Deceased-Donor Acute Kidney Injury and BK Polyomavirus in Kidney Transplant Recipients

Author:

Hall Isaac E.ORCID,Reese Peter PhilipORCID,Mansour Sherry G.,Mohan SumitORCID,Jia Yaqi,Thiessen-Philbrook Heather R.ORCID,Brennan Daniel C.,Doshi Mona D.,Muthukumar Thangamani,Akalin EnverORCID,Harhay Meera NairORCID,Schröppel Bernd,Singh Pooja,Weng Francis L.,Bromberg Jonathan S.,Parikh Chirag R.ORCID

Abstract

Background and objectivesBK polyomavirus (BKV) infection commonly complicates kidney transplantation, contributing to morbidity and allograft failure. The virus is often donor-derived and influenced by ischemia-reperfusion processes and disruption of structural allograft integrity. We hypothesized that deceased-donor AKI associates with BKV infection in recipients.Design, setting, participants, & measurementsWe studied 1025 kidney recipients from 801 deceased donors transplanted between 2010 and 2013, at 13 academic centers. We fitted Cox proportional-hazards models for BKV DNAemia (detectable in recipient blood by clinical PCR testing) within 1 year post-transplantation, adjusting for donor AKI and other donor- and recipient-related factors. We validated findings from this prospective cohort with analyses for graft failure attributed to BKV within the Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network (OPTN) database.ResultsThe multicenter cohort mean kidney donor profile index was 49±27%, and 26% of donors had AKI. Mean recipient age was 54±13 years, and 25% developed BKV DNAemia. Donor AKI was associated with lower risk for BKV DNAemia (adjusted hazard ratio, 0.53; 95% confidence interval, 0.36 to 0.79). In the OPTN database, 22,537 (25%) patients received donor AKI kidneys, and 272 (0.3%) developed graft failure from BKV. The adjusted hazard ratio for the outcome with donor AKI was 0.7 (95% confidence interval, 0.52 to 0.95).ConclusionsIn a well-characterized, multicenter cohort, contrary to our hypothesis, deceased-donor AKI independently associated with lower risk for BKV DNAemia. Within the OPTN database, donor AKI was also associated with lower risk for graft failure attributed to BKV.PodcastThis article contains a podcast at https://www.asn-online.org/media/podcast/CJASN/2021_03_10_CJN18101120_final.mp3

Funder

Roche Organ Transplantation Research Foundation

National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences

Health Resources and Services Administration

National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases

Publisher

American Society of Nephrology (ASN)

Subject

Transplantation,Nephrology,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine,Epidemiology

Reference50 articles.

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