| Literature DB >> 31615131 |
Fatima Dakroub1,2, Antoine Touzé3, Haidar Akl4, Etienne Brochot5,6.
Abstract
The immunosuppression required for graft tolerance in kidney transplant patients can trigger latent BK polyomavirus (BKPyV) reactivation, and the infection can progress to nephropathy and graft rejection. It has been suggested that pre-transplantation BKPyV serostatus in donors and recipients is a predictive marker for post-transplantation BKPyV replication. The fact that research laboratories have used many different assay techniques to determine BKPyV serostatus complicates these data analysis. Even studies based on the same technique differed in their standard controls choice, the antigenic structure type used for detection, and the cut-off for seropositivity. Here, we review the different BKPyV VP1 antigens types used for detection and consider the various BKPyV serostatus assay techniques' advantages and disadvantages. Lastly, we highlight the obstacles in the implementation of a consensual BKPyV serologic assay in clinics (e.g., the guidelines absence in this field).Entities:
Keywords: BK virus; BK virus serology; kidney transplantation; serological technique
Year: 2019 PMID: 31615131 PMCID: PMC6833059 DOI: 10.3390/v11100945
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Advantages and disadvantages of assay techniques for BK polyomavirus (BKPyV) seroreactivity.
| Technique Requirement | Advantages | Disadvantages | Time |
|---|---|---|---|
| Enzyme Immunoassay | Small quantities of sample required | Can only measure one analyte at a time | 2 days (if wells are coated with antigen overnight) |
| Hemagglutination Inhibition Assay | Highly specific | Technically demanding | 1 day |
| Multiplex Assay | Simultaneous detection of multiple antigens | Expensive especially if a small number of antigens is analyzed | Around 2 days (if beads are prepared in advance) |
| Neutralization Inhibition Assay | Highly Specific | Can only be used with PsV or viruses that can be grown | Around 5 days |
An overview of the different research studies pertaining to the involvement of pre-transplant BKPyV serology testing in post-transplantation BKPyV infection.
| Authors | Year | Number of Patients | Type of Assay and BKV Antigen | Conclusions from the Study |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Solis et al. [ | 2018 | 168 KTR + 69 donors | Neutralization assay using pseudovirion system (BKPyV genotypes I, II, and IV) | Recipients with high neutralizing antibody titer have a lower risk for developing BKPyV viremia |
| Abend et al. [ | 2016 | 116 donor-recipient pairs | Neutralization inhibition assay using BKPyV particles (serotypes I, II, III, and IV) | Donor with significant serum neutralizing activity is associated with elevated risk for BKPyV viremia regardless of recipient serostatus |
| Wunderink et al. [ | 2016 | 407 donor-recipient pairs | Luminex assay detecting IgG reactivity against BKPyV Ib1 VP1 protein. | Donor BKPyV IgG levels were strongly associated with the occurrence of recipient viremia and BKPyVAN |
| Sood et al. [ | 2013 | 192 adult and 11 pediatric donor-recipient pairs | BKPyV VLPs-based ELISA to detect human IgG Antibodies | Infection was highest in the Donor+/Recipient− group and lowest in the Donor−/Recipient− group |
| Ali et al. [ | 2011 | 36 pediatric KTRs + donors | BKPyV VP1 VLPs-based indirect ELISA to detect human IgG antibodies | Low BKPyV serostatus in children is associated with a high risk of post-transplantation BKPyV viremia, particularly in the context of donor with high BKPyV serostatus |
| Bijol et al. [ | 2010 | 45 pediatric KTRs | BKPyV VLPs-based ELISA to detect human IgG antibodies | Positive recipient BKPyV serostatus did not confer protection to BKV after transplantation |
| Bohl et al. [ | 2008 | 87 KTRs | BKPyV VP1 VLPs-based ELISA to detect human IgG Antibodies | Pre-transplant seropositivity did not protect against sustained BKPyV viremia but it might mitigate the severity of infection |
| Bohl et al. [ | 2005 | 142 recipients and 84 donors | BKPyV VP1 VLPs-based ELISA to detect human IgG Antibodies | BKPyV infection in the recipient was strongly associated with a positive BKPyV donor antibody status |
| Smith et al. [ | 2004 | 173 pediatric KTRs | BKPyV VP1 VLPs-based indirect ELISA to detect human IgG Antibodies | Recipient seronegativity for BKPyV was significantly associated with the development of BKPyVAN |
| Hirsch et al. [ | 2002 | 77 KTRs | Hemagglutination inhibition assay | The high-risk group is not the seropositive donor and seronegative recipient transplant combination |
| Flegstad et al. [ | 1991 | 10 KTRs | Neutralization inhibition assay | Positive recipient BKPyV serostatus did not confer protection to BKPyV after transplantation |
| Andrews et al. [ | 1988 | 496 donor-recipient pairs | Hemagglutination inhibition assay | A seropositive donor increased the rate of primary and reactivation infections with BKPyV |