| Literature DB >> 33319201 |
Abraham Cohen-Bucay1,2, Silvia E Ramirez-Andrade1, Craig E Gordon3, Jean M Francis4,5, Vipul C Chitalia5,6,7.
Abstract
Reactivation of BK virus (BKV) remains a dreaded complication in immunosuppressed states. Conventionally, BKV is known as a cause for BKV-associated nephropathy and allograft dysfunction in kidney transplant recipients. However, emerging studies have shown its negative impact on native kidney function and patient survival in other transplants and its potential role in diseases such as cancer. Because BKV-associated nephropathy is driven by immunosuppression, reduction in the latter is a convenient standard of care. However, this strategy is risk prone due to the development of donor-specific antibodies affecting long-term allograft survival. Despite its pathogenic role, there is a distinct lack of effective anti-BKV therapeutics. This limitation combined with increased morbidity and health care cost of BKV-associated diseases add to the complexity of BKV management. While summarizing recent advances in the pathogenesis of BKV-associated nephropathy and its reactivation in other organ transplants, this review illustrates the limitations of current and emerging therapeutic options and provides a compelling argument for an effective targeted anti-BKV drug.Entities:
Keywords: BK virus, transplantation
Year: 2020 PMID: 33319201 PMCID: PMC7729234 DOI: 10.1016/j.xkme.2020.06.015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Kidney Med ISSN: 2590-0595
Figure 1BK virus (BKV) biology. (A) BK virions are 45 nm in diameter, nonenveloped, and enclose the viral genome with host cell histones (packaged DNA is depicted in yellow and red on the right) surrounded by a capsid. The most abundant viral protein is VP1 (depicted in blue on the left and in gray on the right), which arranges in 72 pentamers to form the outer surface of the viral capsid, while the inner part of the capsid is composed of proteins VP2 and VP3 (depicted in blue and green on the right). Adapted from: Hurdiss et al. (B) BKV infection is initiated by the attachment of VP1 to polysialylated gangliosides (GD3, GD2, GD1b, and GT1b) and sialylated glycoproteins (1), followed by internalization (2). It then moves along microtubules to reach the endoplasmic reticulum (3), where chaperones, disulfide isomerases, and reductases partially uncoat the capsid (4) and release it into the cytosol (5). The viral genome is then transported (through interaction of VP2 and VP3 proteins with the importin α/β import pathway) into the nucleus for replication (6-7) followed by virion self-assembly in the nucleus (8). Virions are then released from the cell by cell lysis (9). (C) Genome map of BKV. BKV genome is ∼5 kb in length and replicates bidirectionally from a unique origin within the noncoding control region (NCCR; also called transcriptional control region [TCR]). The early coding region encodes 3 proteins by alternative splicing (large tumor antigen [TAg]; small tumor antigen [tAg]; and the truncated TAg; truncTAg), while the late genes encode structural protein, VP3 and Agno proteins), also by alternative splicing of a common pre-mRNA. The proteins encoded in the early coding region are mostly responsible for viral genome replication, with Tag being particularly important for making a quiescent cell reenter the cell cycle and replicate the viral genome. The structural proteins are important in viral attachment to susceptible cells, cell entry, viral propagation, and assembly of progeny virions.
Noninvasive Diagnostic Tests for BK Virus–Associated Nephropathy
| Test | Threshold Value | Sensitivity | Specificity | PPV | NPV | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Decoy cells | >10 cells/cytospin | 25%-100% | 71%-96% | 5%-57% | 97%-100% | 22, 48, 68-70 |
| Urine BK PCR | >1 ×107 copies/mL | 100% | 92%-96% | 31%-67% | 100% | 70,71 |
| Blood/plasma BK PCR | >1 ×104 copies/mL | 100% | 88%-96% | 50%-82% | 100% | 22, 68, 70,71 |
| Haufen | ≥1 tight 3-dimensional polyomavirus clusters | 100% | 99% | 97% | 100% | 72 |
| VP1 urinary mRNA | 6.54 ×105 copies/ng | 93.8%-100% | 93.9%-97% | 97% | 100% | 73,74 |
| Blood microRNA | Cq of 31.9 | 100% | 94.9% | 77.8% | 100% | 75 |
| Urinary exosome microRNA | 5.9 log10 copies/mL | 100% | 98.5% | 92.3% | 100% | 76 |
Abbreviations: mRNA, messenger RNA; NPV, negative predictive value; PCR, polymerase chain reaction; PPV, positive predictive value.
