Cytomegalovirus infections and toxoplasmosis in heart transplant recipients in Sweden.

Journal: Scandinavian Journal Of Infectious Diseases
Published:
Abstract

The morbidity of cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection and toxoplasmosis was evaluated in 75 heart transplant recipients. Among the 73 patients who survived more than one week after transplantation, 16 (22%) acquired primary CMV infection and 30 (41%) had evidence of secondary infection. All CMV seronegative recipients receiving hearts from seropositive donors developed CMV infection. The majority of infections (42/46) occurred during the first 4 months after transplantation. Overall, the incidence of symptomatic CMV disease was 44%. The infections were generally mild and only 1 death was attributed to primary CMV disease complicated by bacterial septicaemia and multiple organ failure. The severity of CMV disease was greatest among those with primary infection. There were 3 cases of toxoplasmosis. Two patients were toxoplasma seronegative before transplantation and developed clinical and serological signs of infection 2-3 months after transplantation despite receiving organs from seronegative donors. Of toxoplasma seronegative recipients receiving allografts from seropositive donors 3/4 were prophylactically treated with pyrimethamine for 6 weeks. None developed clinical or serological signs of toxoplasmosis while one patient who received trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole had a subclinical infection.

Authors
R Andersson, T Sandberg, E Berglin, S Jeansson