JC polyomavirus replication and associated disease in pediatric renal Transplantation: an international CERTAIN Registry study

  • Britta Höcker
  • Julia Tabatabai
  • Lukas Schneble
  • Jun Oh
  • Florian Thiel
  • Lars Pape
  • Krisztina Rusai
  • Rezan Topaloglu
  • Birgitta Kranz
  • Günter Klaus
  • Nikoleta Printza
  • Onder Yavascan
  • Alexander Fichtner
  • Kai Krupka
  • Thomas Bruckner
  • Rüdiger Waldherr
  • Michael Pawlita
  • Paul Schnitzler
  • Hans H Hirsch
  • Burkhard Tönshoff

Abstract

BACKGROUND: JC polyomavirus (JCPyV)-associated nephropathy (JCPyVAN) is a severe, but rare complication in adult renal transplant (RTx) recipients. Related data in pediatric patients are scarce.

METHODS: Based on the CERTAIN Registry, we therefore performed a multi-center, retrospective study on the JCPyV antibody status, prevalence of JCPyV replication, and its associated disease in 139 pediatric RTx recipients (mean age, 8.5 ± 5.3 years). JCPyV DNA in plasma and/or urine was measured by quantitative PCR at a median time of 3.2 (IQR, 0.3-8.1) years post-transplant.

RESULTS: 53.2% of patients were JCPyV-seronegative prior to transplantation; younger age was associated with JCPyV seronegativity. 34/139 (24.5%) patients post-transplant showed active JCPyV replication in either urine (22.0%), plasma (13.4%), or both (7.6%). JCPyV viremia occurred significantly (p < 0.001) more often in patients with viruria (34.6%) than in those without (7.6%), but 7/118 (5.9%) had isolated viremia. High-level viruria (> 107 copies/mL) was found in 29.6% of viruric patients. A higher net state of immunosuppression constituted an independent risk factor for JCPyV replication both in urine and plasma (OR 1.2, p < 0.02). Male patients tended to have a higher risk of JCPyV viremia than females (OR 4.3, p = 0.057). There was one male patient (0.7%) with JCPyVAN 7 years post-transplant, which resolved after reduction of immunosuppressive therapy. No patient exhibited progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy.

CONCLUSIONS: This first multi-center study on JCPyV in pediatric renal transplant recipients shows that JCPyV replication is common (24.5%), with strong immunosuppression being a significant risk factor, but associated nephropathy is rare.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN0931-041X
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 12.2018
PubMed 30058047