Preventive strategies against cytomegalovirus and incidence of α-herpesvirus infections in olid-organ transplant recipients: A nationwide cohort study.
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BORIS DOI
Date of Publication
July 2017
Publication Type
Article
Contributor
Martin-Gandul, Cecilia | |
Stampf, Susanne | |
Héquet, Delphine | |
Mueller, Nicolas J | |
Cusini, Alexia | |
van Delden, Christian | |
Khanna, Nina | |
Boggian, Katia | |
Soccal, Paola | |
Hirsch, Hans H | |
Pascual, Manuel | |
Meylan, Pascal | |
Manuel, Oriol | |
Swiss Transplant Cohort Study, (STCS) |
Subject(s)
Series
American journal of transplantation
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1600-6135
Publisher
Wiley-Blackwell
Language
English
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
28039960
Description
We assessed the impact of antiviral preventive strategies on the incidence of herpes-simplex virus (HSV) and varicella-zoster virus (VZV) infections in a nationwide cohort of transplant recipients. Risk factors for the development of HSV/VZV infection were assessed by Cox PH regression. We included 2781 patients (56% kidney, 20% liver, 10% lung, 7.3% heart, 6.7% others). Overall, 1264 (45%) patients received antiviral prophylaxis [(val)ganciclovir (n=1126) or (val)acyclovir (n=138)]. Incidences for HSV and VZV infections were 28.9 and 12.1 cases per 1000 person-years, respectively. Incidence of HSV/VZV infections at 1-year post-transplant was 4.6% (95% CI 3.5-5.8) in patients receiving antiviral prophylaxis vs. 12.3% (95% CI 10.7-14) in patients without prophylaxis; this was particularly observed for HSV infections: 3% (95% CI 2.2-4) vs. 9.8% (95% CI 8.4-11.4), respectively. A lower rate of HSV/VZV infections was also seen in donor or recipient CMV-positive patients receiving (val)ganciclovir prophylaxis as compared to a preemptive approach. Female gender (HR 1.663, p=0.001), HSV seropositivity (HR 5.198, p<0.001), previous episodes of rejection (HR 1.95, p=0.004), and use of a preemptive approach (HR 2.841, p=0.017) were significantly associated with a higher risk for HSV infection. While HSV/VZV infections were common after transplantation, antiviral prophylaxis significantly reduced symptomatic HSV infections. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
File(s)
File | File Type | Format | Size | License | Publisher/Copright statement | Content | |
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Martin-Gandul_et_al-2016-American_Journal_of_Transplantation.pdf | text | Adobe PDF | 471.31 KB | accepted |