Histologic Classification System for BKV-Associated Nephropathy and Associated Outcomes
| Histologic Class | Histologic Characteristics | Outcomes at 24 mo After Index Biopsy | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cr increase | Allograft failure | Resolution of BKV-associated nephropathy | ||
| Class 1 | pvl 1 and ci ≤1 | 0.4 (IQR, 0-1.6) mg/dL | 16% | 75% |
| Class 2 | pvl 1 and ci >1, or pvl 2 and any ci score, or pvl 3 and ci ≤1 | 1.0 (IQR, 0.4-4.8) mg/dL | 31% | 78% |
| Class 3 | pvl 3 and ci >1 | 4.8 (IQR, 1.3-5.3) mg/dL | 50% | 50% |
Note: pvl 1: ≤1% tubules with BKV replication, pvl 2: >1% and ≤10% of tubules with BKV replication, pvl 3: >10% of tubules with BKV replication, ci 0: interstitial fibrosis in ≤5% of cortical area; ci 1: interstitial fibrosis in >5% and ≤25% of cortical area; ci 2: interstitial fibrosis in >25% and ≤50% of cortical area; and ci 3: interstitial fibrosis in >50% of cortical area.
Abbreviations: BKV, BK virus; Cr, creatinine; ci, interstitial fibrosis of cortical area; IQR, interquartile range; pvl, polyomavirus load.
Data from Nickeleit et al.
Treatment Strategies for BKV Infection
| Study (year) | Study Design | Immunosuppression Adjustment Strategy | Viremia/BKAN | BKV Clearance | Allograft Loss | Acute Rejection After BK Treatment | Mean Follow-up | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hirsch | Prospective cohort | Varied: CNI minimization or switch of agent | 10/5 | 3/5 | 0/10 | NR | 1.6 y post-KTx | 4/5 patients with BKAN also had concurrent rejection and received antirejection treatment and adjustment of IS |
| Ramos | Retrospective cohort | 15/67 no reduction; 34/67 CNI minimization; 8/67 tac → CyA; 3/67 CNI → mTORi; 36/67 MMF d/c; 14/67 MMF 50% reduction | NR/67 | 5/67 | 11/67 | 8/67 | 1 y post-BKAN | 6/67 patients developed ureteral obstruction |
| Celik | Case series | Not described; 31/66 biopsies had initial steroid treatment followed by decreased IS, 6/66 no change in IS, 29/66 decreased IS from outset | NR/31 | 11/45 biopsies at 8 wk; 15/21 biopsies after 8 wk | 11/31 | NR | NR | No long-term difference was seen with initial treatment with steroids or IS reduction from outset |
| Brennan | Prospective cohort | Discontinuation of antiproliferative agent (AZA or MMF); if viremia did not clear after 4 wk, CNI dose was reduced (target CyA 100-200 ng/mL, Tac 3-5 ng/mL) | 23/0 | 22/23 | 0/23 | 2/23 | 1 y post-KTx | Patients randomly assigned to Tac or CyA before BK diagnosis; no difference in incidence between groups and no significant differences in patient survival or allograft loss |
| Saad | Case series | 50% reduction of MMF, CNI, and/or mTORi | 24/16 | 24/24 | 1/24 | 3/24 | 3.6 y post-KTx; 2.6 y post-BK | 71% had stable or improved kidney function; 29% had kidney function decline; the single allograft failure was due to BKAN recurrence during pregnancy |
| Almeras | Prospective cohort | Viremia: 25% reduction in CNI and 50% reduction in MMF; BKAN: 25% reduction in CNI and discontinuation of MMF | 13/3 | 8/11 viremic w/o BKAN patients; 1/3 BKAN patients | 0/13 | 3/13 | 1 y post-KTx | |
