| Literature DB >> 31104346 |
Ann Dao1, Madison Cuffy2, Tiffany E Kaiser1, Ashley Loethen1, John Cafardi2, Keith Luckett1, Adele Helen Rike2, Michael Cardi2, Rita R Alloway1, Amit Govil1, Tayyab Diwan1, Kenneth E Sherman1, Shimul A Shah1, Ervin Steve Woodle1.
Abstract
Hepatitis C (HCV) disease transmission from the use of HCV antibody-positive and HCV nucleic acid test-negative (HCV Ab+/NAT-) kidneys have been anecdotally reported to be absent. We prospectively analyzed kidney transplant (KT) outcomes from HCV Ab+/NAT- donors to HCV naïve recipients under T-cell depleting early steroid withdrawal immunosuppression. Allografts from 40 HCV Ab+/NAT- donors were transplanted to 52 HCV Ab- recipients between July 2016 and February 2018. Thirty-three (82.5%) of donors met Public Health Service (PHS) increased risk criteria. De novo HCV infection was detected at 3 months post-KT in one recipient (1.9%). This was a case of transmission from a HCV Ab+ NAT+ donor with an initial false-negative NAT completed using sample collected on donor hospital admission (day 2). At the time of HCV diagnosis, a stored donor sample collected during procurement (day 4) was tested and resulted NAT-positive. Subsequently, sustained virologic response (SVR) was achieved with 12 weeks of glecaprevir/pibrentasvir. One death with functioning graft at 261 days post-KT was determined not related to HCV or donor factors. This experience provides evidence of a low transmission rate of HCV from HCV Ab+/ NAT- kidney donors, thereby arguing for increasing utilization.Entities:
Keywords: donor-derived infections; hepatitis C; infection and infectious agents; kidney (allograft) function/dysfunction
Year: 2019 PMID: 31104346 DOI: 10.1111/ctr.13598
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Transplant ISSN: 0902-0063 Impact factor: 2.863