| Literature DB >> 34741800 |
Christine M Durand1, Sander Florman2, Jennifer D Motter3, Diane Brown1, Darin Ostrander1, Sile Yu3, Tao Liang1, William A Werbel1, Andrew Cameron3, Shane Ottmann3, James P Hamilton1, Andrew D Redd1,4, Mary G Bowring3, Yolanda Eby5, Reinaldo E Fernandez1, Brianna Doby6, Nazzarena Labo7, Denise Whitby7, Wendell Miley7, Rachel Friedman-Moraco8, Nicole Turgeon8, Jennifer C Price9, Peter Chin-Hong9, Peter Stock9, Valentina Stosor10, Varvara A Kirchner11, Timothy Pruett11, David Wojciechowski12, Nahel Elias12, Cameron Wolfe13, Thomas C Quinn1,4, Jonah Odim14, Megan Morsheimer14, Sapna A Mehta15, Meenakshi M Rana16, Shirish Huprikar16, Allan Massie3, Aaron A R Tobian5, Dorry L Segev3.
Abstract
Liver transplantation (LT) from donors-with-HIV to recipients-with-HIV (HIV D+/R+) is permitted under the HOPE Act. There are only three international single-case reports of HIV D+/R+ LT, each with limited follow-up. We performed a prospective multicenter pilot study comparing HIV D+/R+ to donors-without-HIV to recipients-with-HIV (HIV D-/R+) LT. We quantified patient survival, graft survival, rejection, serious adverse events (SAEs), human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) breakthrough, infections, and malignancies, using Cox and negative binomial regression with inverse probability of treatment weighting. Between March 2016-July 2019, there were 45 LTs (8 simultaneous liver-kidney) at 9 centers: 24 HIV D+/R+, 21 HIV D-/R+ (10 D- were false-positive). The median follow-up time was 23 months. Median recipient CD4 was 287 cells/µL with 100% on antiretroviral therapy; 56% were hepatitis C virus (HCV)-seropositive, 13% HCV-viremic. Weighted 1-year survival was 83.3% versus 100.0% in D+ versus D- groups (p = .04). There were no differences in one-year graft survival (96.0% vs. 100.0%), rejection (10.8% vs. 18.2%), HIV breakthrough (8% vs. 10%), or SAEs (all p > .05). HIV D+/R+ had more opportunistic infections, infectious hospitalizations, and cancer. In this multicenter pilot study of HIV D+/R+ LT, patient and graft survival were better than historical cohorts, however, a potential increase in infections and cancer merits further investigation.Entities:
Keywords: clinical research/practice; ethics and public policy; infection and infectious agents - viral: hepatitis C; infection and infectious agents - viral: human herpesvirus 8 (HHV-8); infection and infectious agents - viral: human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)/acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS); infectious disease; liver disease; liver disease: infectious; liver transplantation/hepatology
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34741800 DOI: 10.1111/ajt.16886
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Transplant ISSN: 1600-6135 Impact factor: 8.086