• Dtsch. Med. Wochenschr. · Apr 2021

    [West-Nile-Virus Infection acquired in Germany in a Kidney Transplant Recipient].

    • Matthias Karrasch, Ulrich Pein, Annekathrin Fritz, Danica Lange, Stefan Moritz, Kerstin Amann, Jonas Schmidt-Chanasit, Daniel Cadar, Dennis Tappe, and Martin Gabriel.
    • Department für Labormedizin, Abteilung III, Universitätsklinikum Halle (Saale).
    • Dtsch. Med. Wochenschr. 2021 Apr 1; 146 (7): 482-486.

    BackgroundWest-Nile-Virus (WNV) is a widely distributed flavivirus that is mainly transmitted between birds through different mosquito species (e. g. Culex, Aedes), but may also be transmitted to mammals including humans. WNV causes a spectrum of disease, ranging from asymptomatic infection to encephalitis in a minority of cases. Risk factors for severe disease are older age, cardiovascular disease and an immunocompromised state.Medical History And Clinical ExaminationHere we report about a 60-year-old male patient who was referred to the University Hospital of Halle (Saale) with severe fever two years after kidney transplantation due to hypertensive nephropathy. No infection focus could be found and by day 6 in the course of his illness the patient developed neurologic symptoms and viral encephalitis was suspected.Treatment And CourseThe patient was initially treated with aciclovir. After initial reduction of immunosuppression, coincident graft dysfunction was treated with methylprednisolon. WNV-infection was suspected due to recent emerging human cases in the nearby area of the city of Leipzig. WNV lineage 2 was detected in the patient's urine by RT-PCR and seroconversion with presence of anti WNV IgM and IgG could be demonstrated. Consecutively, aciclovir treatment was stopped. The patient fully recovered and the transplanted kidney regained adequate function. Kidney biopsy did not reveal gross rejection of the transplant.ConclusionThis case highlights the need to consider rarer causes of illness like WNV-infection particularly in risk groups for more severe outcomes of infectious disease. WNV may be detected by PCR in the blood and cerebrospinal fluid early in the course of infection but it is also excreted for a prolonged period of time in the urine. Seroconversion to anti WNV IgG and IgM may be shown but serologic cross-reactivity among members of the flaviviridae family must be considered.Thieme. All rights reserved.

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