| Weiss | Case series | BKAN: Withdrawal group (n = 17) d/c either antiproliferative (20%) or CNI (80%); Reduction group (n = 18) Tac 3-6 ng/mL, CyA 75-150 ng/mL, MMF 500 BID, sirolimus 2 mg/d (goal < 8 ng/mL); Viremia w/o BKAN: withdrawal of CNI (n = 2), IS reduction (n = 28) | 65/35 | NR | BKAN 16/35; viremia w/o BKAN 0/30 | 2/35 | Up to 5 y | 65% of patients were on CNI/mTORi regimen before BKAN diagnosis; antiviral therapy used in many patients: cidofovir (n = 7), IVIG (n = 16), leflunomide (n = 9); 1 y allograft survival: 87.8% in withdrawal group vs 56.2% in reduction group ( |
| Schaub | Prospective cohort | Sustained viremia: CNI minimization followed by MMF dose reduction if viremia persisted | 38/13 | 35/38 | 0/38 | 10/35 patients who cleared viremia | 2.9 y post-KTx | 7/38 (18%) patients had concurrent treatment for rejection: 1 with rituximab and IVIG, 6 with steroid pulses |
| Hardinger | Retrospective cohort | Discontinuation of antiproliferative agent (AZA or MMF); if viremia did not clear after 4 wk CNI dose was reduced (target CyA 100-200 ng/mL, Tac 3-5 ng/mL) | 23/0 | 22/23 | 4/23; 1/23 DCGL | 5/23 | 5 y post-KTx | 5 y follow-up of study by Brennan et al |
| Sawinski | Retrospective cohort | Discontinuation of antiproliferative agent (MMF or AZA); if viremia did not clear, CNI was reduced; if viremia did not clear Tac was switched to CyA | 132/12 | NR | 8/132 | NR | 3 y post-KTx | Class II DSA development was more common in patients with persistent BK viremia than that in patients with no viremia (OR, 2.53; 95% CI, 1.40-4.59); BK viremia was not associated with allograft loss (HR, 0.80; 95% CI, 0.37-1.73) |
| Seifert | Retrospective cohort | Discontinuation of antiproliferative agent (AZA or MMF); if viremia did not clear after 4 wk CNI dose was reduced (target CyA 100-200 ng/mL, Tac 3-5 ng/mL) | 20/0 | 19/20 | 7/20; 1/20 DCGL | NR | 10 y post-KTx | 10 y follow-up of study by Brennan et al |
| Bischof | Retrospective cohort | Sustained viremia: CNI minimization followed by MMF dose reduction if viremia persisted | 105/33 | 101/105 | Viremia: 6/105; BKAN: 2/33; 1/33 DCGL | 11/101 | 6.6 y post-KTx; 5 y post-BK viremia | 24 viremic patients had low-level viremia (<10,000 copies/mL); 12/101 who cleared viremia had relapse in viremia; 12/105 had concurrent rejection. 6 of them were treated with increased IS; 5/33 allograft loss due to rejection |
| Baek | Retrospective cohort | Not described: minimization or discontinuation or CNI or antiproliferative | 79/12 | 61/79 | NR | 17/79 | 6 y post-KTx | MMF discontinuation vs reduction was protective for acute rejection (OR, 0.11; 95% CI, 0.02-0.61); CNI level reduction ≥ 20% associated with acute rejection (OR, 33.75; 95% CI, 4.26-267.25) |
| Josephson | Case series | LFN alone (n = 19) or LFN + cidofovir (n = 7) coupled with IS reduction (d/c MMF, Tac through target 4-6 ng/mL). | 26/26 | 11/26 | 4/26 | NR | 0.5-3.3 y post-KTx | All patients were treated with IS reduction before starting antiviral therapy; there were kidney-pancreas recipients (n = 7), heart-kidney-pancreas recipient (n = 1), and kidney recipients (n = 18) |
