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ABSTRACT: Parainfluenza virus (PIV) may cause life-threatening pneumonia in lung transplant patients and there are no proven effective therapies. We report the use of inhaled DAS181, a novel sialidase fusion protein, to treat severe PIV type 3 pneumonia in a lung transplant patient. Treatment was well tolerated and associated with improvement in oxygenation and symptoms, along with rapid clearance of PIV. DAS181 should be systematically evaluated for treatment of PIV infection in transplant recipients.
Transplant Infectious Disease 12/2012; · 2.22 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Cytomegalovirus (CMV) disease occurs frequently after cessation of antiviral prophylaxis in CMV-seronegative kidney transplant recipients from seropositive donors (D+R-), and the risk factors are incompletely defined.
We retrospectively assessed the incidence, clinical features, and risk factors for CMV disease in a cohort of D+R- kidney transplant recipients who received antiviral prophylaxis at a single US transplant center using descriptive statistics and Cox proportional hazards models.
CMV disease developed in 29 of 113 (26%) D+R- patients at a median of 185 days (interquartile range 116-231 days) post transplant, including CMV syndrome (66%) and tissue invasive disease (34%). The incidence of CMV disease was higher in patients who underwent re-transplantation (57% vs. 24%) and this factor was independently associated with a higher risk of CMV disease in multivariable analysis (hazard ratio, 4.02; 95% confidence interval, 1.3-13; P = 0.016). Other demographic and transplant variables were not independently associated with a risk of late-onset CMV disease.
Despite a comprehensive analysis of patient and transplant variables, only re-transplantation was identified as a risk factor for CMV disease in D+R- kidney transplant recipients who received antiviral prophylaxis, but had limited clinical predictive value. The development of novel laboratory markers to identify patients at greatest risk for CMV disease should be a priority for future studies.
Transplant Infectious Disease 03/2011; 13(3):244-9. · 2.22 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Sensitive detection of respiratory viruses is important for early diagnosis of infection in patients following hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT). To evaluate the relative sensitivity of respiratory virus detection in specimens from HCT recipients, we compared the results of conventional and quantitative molecular methods.
We tested 688 nasal wash samples collected prospectively from 131 patients during the first 100 days after HCT by viral culture, fluorescent antibody staining (FA), and real-time quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay for detection of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), influenza virus types A (FluA) and B (FluB), and parainfluenza virus types 1 (PIV1) and 3 (PIV3). Testing for human metapneumovirus (MPV) was performed only by PCR. Data regarding 10 respiratory symptoms were collected with each sample.
By any method 37 specimens were positive for a respiratory virus; 34 were positive by PCR, 15 by culture, and 6 by FA. Four specimens were positive by all 3 methods (3 RSV, 1 FluA). One specimen was positive for PIV1, and 2 were positive for rhinovirus by culture alone. Specimens positive by PCR alone included 2 RSV, 2 PIV1, 8 PIV3, and 8 MPV. In 10 specimens positive for RSV, PIV, or influenza virus collected from patients reporting no respiratory symptoms, 9, 4, and 1 specimen were positive by PCR, culture, and FA, respectively. Overall, specimens positive only by PCR had significantly fewer viral copies/mL (mean log(10)=4.32) than specimens positive by both PCR and culture (mean log(10)=5.75; P=0.002) or PCR and FA (mean log(10)=6.83; P<0.001).
FA testing alone did not detect a significant proportion of respiratory virus-positive samples in HCT recipients, especially in patients with no respiratory symptoms and patients with PIV detection. PCR increased the yield of positive specimens 2 times relative to culture and more than 4 times relative to FA. Detection of respiratory viruses by PCR alone was associated with lower virus quantities and with fewer reported respiratory symptoms compared with concomitant detection by both PCR and conventional methods, indicating that PCR may be important to detect asymptomatic or mildly symptomatic stages of respiratory viral infections.
