» Articles » PMID: 21108350

JC Virus DNA in the Peripheral Blood of Renal Transplant Patients: a 1-year Prospective Follow-up in France

Overview
Journal J Med Virol
Specialty Microbiology
Date 2010 Nov 26
PMID 21108350
Citations 6
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

There is little information on JC virus (JCV) infection in renal transplant patients. A long-term prospective follow-up study was conducted to assess the incidence of JCV DNA in the blood of 103 adult renal transplant patients enrolled prospectively between 1 January and 31 December 2006. Patients were monitored until April 2008. JCV DNA was quantified by a real-time polymerase chain reaction in whole blood samples collected regularly for at least 1 year post-transplant. JCV was detected in seven patients (6.8%) (31/1,487 whole blood samples) at a median time of 139 days post-transplant. The median JC virus load of the first positive DNA blood sample was 3.4 log(10) copies/ml (1.9-5.7 log(10) copies/ml). Induction therapy were either anti-CD25 monoclonal antibodies (n = 5) or antithymocyte globulins (n = 2). Post-transplant immunosuppressive treatment included steroids with tacrolimus/mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) (n = 2), or ciclosporin/MMF (n = 1), or belatacept/MMF (n = 4). Two patients were also treated with rituximab. All seven patients infected with JCV had other viral infections(s): BK virus (3), Epstein-Barr virus (2), Cytomegalovirus (1) or both BK virus and Epstein-Barr virus (1). Three patients had BKV-associated nephropathy and decoy cells shedding. JCV infection was not associated with acute rejection episodes or nephropathy, regardless of the virus load. No patient developed progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy during follow-up. Thus the incidence of JCV infection in renal transplant patients was low and not associated with any specific clinical manifestations. JCV replication must still be diagnosed and differentiated from BK virus infection because of its non-aggressive course.

Citing Articles

Determining host factors contributing to the reactivation of JC virus in kidney transplant recipients.

Keykhosravi S, Khosravi M, Shenagari M, Hasan-Alizadeh E, Mosadegh M, Noori Goodarzi N Virol J. 2022; 19(1):131.

PMID: 35941650 PMC: 9358911. DOI: 10.1186/s12985-022-01843-w.


Relationship Among Viremia/Viral Infection, Alloimmunity, and Nutritional Parameters in the First Year After Pediatric Kidney Transplantation.

Ettenger R, Chin H, Kesler K, Bridges N, Grimm P, Reed E Am J Transplant. 2016; 17(6):1549-1562.

PMID: 27989013 PMC: 5445007. DOI: 10.1111/ajt.14169.


A Difficult Decision: Atypical JC Polyomavirus Encephalopathy in a Kidney Transplant Recipient.

Bialasiewicz S, Hart G, Oliver K, Agnihotri S, Koralnik I, Viscidi R Transplantation. 2016; 101(6):1461-1467.

PMID: 27367472 PMC: 5201453. DOI: 10.1097/TP.0000000000001275.


Detection of Recently Discovered Human Polyomaviruses in a Longitudinal Kidney Transplant Cohort.

Bialasiewicz S, Rockett R, Barraclough K, Leary D, Dudley K, Isbel N Am J Transplant. 2016; 16(9):2734-40.

PMID: 27000433 PMC: 7159543. DOI: 10.1111/ajt.13799.


Virological diagnosis of central nervous system infections by use of PCR coupled with mass spectrometry analysis of cerebrospinal fluid samples.

Leveque N, LeGoff J, Mengelle C, Mercier-Delarue S, NGuyen Y, Renois F J Clin Microbiol. 2013; 52(1):212-7.

PMID: 24197874 PMC: 3911460. DOI: 10.1128/JCM.02270-13.