Clinical manifestations of BK virus infection in pediatric kidney transplant patients

Background Polyomavirus BK (BKV) infection is an important cause of graft loss in kidney transplant patients. Purpose The purpose of this study was to evaluate clinical findings and risk factors for BKV in pediatric patients after kidney transplantation. Methods This retrospective single-center stud...

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Published inClinical and experimental pediatrics Vol. 62; no. 11; pp. 422 - 427
Main Authors Kwon, Yiyoung, Kim, Jeong Yeon, Lee, Yeonhee, Cho, Heeyeon
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Sŏul Clinical and Experimental Pediatics / Korean Pediatric Society 01.11.2019
Korean Pediatric Society
대한소아청소년과학회
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Summary:Background Polyomavirus BK (BKV) infection is an important cause of graft loss in kidney transplant patients. Purpose The purpose of this study was to evaluate clinical findings and risk factors for BKV in pediatric patients after kidney transplantation. Methods This retrospective single-center study included 31 pediatric kidney transplant recipients from January 2002 to December 2017. Two patients received 2 transplantations during the study period, and each transplant was analyzed independently. Total number of cases is 33 cases with 31 patients. BKV infection was confirmed from blood samples via periodic quantitative polymerase chain reaction. Results The mean age at kidney transplantation was 11.0±4.7 years, and the male-to-female ratio was 2.7:1. Three patients had a past medical history of high-dose chemotherapy and autologous stem-cell transplantation for solid tumors. Nine patients (27.3%) developed BKV infection. The median period from kidney transplantation to BKV detection in blood was 5.6 months. There was no statistically significant difference in estimated glomerular filtration rate between patients with and those without BKV infection. Among 9 patients with BKV viremia, 7 were treated by reducing their immunosuppressant dose, and BKV was cleared in 6 of these 7 patients. In the other 2 BKV-positive patients, viremia improved without immunosuppressant reduction. Conclusion BKV infection is common in children with kidney transplantation and might not have affected short-term renal function in our patient sample due to early immunosuppressant reduction at the time of BKV detection.
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ISSN:1738-1061
2092-7258
2713-4148
DOI:10.3345/kjp.2019.00388