Transplant Infectious Disease 06/2009; 11(4):298-303. · 2.22 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Limited data exist regarding the incidence and factors associated with outcome of invasive Pseudomonal infections in hematopoietic cell transplant (HCT). A retrospective analysis of cases of invasive Pseudomonas aeruginosa infection and factors associated with outcome was performed. P. aeruginosa invasive infection occurred in 95 of 5772 patients (1.65%) a median of 63 days after HCT (range 5-1435). Only 28% of infections occurred during periods of neutropenia (absolute neutrophil count<500 cells/mm(3)). Infection-attributable mortality during the initial episode of infection was 35.8%. Factors associated with initial mortality included the presence of a copathogen and high-dose steroid use. Ten (16.4%) of those who survived the initial infection experienced a recurrence of P. aeruginosa infection at a median of 9 days (range 3-17) after stopping antibiotics and 60% of those died as a result of recurrent infection a median of 1 day (range 1-7) after onset of recurrence. Grade 3-4 graft-versus-host disease was associated with a higher risk of recurrent infection. The risk of recurrence was not influenced by the presence of copathogens. Thus, invasive P. aeruginosa infections are associated with high recurrence rates and mortality in this immunocompromised population. Aggressive attempts to reduce immunosuppression and to treat copathogens may help during the initial infection.
Bone Marrow Transplantation 06/2007; 39(11):687-93. · 3.75 Impact Factor
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J Storek,
M A Dawson,
L C-L Lim,
B E Burman,
T Stevens-Ayers,
F Viganego,
M M P T Herremans,
M E D Flowers,
R P Witherspoon,
D G Maloney, M Boeckh
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ABSTRACT: Allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation is followed by humoral immunodeficiency. We evaluated whether antibody levels can be improved by recipient vaccination on day -1 and 50 and whether the levels can be further improved by donor vaccination on day -20. A total of 85 patients were randomized or assigned to one of the following strategies of immunization with Streptococcus pneumoniae polysaccharides, Haemophilus influenzae polysaccharide-protein conjugate, tetanus toxoid (protein recall antigen) and hepatitis B surface antigen (protein neo-antigen): (1) donor on day -20, recipient on days -1, +50 and +365 (D(-20)R(-1,50,365)); (2) donor nil, recipient on days -1, +50 and +365 (D(N)R(-1,50,365)); or (3) donor nil, recipient on day +365 (D(N)R(365)). For H. influenzae and tetanus, IgG levels after grafting were the highest in the D(-20)R(-1,50,365) patients, intermediate in the D(N)R(-1,50,365) patients and the lowest in the D(N)R(365) patients. For S. pneumoniae and hepatitis B, antibody levels appeared to be similar in all three patient groups. The results suggest that for polysaccharide-protein conjugate antigens or protein recall antigens, recipient immunization on days -1 and 50 improves antibody levels and that donor vaccination on day -20 further improves the levels. In contrast, neither recipient immunization on days -1 and 50 nor donor immunization on day -20 appears to be efficacious for polysaccharide antigens and poorly immunogenic protein neo-antigens.
Bone Marrow Transplantation 03/2004; 33(3):337-46. · 3.75 Impact Factor
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Chien-Shing Chen, M Boeckh,
K Seidel,
J G Clark,
E Kansu,
D K Madtes,
J L Wagner,
R P Witherspoon,
C Anasetti,
F R Appelbaum,
W I Bensinger,
H J Deeg,
P J Martin,
J E Sanders,
R Storb,
J Storek,
J Wade,
M Siadak,
M E D Flowers,
K M Sullivan
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ABSTRACT: The incidence, etiology, outcome, and risk factors for developing pneumonia late after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (SCT) were investigated in 1359 patients transplanted in Seattle. A total of 341 patients (25% of the cohort) developed at least one pneumonic episode. No microbial or tissue diagnosis (ie clinical pneumonia) was established in 197 patients (58% of first pneumonia cases). Among the remaining 144 patients, established etiologies included 33 viral (10%), 31 bacterial (9%), 25 idiopathic pneumonia syndrome (IPS, 7%), 20 multiple organisms (6%), 19 fungal (6%), and 16 Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP) (5%). The overall cumulative incidence of first pneumonia at 4 years after discharge home was 31%. The cumulative incidences of pneumonia according to donor type at 1 and 4 years after discharge home were 13 and 18% (autologous/syngeneic), 22 and 34% (HLA-matched related), and 26 and 39% (mismatched related/unrelated), respectively. Multivariate analysis of factors associated with development of late pneumonia after allografting were increasing patient age (RR 0.5 for <20 years, 1.2 for >40 years, P=0.009), donor HLA-mismatch (RR 1.6 for unrelated/mismatched related, P=0.01), and chronic graft-versus-host disease (GVHD; RR 1.5, P=0.007). Our data suggest that extension of PCP prophylaxis may be beneficial in high-risk autograft recipients. Further study of long-term anti-infective prophylaxis based on patient risk factors after SCT appear warranted.
Bone Marrow Transplantation 09/2003; 32(5):515-22. · 3.75 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Parainfluenza virus (PIV) infections may be significant causes of morbidity and mortality in patients undergoing stem cell transplantation, but data regarding their impact on transplant-related mortality is limited. This study sought to determine the risk factors of PIV acquisition and progression to lower respiratory tract infection, their impact on transplant-related mortality, and the effectiveness of antiviral therapy. A total of 3577 recipients of hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) between 1990 and 1999 were studied. PIV infections occurred in 253 patients (7.1%); 78% of these infections were community acquired. Multivariable analysis identified the receipt of an unrelated transplant as the only risk factor for PIV acquisition; the dose of corticosteroids at the time of PIV infection acquisition was the primary factor associated with the development of PIV-3 pneumonia, both among allogeneic and autologous HSCT recipients. Both PIV-3 upper respiratory infection and pneumonia were associated with overall mortality. Pulmonary copathogens were isolated from 29 patients (53%) with pneumonia. Mortality was highly influenced by the presence of copathogens and the need for mechanical ventilation. Aerosolized ribavirin with or without intravenous immunoglobulin did not appear to alter mortality from PIV-3 pneumonia, nor did such therapy decrease the duration of viral shedding from the nasopharynx among patients with pneumonia. Corticosteroid administration thus drives the development of PIV pneumonia in a dose-dependent fashion, even among autologous HSCT recipients. Both upper and lower tract PIV infections are predictors of mortality after HSCT. Currently available antiviral therapy appears to be inadequate in reducing viral shedding or mortality once pneumonia is established. (Blood. 2001;98:573-578)
Blood 09/2001; 98(3):573-8. · 9.90 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Intravenous palivizumab (15 mg/kg) was investigated in 2 phase 1 studies among recipients of hematopoietic stem cell transplants (HSCTs). Study 1 included 6 HSCT patients without active respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infection. Study 2 included 15 HSCT patients with RSV upper respiratory tract infection (URTI; n=3) or RSV interstitial pneumonia (IP; n=12), all of whom also received aerosolized ribavirin. Peak serum concentrations of palivizumab in the 2 studies were similar. The mean serum half-life was 22.4 days in study 1, which mainly included autologous HSCT recipients, and 10.7 days in study 2, which mainly included allogeneic HSCT recipients. No antibodies to palivizumab were detected in study 1. No adverse events were attributed to palivizumab in the 2 studies. In study 2, all 3 patients with RSV URTI recovered without progression to lower respiratory tract disease, and 10 (83%) of the 12 patients with RSV IP survived the 28-day study period. Thus, palivizumab appears to be safe and well tolerated in HSCT recipients.
The Journal of Infectious Diseases 09/2001; 184(3):350-4. · 6.41 Impact Factor
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J Storek,
M A Dawson,
B Storer,
T Stevens-Ayers,
D G Maloney,
K A Marr,
R P Witherspoon,
W Bensinger,
M E Flowers,
P Martin,
R Storb,
F R Appelbaum, M Boeckh
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ABSTRACT: Allogeneic peripheral blood stem cell grafts contain about 10 times more T and B cells than marrow grafts. Because these cells may survive in transplant recipients for a long time, recipients of blood stem cells may be less immunocompromised than recipients of marrow. Immune reconstitution was studied in 115 patients randomly assigned to receive either allogeneic marrow or filgrastim-mobilized blood stem cell transplantation. Between day 30 and 365 after transplantation, counts of most lymphocyte subsets were higher in the blood stem cell recipients. The difference was most striking for CD4 T cells (about 4-fold higher counts for CD45RA(high) CD4 T cells and about 2-fold higher counts for CD45RA(low/-)CD4 T cells; P <.05). On assessment using phytohemagglutinin and herpesvirus antigen-stimulated proliferation, T cells in the 2 groups of patients appeared equally functional. Median serum IgG levels were similar in the 2 groups. The rate of definite infections after engraftment was 1.7-fold higher in marrow recipients (P =.001). The rate of severe (inpatient treatment required) definite infections after engraftment was 2.4-fold higher in marrow recipients (P =.002). The difference in the rates of definite infections was greatest for fungal infections, intermediate for bacterial infections, and lowest for viral infections. Death associated with a fungal or bacterial infection occurred between day 30 and day 365 after transplantation in 9 marrow recipients and no blood stem cell recipients (P =.008). In conclusion, blood stem cell recipients have higher lymphocyte-subset counts and this appears to result in fewer infections. (Blood. 2001;97:3380-3389)
Blood 06/2001; 97(11):3380-9. · 9.90 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: To determine the risk factors and outcomes associated with rising cytomegalovirus (CMV) antigenemia levels during preemptive therapy among stem cell allograft recipients, 119 patients with CMV antigenemia were studied. Patients were prospectively monitored for CMV antigenemia weekly; those with positive findings on antigenemia tests were treated with intravenous ganciclovir (5 mg/kg twice daily for 1 week, followed by 5 mg/kg per day for 5-6 d/wk). While on therapy, 47 of 119 (39%) patients demonstrated increases that were 2 or more times greater than their baseline values, whereas 33 of 119 (28%) patients demonstrated increases that were 5 or more times greater. Rising antigenemia was confirmed by polymerase chain reaction for CMV DNA. Multivariate analysis identified corticosteroids as the primary risk factor for increasing antigenemia: for increases greater than or equal to twice the baseline, 1 to 2 mg/kg steroids was associated with an odds ratio (OR) of 4.0. For increases greater than or equal to 2 mg/kg steroids, the OR was 10.1. CMV isolates obtained at the time of rising antigenemia were susceptible to ganciclovir, indicating that resistance was not a major factor. Overall, rising antigenemia levels were not correlated with CMV disease. All 4 patients in whom CMV disease developed during therapy, however, had rising antigenemia levels. Among the 47 patients with antigenemia increases greater than or equal to twice the baseline, 15 were re-induced with antivirals, whereas 32 continued to receive maintenance therapy. All 4 patients in whom CMV disease developed during therapy received maintenance therapy, and 3 died with CMV disease. Thus, host factors such as the receipt of corticosteroids explain increasing viral load during the early phase of preemptive therapy. Continued induction dosing or re-induction may protect against early breakthrough CMV disease and CMV-related death among patients with rising antigenemia on preemptive therapy. (Blood. 2001;97:867-874)
Blood 03/2001; 97(4):867-74. · 9.90 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Community respiratory viruses (CRVs) are an important cause of morbidity and mortality among recipients of hematopoietic stem cell transplants (HSCT). At the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) and parainfluenza virus (PIV) infections in HSCT recipients have been studied intensively for more than a decade. Over time, mortality from these infections has declined as the approach to diagnosis has become more aggressive and more stringent preventive measures have been instituted. However, mortality among HSCT recipients with RSV or PIV pneumonia remains high. Uncontrolled studies at our center suggest that prompt therapy with aerosolized ribavirin has reduced mortality from RSV pneumonia but does not appear to affect the course of established PIV pneumonia. Two controlled clinical trials of ribavirin therapy for RSV infection in HSCT recipients are in progress.
Biology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation 02/2001; 7 Suppl:11S-15S. · 3.87 Impact Factor
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M Boeckh,
R A Bowden,
B Storer,
N J Chao,
R Spielberger,
D K Tierney,
G Gallez-Hawkins,
T Cunningham,
K G Blume,
D Levitt,
J A Zaia
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ABSTRACT: MSL-109 is a monoclonal antibody specific to the cytomegalovirus (CMV) glycoprotein H with high neutralizing capacity. In a prospective, randomized, double-blind study, allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) recipients with positive donor and/or recipient serology for CMV before transplantation received either 60 mg/kg MSL-109 (n = 59), 15 mg/kg MSL-109 (n = 60), or placebo (n = 60) intravenously every 2 weeks from day -1 until day 84 after transplantation. CMV pp65 antigenemia, CMV-DNA load in plasma, and viremia by culture were tested weekly. Primary end points were development of pp65 antigenemia at any level and/or viremia for which ganciclovir was given. There was no statistically significant difference in CMV pp65 antigenemia or viremia among patients in the 60-mg group (pp65 antigenemia, 47%; viremia, 15%), the 15-mg group (52%; 23%), and the placebo group (45%; 17%). There was also no difference in maximum levels of pp65 antigenemia, time to clearance of pp65 antigenemia after start of ganciclovir, CMV disease, invasive bacterial and fungal infections, time to neutrophil and platelet engraftment, acute graft-versus-host disease, days of hospitalization, and overall survival rate among the 3 groups. However, a subgroup analysis of CMV-seronegative recipients with a seropositive donor (D+/R-) showed a transiently improved survival rate by day 100 in MSL-109 recipients (mortality: 60-mg group, 1/13; 15-mg group, 1/12; placebo group, 6/10 [P = .02 for 60-mg versus placebo groups; P = .08 for 15-mg versus placebo groups]); by the end of follow-up, the difference was no longer statistically significant. The improved survival rate in D+/R- patients could not be attributed to a reduction in CMV disease; however, MSL-109 was associated with improved platelet engraftment and less grade III to IV acute graft-versus-host disease in this subgroup. In a subgroup analysis of CMV-seropositive recipients of MSL-109 (D+/R+ and D-/R+), overall mortality was increased compared to that of the placebo group (P = .12 for the 60-mg versus placebo groups, P = .05 for the 15-mg versus placebo groups, and P = .04 for the dose levels combined versus placebo). MSL-109 was well tolerated and no immune response to the drug was observed. Thus, MSL-109 was safe but did not reduce CMV infection in allogeneic HSCT recipients. The transient survival advantage seen early after transplantation in CMV D+/R- patients and the negative effect on survival in seropositive patients remain unexplained. Thus, there is no evidence that MSL-109 is beneficial in CMV-seropositive HSCT recipients.
Biology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation 02/2001; 7(6):343-51. · 3.87 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Among hematopoietic stem-cell transplant (HSCT) recipients, cytomegalovirus (CMV) disease before engraftment is rare but often fatal, and cell-based diagnostic tests have low sensitivity in this clinical setting. We used the quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay to test for CMV DNA in plasma samples from 15 HSCT recipients who developed CMV disease before engraftment and from 33 matched control patients. CMV DNA was detected in plasma in 14 (93.3%) of the 15 patients who had CMV disease before engraftment, compared with 5 (15.2%) of 33 control patients (P<.001). CMV DNA was detected a median of 13 days before the onset of CMV disease (range, 0-35 days). The maximum CMV virus load in plasma was >1 log(10) higher among case patients than among control patients (median, 1700 [range, 50 to 5.5x107] vs. <50 [range, <50-350] CMV DNA copies/mL plasma, respectively; P<.001). Quantitative PCR for CMV DNA in plasma appears to be useful for the identification of HSCT recipients at risk for CMV disease before engraftment.
