Monitoring of CMV-specific cell-mediated immunity with a commercial ELISA-based interferon-γ release assay in kidney transplant recipients treated with antithymocyte globulin
- PMID: 31991045
- DOI: 10.1111/ajt.15793
Monitoring of CMV-specific cell-mediated immunity with a commercial ELISA-based interferon-γ release assay in kidney transplant recipients treated with antithymocyte globulin
Abstract
Monitoring for cytomegalovirus (CMV)-specific cell-mediated immunity (CMV-CMI) may be useful for individualizing valganciclovir (VGCV) prophylaxis after kidney transplantation (KT). We performed a commercial ELISA-based interferon (IFN)-γ release assay (QTF-CMV) from posttransplant months 2-5 (362 points) in 120 CMV-seropositive KT recipients that received antithymocyte globulin as induction therapy and VGCV prophylaxis (median of 92 days). Forty-seven patients (39.3%) had CMV infection after discontinuation of prophylaxis. The QTF-CMV assay was reactive, nonreactive, and indeterminate in 264 (72.9%), 90 (24.9%), and 8 points (2.2%). The QTF-CMV assay at prophylaxis discontinuation exhibited suboptimal accuracy for predicting protective CMV-CMI (sensitivity: 77.4%; specificity: 34.3%; positive predictive value [PPV]: 64.1%; negative predictive value [NPV]: 50.0%), with no differences in 1-year CMV infection rates between patients with negative (nonreactive or indeterminate) or reactive results (45.8% vs 36.1%; P = .244). Specificity and PPV to predict protective CMV-CMI improved by elevating the IFN-γ cutoff value to 1.13 IU/mL (65.7% and 71.4%) and 7.0 IU/mL (85.7% and 76.2%), although NPVs decreased. The QTF-CMV assay as per manufacturer's interpretative criteria performed poorly to predict protection from CMV infection following discontinuation of VGCV prophylaxis among ATG-treated CMV-seropositive KT recipients. This performance is slightly improved by modifying the IFN-γ positivity threshold.
Keywords: clinical research/practice; complication: infectious; immunosuppressant - polyclonal preparations: rabbit antithymocyte globulin; infection and infectious agents - viral: cytomegalovirus (CMV); infectious disease; kidney transplantation/nephrology.
© 2020 The American Society of Transplantation and the American Society of Transplant Surgeons.
Comment in
-
CMV cell-mediated immunity assays: Focus on CD4+ cells.Am J Transplant. 2020 Aug;20(8):2285-2286. doi: 10.1111/ajt.15866. Epub 2020 Apr 5. Am J Transplant. 2020. PMID: 32185870 No abstract available.
-
CMV immune monitoring-Where do we go from here?Am J Transplant. 2020 Aug;20(8):1961-1962. doi: 10.1111/ajt.15875. Epub 2020 Apr 15. Am J Transplant. 2020. PMID: 32216014 No abstract available.
References
REFERENCES
-
- Razonable RR, Humar A. Cytomegalovirus in solid organ transplant recipients - Guidelines of the American Society of Transplantation Infectious Disease Community of Practice. Clin Transplant. 2019;33(9):e13512.
-
- Egli A, Humar A, Kumar D. State-of-the-art monitoring of cytomegalovirus-specific cell-mediated immunity after organ transplant: a primer for the clinician. Clin Infect Dis. 2012;55:1678-1689.
-
- Fernandez-Ruiz M, Kumar D, Humar A. Clinical immune-monitoring strategies for predicting infection risk in solid organ transplantation. Clin Transl Immunology. 2014;3:e12.
-
- Walker S, Fazou C, Crough T, et al. Ex vivo monitoring of human cytomegalovirus-specific CD8+ T-cell responses using QuantiFERON-CMV. Transpl Infect Dis. 2007;9:165-170.
-
- Clari MA, Munoz-Cobo B, Solano C, et al. Performance of the QuantiFERON-cytomegalovirus (CMV) assay for detection and estimation of the magnitude and functionality of the CMV-specific gamma interferon-producing CD8(+) T-cell response in allogeneic stem cell transplant recipients. Clin Vaccine Immunol. 2012;19:791-796.
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical
