| Literature DB >> 34613666 |
Miklos Z Molnar1, Vishnu S Potluri2, Douglas E Schaubel3, Meghan E Sise4, Beatrice P Concepcion5, Rachel C Forbes6, Emily Blumberg7, Roy D Bloom2, David Shaffer6, Raymond T Chung8, Ian A Strohbehn4, Nahel Elias9, Ambreen Azhar10,11, Mital Shah2, Deirdre Sawinski2, Laura A Binari5, Manish Talwar10,11, Vasanthi Balaraman10,11, Anshul Bhalla10,11, James D Eason10,11, Behdad Besharatian2, Jennifer Trofe-Clark12, David S Goldberg13, Peter P Reese2.
Abstract
Kidney transplantation (KT) from deceased donors with hepatitis C virus (HCV) into HCV-negative recipients has become more common. However, the risk of complications such as BK polyomavirus (BKPyV) remains unknown. We assembled a retrospective cohort at four centers. We matched recipients of HCV-viremic kidneys to highly similar recipients of HCV-aviremic kidneys on established risk factors for BKPyV. To limit bias, matches were within the same center. The primary outcome was BKPyV viremia ≥1000 copies/ml or biopsy-proven BKPyV nephropathy; a secondary outcome was BKPyV viremia ≥10 000 copies/ml or nephropathy. Outcomes were analyzed using weighted and stratified Cox regression. The median days to peak BKPyV viremia level was 119 (IQR 87-182). HCV-viremic KT was not associated with increased risk of the primary BKPyV outcome (HR 1.26, p = .22), but was significantly associated with the secondary outcome of BKPyV ≥10 000 copies/ml (HR 1.69, p = .03). One-year eGFR was similar between the matched groups. Only one HCV-viremic kidney recipient had primary graft loss. In summary, HCV-viremic KT was not significantly associated with the primary outcome of BKPyV viremia, but the data suggested that donor HCV might elevate the risk of more severe BKPyV viremia ≥10 000 copies/ml. Nonetheless, one-year graft function for HCV-viremic recipients was reassuring.Entities:
Keywords: JC; clinical research; infection and infectious agents - viral: BK; infection and infectious agents - viral: hepatitis C; infectious disease; kidney transplantation; nephrology; polyoma; practice
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34613666 PMCID: PMC8968853 DOI: 10.1111/ajt.16834
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Transplant ISSN: 1600-6135 Impact factor: 8.086