The Journal of Infectious Diseases 02/2001; 183(3):377-82. · 6.41 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: We identified 10 patients who developed cytomegalovirus (CMV) retinitis after HSCT during a 14-year period. The median day of diagnosis of CMV retinitis after transplantation was day 251 (range, days 106--365). CMV retinitis was associated with CMV serostatus of donor or recipient (P=0.01), CMV reactivation before day 100 (P=0.007), delayed lymphocyte engraftment (P<0.05), and chronic graft versus host disease (GVHD; P<0.001). In allogeneic recipients of HSCT who were alive at day 100 after transplantation and had chronic clinical extensive GVHD, the incidence of GVHD was 1.4% (8 of 577). Five of 10 patients had other manifestation of CMV disease before retinitis occurred (4 with gastrointestinal disease and 1 with interstitial pneumonia; median time, 70 days before onset of CMV retinitis; range, 58--279 days), and 4 others had CMV excretion. CMV retinitis was bilateral in 4 patients; 9 of 10 patients had ocular symptoms (i.e., decreased vision and floaters). Six of 7 patients responded well to ganciclovir or foscarnet systemic treatment, 1 improved only after switching to cidofovir, and 1 patient who received a transplant in 1983 did not respond to acyclovir treatment. In conclusion, CMV retinitis is an uncommon late complication after HSCT that occurs mainly in seropositive allograft recipients with previous CMV reactivation and chronic GVHD, and with delayed engraftment of lymphocytes.
Clinical Infectious Diseases 01/2001; 32(2):214-9. · 9.15 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Two randomized, placebo-controlled trials previously showed that fluconazole (400 mg/d) administered prophylactically decreases the incidence of candidiasis in blood and marrow transplant (BMT) recipients. However, there exists conflicting data regarding the optimal duration of fluconazole administration, specifically whether prophylaxis through acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) results in improved survival in allograft recipients. Reported here are the results of long-term follow-up and a detailed analysis of invasive candidiasis and candidiasis-related death in 300 patients who received fluconazole (400 mg/d) or placebo for 75 days after BMT at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center. Patients in both treatment arms were compared for survival, causes of death, and the incidence of invasive fungal infections early (less than 110 days) and late (more than 110 days) after BMT. After 8 years of follow-up, survival is significantly better in fluconazole recipients compared with placebo recipients (68 of 152 vs 41 of 148, P =.0001). The overall incidence of invasive candidiasis was increased in patients who received placebo compared with fluconazole (30 of 148 vs 4 of 152, P <.001). More patients who received placebo died with candidiasis early (13 of 148 vs 1 of 152, P =.001) and late (8 of 96 vs 1 of 121, P =.0068) after BMT. The incidence of severe GVHD involving the gut was higher in patients who did not receive fluconazole (20 of 143 vs 8 of 145, P =.02), and fewer patients who received fluconazole died with this complication. Thus, administration of fluconazole (400 mg/d) for 75 days after BMT appears to be associated with decreased gut GVHD, a persistent protection against disseminated candidal infections and candidiasis-related death, resulting in an overall survival benefit in allogeneic BMT recipients.
Blood 10/2000; 96(6):2055-61. · 9.90 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Concerns have been raised about emergence of ganciclovir resistance as a result of the advent of both routine oral ganciclovir prophylaxis and highly potent immunosuppression. We retrospectively assessed the occurrence of ganciclovir-resistant cytomegalovirus disease among transplant recipients who had received oral ganciclovir prophylaxis and highly potent immunosuppression.
