Impact of Cytomegalovirus Match on Survival after Cardiac and Lung Transplantation

Author:

Bonatti Hugo1,Tabarelli Walther2,Ruttmann Elfriede2,Kafka Reinhold1,Larcher Clara3,Hofer Daniel3,Klaus Alexander1,Laufer Günther2,Christian Geltner M.D.2,Margreiter Raimund1,Müller Ludwig2,Antretter Herwig2

Affiliation:

1. Clinical Department of General and Transplant Surgery, Innsbruck, Austria

2. Clinical Department of Cardiac Surgery, Innsbruck, Austria

3. Institute of Hygiene, University Hospital, Innsbruck, Austria

Abstract

Acute cytomegalovirus (CMV) disease and indirect effects caused by the virus alter the outcome after solid organ transplantation. Long-term results after 54 lung and 139 cardiac transplants at a single center have been retrospectively analyzed with regard to CMV status. Standard CMV prophylaxis consisted of ganciclovir for 100 days. Lung recipients were pretransplant CMV negative in 32 per cent as compared to heart recipients with 23 per cent. Patient survival after mismatch transplants (donor positive, recipient negative) was significantly reduced as compared to the other match groups (42% vs 76% at five years, P = 0.01). In heart recipients, CMV positive patients receiving a CMV negative graft showed best survival, whereas in the group of lung recipients negative/negative matched transplants produced best results. In both groups, CMV negative grafts had a better outcome than CMV positive grafts, and a survival difference between heart and lung recipients was only observed in recipients of a CMV positive grafts. Despite ganciclovir prophylaxis, CMV match remains an important factor for survival follwing heart and, even more profoundly, lung transplantation. Because survival was least favorable in the mismatched group, prophylactic regimens warrant improvement. For CMV negative lung recipients, CMV matching might be considered.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Medicine

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