Cytomegalovirus-RNA accurately predicts the need for preemptive therapy
in children undergoing liver transplantation: a proof-of-concept study
Abstract
Preemptive therapy (PET) is safe and effective in controlling
Cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection after pediatric liver transplantation
(LT) and allows to observe the kinetics of quatitative CMV-DNA viral
load till it reaches the treatment thresholds. While an early detection
of low-to-moderate CMV-DNA levels may not indicate active viral
replication, awaiting the viral load to exceed the treatment threshold
may lead to viremic breakthroughs and CMV disease. We assessed the
capacity of quantitative CMV-RNA (UL21.5 mRNA) to identify active viral
replication, and its accuracy in predicting the need for PET in LT
children. One-hundred and forty-four comparative quantitative CMV-RNA
and CMV-DNA determinations were obtained from 12 children followed
prospectically for 6 months after LT. Of 52 CMV-DNA-positive specimens,
17 (32%) were also CMV-RNA-positive, while CMV-RNA was undetectable in
CMV-DNA-negative specimens. All children needing PET or treated for CMV
disease had early detectable CMV-RNA, peaking simultaneously to CMV-DNA
(median CMV-DNA: 65,906 cp/mL; median CMV-RNA: 767 cp/mL); conversely,
none of those with persistently low DNAemia proved CMV-RNA-positive. In
this first pilot study, CMV-RNA had 100% sensitivity and specificity in
predicting the need for PET after pediatric LT. The early detection of
CMV-RNA marks significant CMV infection/reactivation, thus allowing to
avoid unnecessary antiviral treatment.