| Literature DB >> 31590269 |
Samuel Chan1,2,3, Nicole M Isbel4,5,6, Carmel M Hawley7,8, Scott B Campbell9,10,11, Katrina L Campbell12,13, Mark Morrison14, Ross S Francis15,16,17, E Geoffrey Playford16,18, David W Johnson15,16,17.
Abstract
The incidence of infectious complications, compared with the general population and the pre-transplant status of the recipient, increases substantially following kidney transplantation, causing significant morbidity and mortality. The potent immunosuppressive therapy given to prevent graft rejection in kidney transplant recipients results in an increased susceptibility to a wide range of opportunistic infections including bacterial, viral and fungal infections. Over the last five years, several advances have occurred that may have changed the burden of infectious complications in kidney transplant recipients. Due to the availability of direct-acting antivirals to manage donor-derived hepatitis C infection, this has opened the way for donors with hepatitis C infection to be considered in the donation process. In addition, there have been the development of medications targeting the growing burden of resistant cytomegalovirus, as well as the discovery of the potentially important role of the gastrointestinal microbiota in the pathogenesis of post-transplant infection. In this narrative review, we will discuss these three advances and their potential implications for clinical practice.Entities:
Keywords: cytomegalovirus; direct acting antivirals; donor-derived infections; gastrointestinal microbiome; hepatitis C; kidney transplantation; knowledge acquisition; letermovir
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31590269 PMCID: PMC6843315 DOI: 10.3390/medicina55100672
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicina (Kaunas) ISSN: 1010-660X Impact factor: 2.430
Pharmacology of direct-acting antivirals agents.
| Agent Class | Example | Genotype | Adverse Events | Drug-Drug Interactions | Contraindications | Probability of Drug Resistance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NS3/4A protease inhibitors | Boceprevir | Narrow | Fatigue | Multiple via CYP3A and p-glycoprotein (e.g., ritonavir, erythromycin, rifampicin, efavirenz) | Low creatinine clearance; use of alpha-1 adrenoreceptor antagonists, anticonvulsants, oral contraceptive pills | High |
| NS5A inhibitors | Daclatasvir | Medium | Headache | Minimal; case reports of thyroid hormone, dihydropyridines, alpha and beta blockers, proton pump inhibitors, statins | Low creatinine clearance; previous Hepatitis B, use of systemic steroids and anticonvulsant therapy | Low |
| NS5B polymerase inhibitors | Sofosbuvir (nucleoside) | Broad (nucleoside) | Fatigue | Minimal | Low creatinine clearance; use of anticonvulsant and antimicrobial therapy, HIV protease inhibitor therapy and herbal supplements (e.g., St John’s Wort) | Low |
Suitable direct-acting antiviral agent combination regimens for each Hepatitis C virus (HCV) genotype.
| Genotype | Suitable Regimens |
|---|---|
| Genotype 1 | Ledipasvir-sofosbuvir |
| Genotype 2 | Sofosbuvir-velpatasvir |
| Genotype 3 | Glecaprevir-pibrentasvir |
| Genotype 4 | Ledipasvir-sofosbuvir |
| Genotype 5 and 6 | Ledipasvir-sofosbuvir |
Studies evaluating Hepatitis C positive donors into Hepatitis C negative recipients in transplantation.
| Study | Year | Study Design | N | Mean Age of Recipients (Years) | Organ Transplant | Intervention | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Durand [ | 2018 | Open-label, non-randomised trial | 10 | 71 (median) | Kidney | Grazoprevir/elbasvir (Genotype 1); sofosbuvir added for Genotype 3 | HCV RNA not detectable |
| Reese [ | 2018 | Open-label, non-randomised trial | 20 | 56 | Kidney | Grazoprevir/elbasvir (Genotype 1) | HCV RNA not detectable |
| Woolley [ | 2019 | Open-label, non-randomised trial | 44 | 61 (median) | Heart and lung | 4 week-regimen of sofosbuvir/velpatasvir | 35/44 enrolled and completed 6 months follow-up (non-detectable HCV RNA, stable graft function no treatment adverse effects) |
| Wadei [ | 2019 | Case report | 1 | - | Liver | Glecaprevir/pibentasvir (delayed) | Delay in direct-acting anti-HCV drugs (DAA) resulted in severe membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis requiring haemodialysis |
| Abdelbasit [ | 2018 | Case series | 5 | 47 | Lung | Sofosbuvir/ledipasvir (Genotype 1); sofosbuvir/alpatasvir (Genotype 2) | HCV RNA not detectable |
| Schlendorf [ | 2018 | Open-label, non-randomised trial | 13 | 53 | Heart | Ledipasvir/sofosbuvir (Genotype 1) and Sofosbuvir/Velpatasivr (Genotype 3) | 12/13 undetectable HCV RNA |
| Cotter [ | 2019 | Registry | 2635 | 57 | Liver | Various DAAs (registry study) | 3-year graft survival following use of DAAs increased to 88% from 79% |
| Axelrod [ | 2018 | Registry | 157,873 kidney and 58,509 liver transplants | - | Kidney and liver | Various DAAs (registry study) | Improvements in graft function and death post DAA |
| Cholankeril [ | 2018 | Registry | 3855 | 58 | Liver | Various DAAs (registry study) | 1-year post transplant survival pre-DAA 89.9% vs 91.9% post DAA |
Pharmacology of letermovir and maribavir.
| Medication | Mechanism of Action | Adverse Events | Resistance Patterns | Drug-Drug Interactions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Letermovir | Inhibits viral terminase complex (UL51/JL56/UL89) | Nausea, diarrhea, vomiting, peripheral edema, cough, headache, fatigue and abdominal pain | None noted | None known, possibly with ciclosporin |
| Maribavir | Inhibits CM UL97 serine/threonine kinase by competitively inhibiting the binding of ATP to the kinase ATP-binding site | Gastrointestinal disorders (diarrhea, dysgeusia, nausea, vomiting) | Emerging (T409M and H411Y) | CYP3A4 |