We studied 240 recipients of liver, kidney, or pancreas transplants. Antiviral susceptibility testing of blood cytomegaloviral isolates was done when patients failed to respond to intravenous ganciclovir treatment for symptomatic cytomegalovirus infection. Portions of the UL97 gene associated with ganciclovir resistance were sequenced in cytomegalovirus isolates with phenotypic resistance to ganciclovir.
Ganciclovir-resistant cytomegalovirus disease developed in five (7%) of 67 seronegative recipients of cytomegalovirus-seropositive organs (D+/R-) compared with none of 173 seropositive recipients (p=0.002). Among the 25 (10.4%) patients who developed cytomegalovirus disease within 1 year after transplantation, five had ganciclovir-resistant cytomegalovirus disease. Among D+/R-transplant recipients, ganciclovir-resistant cytomegalovirus disease was more common among the group receiving the most potent immunosuppression--ie, recipients of kidney and pancreas or pancreas alone (four of 19) compared with all other transplant recipients (one of 48, p=0.02). Ganciclovir-resistant cytomegalovirus disease was diagnosed at a median of 10 months after transplantation (range 7-12) after lengthened exposure to ganciclovir, was associated with previously described mutations of the UL97 gene, and led to serious clinical complications.
Ganciclovir-resistant cytomegalovirus is an important cause of late morbidity among D+/R- transplant recipients who have had lengthened exposure to ganciclovir and have received highly potent immunosuppression. Strategies to reduce this complication, especially among D+/R- patients, are warranted.
The Lancet 09/2000; 356(9230):645-9. · 38.28 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: We examined the feasibility of a community blood bank granulocyte transfusion program utilizing community donors stimulated with a single-dose regimen of subcutaneous granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) plus oral dexamethasone. The recipients of these transfusions were neutropenic stem cell transplantation patients with severe bacterial or fungal infection. Nineteen patients received 165 transfusions (mean 8.6 transfusions/patient, range 1-25). Community donors provided 94% of the transfusions; relatives accounted for only 6% of the transfusions. Sixty percent of the community donors initially contacted agreed to participate, and 98% of these individuals indicated willingness to participate again. Transfusion of 81.9 +/- 2.3 x 10(9) neutrophils (mean +/- SD) resulted in a mean 1-hour posttransfusion neutrophil increment of 2. 6 +/- 2.6 x 10(3)/microL and restored the peripheral neutrophil count to the normal range in 17 of the 19 patients. The buccal neutrophil response, a measure of the capacity of neutrophils to migrate to tissue sites in vivo, was restored to normal in most patients following the transfusion. Chills, fever, and arterial oxygen desaturation of >/= 3% occurred in 7% of the transfusions, but these changes were not sufficient to limit therapy. Infection resolved in 8 of 11 patients with invasive bacterial infections or candidemia. These studies indicate that transfusion of neutrophils from donors stimulated with G-CSF plus dexamethasone can restore a severely neutropenic patient's blood neutrophil supply and neutrophil inflammation response. Further studies are needed to evaluate the clinical efficacy of this therapy.
Blood 06/2000; 95(11):3302-9. · 9.90 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The introduction of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) for HIV has had a major impact on the treatment of CMV disease in HIV-infected individuals. There is mounting evidence that in patients with CMV retinitis who have a sustained response to HAART, CMV maintenance treatment can be discontinued without relapse of retinitis. In HAART-naïve individuals with newly diagnosed CMV retinitis, the optimal timing for the initiation of HAART relative to the start of anti-CMV treatment is currently unknown. New local therapies for CMV retinitis (e.g. ganciclovir implant, the new antisense compound fomivirsen) provide treatment options in situations where high local drug delivery is warranted. A treatment algorithm for CMV disease in the HAART era is proposed. In the transplant setting, ganciclovir and foscarnet remain the major compounds used for treatment of CMV disease. In marrow and stem cell transplant recipients, CMV pneumonia still carries a high mortality. Ganciclovir in combination with CMV-specific immunoglobulin or regular intravenous IG remains the treatment of choice for CMV pneumonia; extended antiviral maintenance for several months is recommended in patients with continued immunosuppression. Preemptive treatment based on virologic markers (e.g. pp65 antigenemia, CMV DNA) has been very successful in reducing the incidence of early CMV disease in the transplant setting. The duration of preemptive treatment should be guided by the underlying immunosuppression and virologic markers. Late CMV disease is a challenge in marrow and stem cell transplant recipients, and occurs increasingly in highly immunosuppressed solid organ transplant recipients as well. Recent advances in prophylaxis strategies include oral ganciclovir for liver transplant recipients and valacyclovir for kidney transplant recipients.
