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Outcomes of human adenovirus infection and disease in a retrospective cohort of pediatric solid organ transplant recipients

Authors :
Dale R. Purdy
Despoina M Galetaki
Richard L. Hodinka
Adriana E. Kajon
Brian T. Fisher
Ana María Cárdenas
Craig L K Boge
Hans Petersen
Alix E. Seif
Source :
Pediatr Transplant
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Wiley, 2019.

Abstract

Information about human adenovirus (HAdV) infection in solid organ transplant (SOT) recipients is limited. We aimed to describe HAdV infection epidemiology and outcomes in a single-center retrospective cohort during the era of polymerase chain reaction (PCR) availability. SOT recipients transplanted at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia 2004—2013 were followed for 180 days post-transplant. HAdV infection was defined as a positive HAdV PCR from a clinical specimen. HAdV disease was defined by organ-specific radiologic and/or laboratory abnormalities. No HAdV surveillance protocols were employed during the study period; testing was solely per clinician discretion. Progression of HAdV infection was defined as HAdV disease or ≥1-log viral load increase since a corresponding site’s first positive specimen. Of the assembled 425 SOT recipients, 227 (52.6%) had ≥1 HAdV PCR. Twenty-four (10.6%) had ≥1 HAdV-positive PCR. HAdV-positive subjects were younger than uninfected subjects (2.0 years vs. 6.5, p=0.001). Infection incidence rates were highest in liver recipients (15.3%), followed by heart (8.6%), kidney (8.3%), and lung (4.2%). Four subjects (16.7%) met HAdV disease criteria at virus detection. Five subjects (20.8%) had progression of HAdV infection. All-cause mortality rates in positive and negative subjects were 0% and 3.9%, respectively. HAdV infection was infrequently detected in SOT recipients. Over one-third of HAdV-positive patients met disease criteria at detection or had infection progression, but none died. This low all-cause mortality raises questions about benefits of HAdV surveillance. Larger multi-center studies are needed to assess incidence variance by center and comparative effectiveness of therapeutic interventions.

Details

ISSN :
13993046 and 13973142
Volume :
23
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pediatric Transplantation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2f2cf8435a8ca7c880c389d59eb84d4e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/petr.13510