Cytomegalovirus and polyomavirus BK posttransplant

Adrian Egli(University of Basel), S. Binggeli(Department of Biomedicine Basel), Sohrab Bodaghi(University of Basel), Alexis Dumoulin(University Hospital of Basel), Georg A. Funk(Department of Biomedicine Basel), Nina Khanna(Department of Biomedicine Basel), David Leuenberger(Department of Biomedicine Basel), Rainer Gosert(University Hospital of Basel), Hans H. Hirsch(Department of Biomedicine Basel)
Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation
September 1, 2007
Cited by 107Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Virus replication and progression to disease in transplant patients is determined by patient-, graft- and virus-specific factors. This complex interaction is modulated by the net state of immunosuppression and its impact on virus-specific cellular immunity. Due to the increasing potency of immunosuppressive regimens, graft rejections have decreased, but susceptibility to infections has increased. Therefore, cytomegalovirus (CMV) remains the most important viral pathogen posttransplant despite availability of effective antiviral drugs and validated strategies for prophylactic, preemptive and therapeutic intervention. CMV replication can affect almost every organ system, with frequent recurrences and increasing rates of antiviral resistance. Together with indirect long-term effects, CMV significantly reduces graft and patient survival after solid organ and hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. The human polyomavirus called BK virus (BKV), on the other hand, only recently surfaced as pathogen with organ tropism largely limited to the reno-urinary tract, manifesting as polyomavirus-associated nephropathy in kidney transplant and hemorrhagic cystitis in hematopoetic stem cell transplant patients. No licensed anti-polyoma viral drugs are available, and treatment relies mainly on improving immune functions to regain control over BKV replication. In this review, we discuss diagnostic and therapeutic aspects of CMV and BKV replication and disease posttransplantation.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis