Risk of Cytomegalovirus Viremia Following Transplantation of Hepatitis C-Viremic Donor Kidneys Into Uninfected Recipients: A Multi-Center Retrospective Cohort Study.

Journal: Transplant Infectious Disease : An Official Journal Of The Transplantation Society
Published:
Abstract

Background: Several studies have suggested an increased risk of cytomegalovirus (CMV) viremia among Hepatitis C virus (HCV)-uninfected recipients of kidney transplants from HCV-RNA+ deceased donors (HCV D+/R-), but these studies featured small sample sizes and limited ability to address confounding variables.

Methods: We assembled a retrospective cohort of adult kidney transplant recipients at five US centers between 4/1/2015 and 12/31/2020 to determine the association between HCV D+/R- transplants and the outcomes of CMV viremia (> 1000 IU/mL), death-censored graft failure, and mortality in the first posttransplant year compared to HCV D-/R- transplants. We generated highly similar matched cohorts of HCV D+/R- and HCV D-/R- recipients based on attributes that affect the risk of CMV viremia. We matched exactly on center, CMV donor/recipient serostatus, and antibody induction therapy.

Results: The cohort comprised 275 HCV D+/R- recipients with a mean age of 52.5 years (SD = 10.7); 19% were CMV D+/R-, and 74% received anti-thymocyte globulin induction. With variable ratio matching, 267 HCV D+/R- recipients were matched to 996 HCV D-/R- recipients. CMV viremia occurred in 15% of HCV D+/R- and 11% of HCV D-R- recipients. In Cox regression, transplantation with an HCV-RNA+ donor kidney was not associated with a significantly higher risk of CMV viremia (HR 1.3, 95% CI 0.89-1.92) or death-censored graft loss (HR 0.61, 95% CI 0.31-1.2).

Conclusions: The risk of CMV viremia was not significantly increased among HCV D+/R- kidney recipients. Future studies should examine associations between donor-derived HCV infection and clinical outcomes of CMV syndrome and disease.

Authors
Vishnu Potluri, David Goldberg, Siqi Zhang, Douglas Schaubel, Miklos Molnar, Rachel Forbes, Megan Sise, James Rogers, Vasanthi Balaraman, Anshul Bhalla, David Shaffer, Beatrice Concepcion, Raymond Chung, Ian Strohbehn, Shristi Mapchan, Vikas Vujjini, Akhila Sangadi, Eric Martin, Roy Bloom, Alyssa Ammazzalorso, Emily Blumberg, Peter Reese