• Transplant. Proc. · Oct 2012

    Co-infection and clinical impact of human herpesvirus 5 and 6 in liver transplantation.

    • A M Sampaio, A C Guardia, A Milan, A N Sasaki, P D Andrade, S H A Bonon, R S B Stucchi, S C Botelho Costa, and I F S F Boin.
    • Unit of Liver Transplantation, Diagnosis of Molecular Infection Disease, Faculty of Medical Science, State University of Campinas, SP, Brazil.
    • Transplant. Proc. 2012 Oct 1; 44 (8): 2455-8.

    BackgroundHuman herpesvirus (HHV) 5 and 6 remain latent after primary infection and can be reactivated after immunosuppression for organ transplantation. An association between HHV-5 and HHV-6 has been reported in liver transplant patients. The coinfection is associated with clinical manifestations and graft dysfunction.ObjectiveThe aim of this study was to monitor herpesviruses in liver transplant recipients to better understand issues involving coinfection with HHV-5/6 and correlations with acute cellular rejection episodes and bacterial infections.MethodsForty-five adult liver transplant patients of median age 47 years (range, 18-66), gave blood samples and liver biopsies in the first 6 months after their surgeries. Viremia was detected with the use of nested PCR and antigenemia; the Banff classification was used to detect allograft rejection.ResultsIgG positive for HHV-5 was observed in 94% of subjects whose main indication (67%) for transplantation was hepatitis C. Twenty-three (51.1%) displayed cytomeg virus (CMV) infections and 12 (26.7%) HHV-6 infection. There were 6 patients (13.3%) with HHV-5/6 coinfections. Eighteen of the 23 patients had CMV disease, showing a strong correlation between a positive test and CMV disease; 6 displayed an acute cellular rejection episode in the same period (χ(2) = 6.62; P < .03). Four out of 6 patients who displayed coinfections (HHV-5/6) had concomitant bacterial infections; 3/6 experienced graft rejection episodes. During follow-up, 1 patient had HHV-6 infection diagnosed as encephalitis followed by fever on the 24th day after surgery. The median 32 days for HHV-6 detection by nested PCR positivity was shorter than 38 days for HHV-5.ConclusionsHHV-5/6-infected patients displayed more allograft rejection episodes, coinfections, and concomitant bacterial infections, besides an higher risk for CMV disease.Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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