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Vol. 14. Issue 2.
Pages 170-174 (March - April 2010)
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Vol. 14. Issue 2.
Pages 170-174 (March - April 2010)
Original Article
Open Access
BKV-infection in kidney graft dysfunction
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3021
Juliana Montagner1,2,
Corresponding author
jmontagner@mixmail.com

Correspondence to: Rua Coronel Corte Real 311/702 – Petrópolis Porto Alegre – RS – Brazil CEP: 90630-080.
, Tatiana Michelon1,2, Barbara Fontanelle1, Alexandre Oliveira1, Janaina Silveira1,2, Regina Schroeder1,2, Jorge Neumann2, Elizete Keitel1, Claudio Osmar Pereira Alexandre1
1 Post-Graduation in Pathology – Universidade Federal de Ciências da Saúde de Porto Alegre
2 Transplant Immunology Laboratory - Santa Casa de Porto Alegre Hospital, RS, Brazil
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Abstract
Introduction

BKV nephropathy (BKN) causes kidney graft loss, whose specific diagnosis is invasive and might be predicted by the early detection of active viral infection.

Objective

Determine the BKV-infection prevalence in late kidney graft dysfunction by urinary decoy cell (DC) and viral DNA detection in urine (viruria) and blood (viremia; active infection).

Methods

Kidney recipients with >1 month follow-up and creatinine >1.5mg/dL and/or recent increasing >20% (n=120) had their urine and blood tested for BKV by semi-nested PCR, DC searching, and graft biopsy. PCR-positive patients were classified as 1+, 2+, 3+. DC, viruria and viremia prevalence, sensitivity, specificity, and likelihood ratio (LR) were determined (Table 2×2). Diagnosis efficacy of DC and viruria were compared to viremia.

Results

DC prevalence was 25%, viruria 61.7%, and viremia 42.5%. Positive and negative patients in each test had similar clinical, immunossupressive, and histopathological characteristics. There was no case of viremia with chronic allograft nephropathy and, under treatment with sirolimus, patients had a lower viruria prevalence (p=0.043). Intense viruria was the single predictive test for active infection (3+; LR = 2.8).1,6-4,9

Conclusion

DC, BKV-viruria and -viremia are commun findings under late kidney graft dysfunction. Viremia could only be predicted by intense viruria. These results should be considered under the context of BKN confirmation.

Keywords:
BK virus
decoy cells
kidney transplantation
PCR
viremia
viruria
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