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    J Clin Virol. 2010 Sep;49(1):53-7. Epub 2010 Jul 24.

    Successful outcome of kidney transplantation from a HBV-DNA positive donor into recipients with cleared HBV-infection using a pre-emptive therapy approach.

    Source

    Department of Transplant and Infection Immunology, Institute of Virology, Saarland University, D-66421 Homburg, Germany.

    Abstract

    BACKGROUND:

    Donor-derived transmission of hepatitis B virus (HBV) may cause serious complications after transplantation. To date, transplantation from HBV-infected donors to HBV-infected recipients seems feasible, although this is recommended with prophylaxis with specific drugs and antibodies only, whereas pre-emptive strategies are rarely used.

    OBJECTIVES:

    Here, we assessed the success of transplantation of kidneys from a chronically HBV-infected deceased donor (HBs-antigen positive, anti-HBc positive, HBV-DNA positive) to two recipients with cleared HBV-infection (HBs-antigen negative, anti-HBc positive, anti-HBs >100 IU/l) where risk-assessment was performed using a pre-emptive approach in the absence of prophylaxis.

    STUDY DESIGN:

    Pre-emptive monitoring included assessment for evidence of infection by analysis of liver enzymes, viral load, and humoral and cellular immunity against HBV and CMV.

    RESULTS:

    In line with undetectable HBV-load, HBc-specific T-cell frequencies remained stable (mean 0.46+/-0.10% and 0.06+/-0.03%), whereas CMV-specific T-cell frequencies in one patient showed dynamic changes that coincided with CMV-viremia. Likewise, HBV-specific antibody titres were stable. Liver enzymes demonstrated absence of liver-cell injury and renal function was good (creatinine 1.8 and 0.8 mg/dl at last follow-up after 39 and 38 months, respectively).

    CONCLUSIONS:

    When combined with careful HBV-monitoring, kidneys from HBV-infected donors may be transplanted into HBV-immune recipients without the need for specific prophylaxis.

    Copyright (c) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

    PMID:
    20656549
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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