BK polyomavirus in the urine for follow-up of kidney transplant recipients
- PMID: 30076973
- DOI: 10.1016/j.cmi.2018.07.027
BK polyomavirus in the urine for follow-up of kidney transplant recipients
Abstract
Objectives: After kidney transplantation, human BK polyomavirus (BKPyV) can induce a progressive disease, in three stages: viruria, viraemia, and then nephropathy after a few months of viral replication. Therapeutic intervention is recommended when BKPyV is detected in the plasma. The objective of our study was to assess urinary BKPyV nucleic acid test as a predictor for developing viraemia.
Methods: We first defined a viruria threshold based on 393 time-matched urine and plasma samples collected after kidney transplantation; to validate this threshold, we followed-up a cohort of 236 kidney transplant patients.
Results: A BKPyV viruria threshold of 6.71 log10 copies/mL best discriminated between plasma-positive and plasma-negative patients (sensitivity 90.9% (95% CI 86.5-95); specificity 90.3% (95% CI 86.3-94.3); area under the curve 0.953 (95% CI 0.933-0.974). In the validation cohort, the risk of developing BKPyV viraemia at 1 year was 16.5% (39/236) and rose to 90.7% (39/43) if BKPyV viruria remained above the threshold of 6.71 for more than 1 month.
Conclusions: Sustained BKPyV viruria is a reliable, early marker of patients at high risk of developing BKPyV viraemia. This marker should alert the clinician early, and thus allow timely therapeutic intervention.
Keywords: BK virus; BKPyV viraemia; BKPyV viruria; Kidney transplantation.
Copyright © 2018 European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
MeSH terms
Substances
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Other Literature Sources
Medical
