Review
Copyright ©2012 Baishideng.
World J Transplant. Dec 24, 2012; 2(6): 84-94
Published online Dec 24, 2012. doi: 10.5500/wjt.v2.i6.84
Table 1 Polyomaviruses detected in humans and involved in the pathogenesis of polyomavirus-associated nephropathy
VirusHostClinical diseases
BKVHumanPVAN in renal transplantation
Hemorrhagic cystitis in bone marrow transplantation
JCVHumanProgressive multifocal leukoencephalopath
PVAN in renal transplantation
SV-40Non-human primateUnknown; PVAN in renal transplantation?
Table 2 Determinants in the development of polyomavirus-associated nephropathy
Determinants
Patient-relatedAge > 50 yr
Male gender
Comorbidities (diabetes mellitus)
Negative serostatus before transplantation
Organ-relatedDegree of HLA mismatching
Prior rejection episodes
Renal injury
Latent infection load
Viral-relatedNCCR rearrangements
Genotype
Viral fitness
Immunity-relatedIntense triple immunosuppression (calcineurin-inhibitor, antiproliferative agent, steroid)
Rejection and anti-rejection treatment (anti-lymphocyte preparations, iv steroid boluses)
Positive serostatus of donor
Low number of BKV-specific T-cells
Table 3 Algorythm for the virological monitoring of polyomavirus BK replication in renal transplantation[49]
AssayNotesTiming - intervention
ScreeningPositive screening test (possible PVAN)Every 3 mo up to 2 yr post-transplantation or in case of allograft dysfunction or when renal biopsy is performed
Urine cytology (decoy cells) or urine DNA load
Adjunctive quantitative tests (threshold)Presumptive PVANPre-emptive reduction of immunosuppression
Urine DNA load > 107 copies/mL or plasma DNA load > 104 copies/mL
Allograft biopsyDefinitive diagnosis of PVAN
Monitoring of response to treatmentEvery 2-4 wk
Urine DNA load decreasing or plasma DNA load decreasing
Serum creatinine
Negative monitoring test (resolved PVAN)
Table 4 Recommended treatment of polyomavirus-associated nephropathy by reduction or switching of immunosuppression[49]
SwitchingDecreasing
Tacrolimus → Cyclosporine A (trough levels 100-150 ng/mL)Tacrolimus (trough levels < 6 ng/mL)
Mycophenolate mofetil → Azathioprine (dose ≤ 100 mg/d)Cyclosporine A (trough levels 100-150 ng/mL)
Tacrolimus → sirolimus (trough levels < 6 ng/mL)Mycophenolate mofetil dose ≤ 1 g/d
Mycophenolate mofetil → sirolimus (trough levels < 6 ng/mL)Cyclosporine A (trough levels 100-150 ng/mL)
Mycophenolate mofetil → leflunomide