## Abstract In a study of the effects on renal allograft survival of HLA mismatching, mismatching for cytomegalovirus (CMV) antibody status, and postโtransplant CMV infection, 148 cyclosporinโtreated renal transplant recipients were given kidneys optimally matched for HLAโA, โB, and โDR antigens bu
Diagnosis of cytomegalovirus infection in cyclosporin-treated renal allograft recipients
โ Scribed by Dr. D. J. Morris; A. J. Fox; P. E. Klapper
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1990
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 495 KB
- Volume
- 32
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0146-6615
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โฆ Synopsis
Abstract
The relative merits of antibody response and virus shedding as markers of cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection among cyclosporinโtreated renal allograft recipients were analysed. CMVโspecific antibody was assayed by lgGโspecific radioimmunosorbent test (RIST) and by complement fixation test (CFT). CMV shedding was assayed by virus isolation and by the rapid test immediate early nuclear antigen detection (IENAD). RIST and CFT detected seroconversion in similar numbers of patients, but the former test was the more sensitive when CMV antibody was sought in pretransplant sera to differentiate primary from recurrent infection. IENAD detected or excluded CMV shedding for more urine specimens than virus isolation (462/515 [90%] vs. 366/515 [71%]), but the reverse applied to saliva specimens (33/57 [58%] vs. 54/57 [95%]). The high specificity of IENAD allowed positive results by IENAD to be accepted when virus isolation failed to provide a result. IENAD was, however, less sensitive than virus isolation even when specimens yielding CMV by IENAD, but no result by virus isolation, were included in the analysis (27/44 [61%] vs. 38/44 [86%]). Assays of both antibody response and virus shedding were required to maximise the diagnosis of recurrent CMV infections, but the former assay detected all primary CMV infections. The diagnostic implications of these results are discussed.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
To detect cytomegalovirus (CMV) infections, a total of 1,074 cultures of urine, saliva, or blood were collected weekly from 43 consecutive patients undergoing allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. Twenty-three patients were seronegative before transplant and primary infection occurred in 2 (9%). T