Journal of Clinical Virology 03/2000; 16(1):25-40. · 3.97 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Over a 20-year period, 40 nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) were isolated from 6259 hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) recipients (0.64%), of which 28 were considered to have probable or definite infection (0.44%). Only 3 of 15 lower respiratory isolates obtained by bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) and/or biopsy; (Mycobacterium avium complex [n = 2] and M. gordonae [n = 1]) caused definite or probable lower respiratory tract disease, whereas 12 of 15 were considered to cause possible lower respiratory tract disease according to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention definitions. The median time to diagnosis was 251 days following HSCT. All 3 patients with definite NTM disease were successfully treated with 3 antimicrobials for several months. Twenty-three patients had catheter-related infections, including exit site infection (n = 5), tunnel infection (n = 7), and catheter-related bacteremia (n = 11). All were caused by rapidly growing mycobacteria. The median time to diagnosis was 61 days following HSCT. All patients with catheter-related infections were successfully treated with an average of 2 antibiotics for a median of 3 weeks for exit site infection and 6 weeks for tunnel infection and catheter-related bacteremia. Soft tissue debridement was performed in all cases with tunnel infection. The catheter was removed in 21 of 23 patients with catheter-related infections. Two additional patients were diagnosed, one with lymphadenitis and one with skin lesion, due to NTM. In conclusion, NTM infections are infrequent in HSCT recipients and carry a good clinical prognosis. In the majority of lower NTM respiratory isolates obtained by BAL, a pathogenic role could not be established. However, lower respiratory tract disease can occur late after HSCT and should be considered if patients fail to respond to the treatment of concomitant infections or if evidence of tissue infection or concomitant bacteremia is present. Therapy should be performed with 2 to 3 antimicrobials, guided by antimicrobial susceptibilities, with additional surgical debridement in patients with tunnel infection.
Biology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation 02/2000; 6(4):361-9. · 3.87 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Chemoprophylaxis for Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP) is routinely given after allogeneic blood or marrow transplantation. We evaluated the effectiveness of dapsone prophylaxis (50 mg orally twice daily, 3 times per week) compared with twice-weekly trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (TMP-SMZ) in preventing PCP after allogeneic blood or marrow transplantation. Patients included all (n=646) who received allogeneic blood or marrow transplants between 1 September 1993 and 31 December 1996 who survived at least 100 days after transplantation. A cohort of 111 dapsone recipients was compared with the remaining 535 who received TMP-SMZ. Ten patients developed PCP; 8 were taking dapsone. PCP incidence in the TMP-SMZ cohort was 0.37% versus 7.2% for dapsone. The relative risk for PCP associated with dapsone use was 18.8 (P<.001) and was not accounted for by age, clinical extensive chronic graft-versus-host disease, donor source, or malignant relapse. Dapsone prophylaxis at this dosage is associated with significantly higher rates of PCP than is TMP-SMZ after allogeneic marrow transplantation. We advise caution in prescribing alternatives to TMP-SMZ prophylaxis in this setting.
Clinical Infectious Diseases 01/2000; 29(6):1467-71. · 9.15 Impact Factor