| Faguer | Case series | MMF replaced by LFN (LD 100 mg/d ×5 d, MD 40 mg/d, target levels 40-80 mg/L), and Tac decreased to target level of 6-10 ng/mL | 8/12 | 5/12 | 2/12 | 1/12 | 1.3 y post-KTx | 3 patients had concurrent acute cellular rejection treated with steroid pulses |
| Basse | Case series | BK viremia (n = 1): MMF halved; BKAN + rejection (n = 4): steroid pulses, MMF replaced by LFN (target level 40-100 mg/L) | 7/4 | NR | 0/7 | NR | 1.2-2 y post-KTx | All 4 cases of BKAN had concurrent allograft rejection on kidney biopsy |
| Leca | Case series | MMF replaced by LFN (LD 60 mg/d ×3 d, MD 20 mg/d) and Tac level decreased to 5 ng/mL; 2 groups based on LFN levels: “low level” <40 μg/mL (n = 12) and “high level” >40 μg/mL (n = 9) | 21/21 | 11/21; low level 6/12; high level 5/9 | 4/21; low level 3/12; high level 1/9 | 2/21; low level 0/12; high level 2/9 | 1.1 y -KTx | 8 patients also received cidofovir, and 3 patients received IVIG; 2 patients developed TMA after leflunomide treatment |
| Teschner | Case series | MMF replaced with LFN (LD 100 mg/d ×3 d, MD 20 mg/d, target level 40 μg/mL) + Tac level decreased to 4-6 ng/mL | 13/13 | 11/13 | 1/13 | 0/13 | 2 y post-KTx; 1.3 y post-BKAN | |
| Krisl | Retrospective cohort | MMF replaced by LFN, CNI minimization (LFN group, n = 52); MMF minimization or d/c, CNI minimization (CNT group, n = 24) | 76/33; LFN 52/32; CNT 24/1 | LFN 16/52; CNT 15/24; viremia: LFN 8/20; CNT 15/23 | LFN 8/52; CNT 2/24 | LFN 10/52; CNT 2/24; viremia: LFN 2/20; CNT 0/23 | 1.1-1.4 y post-BKAN | In multivariate analysis, leflunomide use was not associated with BK viral clearance (OR, 1.10; 95% CI, 0.19-6.5; |
| Tong | Case series | IS reduction alone (n = 2); IS reduction + cidofovir (0.25 mg/kg q4d; n = 5) | 7/7 | 5/7 | 0/7 | NR | 1.5 y post-BKAN | |
| Kuypers | Retrospective cohort | IS reduction + cidofovir (0.5-1 mg/kg qw) (n = 8); IS reduction alone (n = 13) | 21/21 | Cidofovir 6/8; no cidofovir 6/13 | Cidofovir 0/8; no cidofovir 9/13 | NR | 2 y post-BKAN | 2 patients in the cidofovir group had concurrent rejection and were treated with steroids |
| Wadei | Case series | IS reduction (either decrease overall IS, or switch to CyA-based regimen; n = 23); IS reduction + cidofovir (0.25 mg/kg q2w ×4, if BKAN persisted 0.5 mg/kg q2w ×4-5) (n = 20); IS reduction + cidofovir + IVIG (2.5 g/kg; n = 10); IS reduction + IVIG (n = 2) | 31/55 | NR | 8/55 | 9/55; 6/30 in cidofovir treated; 3/25 without cidofovir | 1.6 post-BKAN | Neither cidofovir, IVIG. nor CyA conversion was associated with improved allograft functional outcome or BKV clearance in kidney tissue; allograft loss was not reported for each specific treatment group |
| Kuypers | Prospective cohort | IS reduction + cidofovir (0.5-1 mg/kg qw; n = 26); IS reduction alone (n = 15) | 41/41 | Cidofovir 15/26; no cidofovir 7/15 | Cidofovir 4/26; no cidofovir 11/15 | Cidofovir 4/26; no cidofovir 1/15 | 2.5 y post-BKAN | Allograft survival was better in the cidofovir group ( |
| Lee | Prospective, double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized trial | IS reduction + levofloxacin (30-d course; n = 20); IS reduction alone (n = 19) | 39/0 | Levofloxacin 8/20; control 6/19 | Levofloxacin 0/20; control 2/19 | Levofloxacin 1/20; control 0/19 | 0.5 y postviremia | Reduction of BK viral load was similar at 3 and 6 mo in both groups; leflunomide was also used in 6 patients |
