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Case Reports
Journal Article
Persistent Primary Cytomegalovirus Infection After Deceased Donor Kidney Transplant: Ganciclovir Susceptibility of Human Cytomegalovirus With UL97 D605E Mutation: A Case Report.
Transplantation Proceedings 2018 December
BACKGROUND: Cytomegalovirus (CMV) could cause rejection in immunocompromised patients during early post-renal transplant stage. The American Transplant Society guidelines recommend prophylactic therapy with ganciclovir (GCV) for 3 to 6 months to prevent CMV infections in adult renal transplant patients. However, there is no recommended CMV treatment regimen for pediatric patients.
MAIN FINDINGS: We performed deceased donor kidney transplant from an anti-CMV antibody-positive donor to an anti-CMV antibody-negative 15-year-old female recipient with end-stage renal disease caused by bilateral renal hypoplasia. One month after transplant, increase in positive cells in the CMV antigenemia assay indicated a primary CMV infection in the patient, who immediately received GCV. She was switched to foscarnet after 4 months of anti-CMV therapy because of clinical GCV resistance. CMV was isolated from the peripheral blood mononuclear cells but neutralizing antibody was not detected. Isolated CMV was susceptible to GCV and foscarnet, although it carried the UL97 D605E mutation, assumed to be associated with GCV resistance.
CONCLUSIONS: The primary CMV infection presented a phenotypic clinical drug resistance, but all recovered CMV isolates were drug-susceptible even if isolated after prolonged anti-CMV therapy, indicating that immune status was more important for recovery from primary CMV infection than anti-CMV therapy.
MAIN FINDINGS: We performed deceased donor kidney transplant from an anti-CMV antibody-positive donor to an anti-CMV antibody-negative 15-year-old female recipient with end-stage renal disease caused by bilateral renal hypoplasia. One month after transplant, increase in positive cells in the CMV antigenemia assay indicated a primary CMV infection in the patient, who immediately received GCV. She was switched to foscarnet after 4 months of anti-CMV therapy because of clinical GCV resistance. CMV was isolated from the peripheral blood mononuclear cells but neutralizing antibody was not detected. Isolated CMV was susceptible to GCV and foscarnet, although it carried the UL97 D605E mutation, assumed to be associated with GCV resistance.
CONCLUSIONS: The primary CMV infection presented a phenotypic clinical drug resistance, but all recovered CMV isolates were drug-susceptible even if isolated after prolonged anti-CMV therapy, indicating that immune status was more important for recovery from primary CMV infection than anti-CMV therapy.
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