Post‐transplant lymphoproliferative disorder associated Epstein‐Barr virus DNAemia after liver transplantation in children: Experience from single center

Author:

Dogan Barut1ORCID,Sema Yildirim Arslan2ORCID,Bora Kunay1ORCID,Veysel Umman3ORCID,Benan Dernek4,Ezgi Kıran Taşçı5ORCID,Gozde Akkus Kayali6ORCID,Demir Derya7ORCID,Ozsan Nazan7ORCID,Hekimgil Mine7ORCID,Zumrut Sahbudak Bal2ORCID,Miray Karakoyun1ORCID,Funda Cetin1ORCID,Sema Aydogdu1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and Nutrition Disease, Department of Pediatrics Medical School of Ege University İzmir Türkiye

2. Division of Infectious Disease, Department of Pediatrics Medical School of Ege University Izmir Turkey

3. Department of General Surgery Medical School of Ege University İzmir Turkey

4. Department of Pediatrics Medical School of Ege University Izmir Turkey

5. Department of Pediatrics Sivas Numune Hospital, Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and Nutrition Disease Sivas Turkey

6. Department of Microbiology Medical School of Ege University Izmir Turkey

7. Department of Pathology Medical School of Ege University İzmir Turkey

Abstract

AbstractThe most prevalent malignancy that complicates both adult and pediatric solid organ transplantation is post‐transplant lymphoproliferative disorder (PTLD). This study aimed to analyze the clinical and pathological characteristics, treatments, and outcomes of Epstein‐Barr virus (EBV) DNAemia and PTLD in pediatric liver transplant recipients. A retrospective chart review was performed on 112 patients less than 18 years of age who underwent isolated orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) between 2010 and 2022 at Ege University Children's Hospital. Data gathered for 1‐year post‐OLT included age at OLT, EBV, immunoglobulin (Ig)M/IgG status of the donor and recipient, indication for OLT, induction regimen, all immunosuppression levels, date and result of EBV polymerase chain reaction testing, rejection episodes documented by liver biopsy, and the development of PTLD. Forty‐nine patients (43.75%) developed EBV DNAemia (median interval from surgery: 2 months, min–max: 2–36), of which 43 (87.8%) grafts came from living donors, and 6 (12.2%) came from deceased donors. Nine (18.4%) patients died during follow‐up, and eight (16.3%) developed PTLD. Of these 8 patients; five patients developed EBV‐related disease, one child developed hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis, one developed aplastic anemia, and one child developed B cell lymphoma. When PTLD patients and without‐PTLD patients were compared, pediatric intensive care unit hospitalization, abnormal bone marrow biopsy findings, lymphadenopathy, age at diagnosis of EBV DNAemia, EBV viral load, tacrolimus (FK 506) pre‐infection, were higher and tacrolimus 1‐month levels were lower in patients with PTLD (p < 0.05). In logistic regression analysis, we showed that the age at diagnosis of EBV DNAemia was significantly higher in children with PTLD (p = 0.045; OR: 1.389; 95% CI: 1.007–1.914). PTLD is a rare but severe complication associated with EBV after OLT. This study demonstrated that PTLD is associated with older age, higher tacrolimus blood levels before EBV DNAemia, and higher peak EBV viral load at 1 month of EBV DNAemia.

Publisher

Wiley

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