prophylactic treatment.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28129395 PMCID: PMC5271354 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0171035
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Longitudinal monitoring of CMV-specific immunity reveals heterogeneous risk for primary CMV-infection in D+/R- renal transplant recipients.
High risk D+/R- recipients were observed for a median follow-up time of 784 days (156–1155 days). CMV-viremia (grey area) was measured by quantitative PCR, CMV-specific T cells were quantified by IFNγ secretion after restimulation with CMV-specific peptide mixes in ICS. Viremic patients are separately shown in (A)—(D), kinetics of CMV-pp65- (solid line) or CMV-IE-1- (dashed line) specific CD8+ T cells are indicated. Patients without viremia are shown together in (E), last time points of negative T cell screenings are indicated. (F) Quantification of IFNγ secretion using the CMV-QuantiFERON assay in patients without viremia.
CMV-IgM and -IgG serostatus of viremic and aviremic patients.
| Patient No. | Days post Tx | CMV IgM serostatus | Days post Tx | CMV IgG serostatus |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 127 | positive | 127 | positive |
| 2 | 177 | 177 | positive | |
| 4 | 208 | positive | 208 | |
| 6 | 94 | positive | 135 | positive |
| 3 | 165 | 165 | ||
| 5 | 1155 | 1155 | ||
| 7 | 995 | 995 | ||
| 8 | 728 | 728 | ||
Fig 2Cold ischemic time is correlated with primary CMV-infection.
(A) Comparison of cold ischemic times in viremic (median = 1020 min; 720–1080 min) and aviremic patients (median = 335 min; 120–660 min). (B) Comparison of warm ischemic time (WIT) in viremic (median = 25 min; 16–60 min) and aviremic patients (median = 20 min; 16–30 min). Statistical analysis were performed with the Mann-Whitney U test. * = p < 0.05.