Predictive factors for cytomegalovirus infection after orthotopic liver transplantation using an ultrasensitive polymerase chain reaction assay
- PMID: 16980084
- DOI: 10.1016/j.transproceed.2006.06.114
Predictive factors for cytomegalovirus infection after orthotopic liver transplantation using an ultrasensitive polymerase chain reaction assay
Abstract
The predictive factors for cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection in de novo liver transplant patients were determined at 3 months posttransplantation. We included all consecutive patients except those who died or who had lost their graft within 1 month posttransplant. We recorded both donor (D) and recipient (R) data. Immunosuppression utilized tacrolimus, steroids, with or without mycophenolate mofetil, and/or induction therapy with anti-CD25 monoclonal antibodies. CMV prophylaxis was administered only to those at high risk of CMV infection, namely, D+/R- patients. These cases received intravenous ganciclovir at 500 mg/d for the first 2 weeks followed by oral ganciclovir at 500 mg for the following 3 months. The median time to CMV infection was 1 month. The significant predictive factors for CMV infection were D/R CMV status, (P = .002): D+/R+ versus other patients (P = .01), D-/R- versus other patients (P = .002), D+ versus D- (P = .009). In addition infection was associated with the original liver disease (hepatitis C virus infection or alcohol-related cirrhosis; P = .03), R+ vs. R- (P = .03), donor age (<45 or >45 years; P = .01), lymphocyte count at M2 (< or >1300/mm(3); P = .02), hemoglobin levels at 1 and 3 months, and platelet and white blood cell counts at day 7. The independent predictive factors were recipient CMV sero-status (R+ vs R-; odds ratio = 10.2), donor age >45 years (odds ratio = 11.4) and lymphocyte count at M2 <1300/mm(3) (odds ratio = 7.33). This study showed that the major factors associated with CMV infection were recipient CMV status, donor age, and lymphocyte count.
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