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Adenovirus Infection as a Cause of Fever of Unknown Origin and Allograft Dysfunction in a Kidney Transplant Recipient.

With the recent introduction of more potent modern immunosuppressive regimens in solid-organ transplant, new types of viral infections such as adenovirus are emerging as a potential cause for graft dysfunction and loss. We report a case of 41-year-old male patient with end-stage renal disease from recurrent kidney stones who underwent kidney transplant from a deceased 12-year-old female donor. He developed adenoviral infection with acute cystitis, microscopic hematuria, and necrotizing interstitial nephritis associated with graft dysfunction within the first month of the postoperative period. Diagnosis was made by graft biopsy that showed more than 60% necrosis with tubulointerstitial hemorrhage, thrombotic microangiopathy, and histologic features suggestive of viral infection with negative Cytomegalovirus and polyomavirus stains in the graft and elevated adenovirus PCR in the blood. Simultaneously, the patient had very low absolute total lymphocyte count of 70 cells/μL during which he received supratherapeutic tacrolimus at whole blood trough levels and mycophenolate mofetil. This prompted the tapering of immunosuppression and the discontinuation of all antimicrobial drugs. Within a 2-week period, the immune reconstitution was sufficient for the clearance of the infection and the subsequent gradual recovery of graft function.

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