| Wali | Case series | 50% reduction in IS followed 12 wk after by d/c of Tac and MMF, and starting sirolimus (target level 10-12 ng/mL) | 3/3 | 3/3 | 0/3 | 0/3 | 1.5 y post-BKAN | |
| Jacobi | Retrospective cohort | Low viremia (103-104 copies/mL): reduction CNI by 30% and MMF by 50% (n = 15). If viremia persists, change to sirolimus (target 5-8 ng/mL) + low CyA (target 60-80 ng/mL) regimen (n = 7), or other regimens (n = 4); high viremia (>104 copies/mL) or BKAN: change to sirolimus (target 5-8 ng/mL) + low CyA (target 60-80 ng/mL) regimen (n = 13), or other regimens (n = 2), or reduction in IS (n = 7) | 48/22 | 43/48 | 5/48 | 3/48 | 1.8 y post-KTx | Overall viral replication did not differ between different treatment groups of patients with either BK viremia or BKAN |
| Sener | Case series | 50% reduction in IS + IVIG (2 g/kg) | 7/8 | 4/8 | 1/8 | 1/5 | 1.25 y post-BKAN | 2 patients were initially misdiagnosed as having ACR |
| Vu | Retrospective cohort | MMF replaced by LFN (40 mg/d), if persistent after 4 wk CNI was decreased (CyA target 100-200 ng/mL or Tac 3-5 ng/mL; n = 23), if persistent after 4 wk IVIG (1 g/kg) was given (n = 30) | 53/10 | 23/53 with IS reduction only; 27/30 with IVIG | 1/30 | 1/30 | 1.5 y post-BKAN | |
| Kable | Retrospective cohort | MAT (Tac reduction or conversion to CyA + MMF reduction or conversion to LFN or AZA + ciprofloxacin 500 mg/d ×30 d + cidofovir 0.5 mg/kg q2w ×10 wk) + IVIG 100 mg/kg qw ×10 wk (n = 22); MAT alone (n = 28) | 50/50 | MAT + IVIG 18/22; MAT 16/28 | DCGL 21/50; MAT + IVIG 6/22 | MAT + IVIG 14/22; MAT 16/28 | 5 y post-KTx | In multivariate analysis, IVIG was associated with more effective clearance of viremia (HR, 6.82; 95% CI, 1.03-45.11; |
Abbreviations: ACR, acute cellular rejection; AZA, azathioprine; BKAN, BK virus–associated nephropathy; BKV, BK virus; CNI, calcineurin inhibitor; CNT, control; CyA, cyclosporine A; d/c, discontinue; DCGL, death-censored graft loss; DSA, donor-specific antibody; HR, hazard ratiol IS, immunosuppression; IVIG, intravenous immunoglobulin; KTx, kidney transplant; LD, loading dose; LFN, leflunomide; MAT, multidimensional antiviral therapy; MD, maintenance dose; MMF, mycophenolate mofetil; mTORi, mammalian target of rapamycin inhibitor; NR, not reported; OR, odds ratio; q4d, every 4 days; qw, every week; Tac, tacrolimus; TMA, thrombotic microangiopathy; w/o, without.
| Virus-associated factors | Rearrangement of the NCCR Region |
| Transplant factors | Degree of immunosuppression Thymoglobulin use Higher steroid use Tacrolimus-based regimens (controversial) Rejection episodes Delayed allograft function Higher degree of HLA antigen mismatch Blood type ABO-incompatible transplantation |
| Receptor factors | Decreased cellular immunity Age (<17-18 and >55-60 y) Sex (male) Race (African American) Ureteral stent placement |
| Donor factors | BK seropositive donor (especially D+/R− pairs) Deceased donor Donation after circulatory death |
Abbreviation: NCCR, noncoding control region.