Arbovirus in Solid Organ Transplants: A Narrative Review of the Literature
- PMID: 39599892
- PMCID: PMC11599096
- DOI: 10.3390/v16111778
Arbovirus in Solid Organ Transplants: A Narrative Review of the Literature
Erratum in
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Correction: Gajurel et al. Arbovirus in Solid Organ Transplants: A Narrative Review of the Literature. Viruses 2024, 16, 1778.Viruses. 2025 Feb 20;17(3):292. doi: 10.3390/v17030292. Viruses. 2025. PMID: 40000237 Free PMC article.
Abstract
The incidence of arbovirus infections has increased in recent decades. Other than dengue, chikungunya, and West Nile viruses, the data on arbovirus in solid organ transplant (SOT) are limited to case reports, and infections in renal transplant recipients account for most of the reported cases. Dengue and West Nile infections seem to be more severe with higher mortality in SOT patients than in the general population. Acute kidney injury is more frequent in patients with dengue and chikungunya although persistent arthralgia with the latter is less frequent. There is no clear relationship between arboviral infection and acute cellular rejection. Pre-transplant screening of donors should be implemented during increased arboviral activity but, despite donor screening and negative donor nucleic acid amplification test (NAT), donor derived infection can occur. NAT may be transiently positive. IgM tests lack specificity, and neutralizing antibody assays are more specific but not readily available. Other tests, such as immunohistochemistry, antigen tests, PCR, metagenomic assays, and viral culture, can also be performed. There are a few vaccines available against some arboviruses, but live vaccines should be avoided. Treatment is largely supportive. More data on arboviral infection in SOT are needed to understand its epidemiology and clinical course.
Keywords: Japanese encephalitis; Powassan; West Nile; arbovirus; chikungunga; dengue; donor derived; tick borne encephalitis virus; yellow fever; zika.
Conflict of interest statement
S.D.-none; K.G.-consultant to Karius (but not relevant to this manuscript). R.D. is an employee of labcorp, but this study is performed independently.
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