Long-term oral ganciclovir prophylaxis for prevention of cytomegalovirus infection and disease in cytomegalovirus high-risk renal transplant recipients
J. Kletzmayr et al., Long-term oral ganciclovir prophylaxis for prevention of cytomegalovirus infection and disease in cytomegalovirus high-risk renal transplant recipients, TRANSPLANT, 70(8), 2000, pp. 1174-1180
Background Although specific therapy is available with ganciclovir; cytomeg
alovirus (CMV) disease remains a major problem after renal transplantation
especially in CMV seronegative recipients of organs of seropositive donors
(D+R-),
Methods. In an open-labeled prospective controlled trial me evaluated the e
ffect of long-term oral ganciclovir prophylaxis (3 g/day for 3 months post-
transplantation) in a cohort of 31 CMV-high risk (D+R-) renal transplant re
cipients (GC) compared with a cohort of 28 high-risk patients with targeted
CMV prophylaxis (CO) receiving i.v, ganciclovir during antirejection thera
py. Primary end-points were CMV infection, diagnosed by pp65 antigenemia as
say or serologic method, and CMV disease. Additionally severity of CMV dise
ase quantified by a scoring system was evaluated.
Results. CMV prophylaxis significantly reduced the incidence of CMV infecti
on (CO: 75%, GG: 45%; P<.05) and CMV disease (CO: 60%, GC: 29%; P<.05) with
out relevant side effects and without any clinical suspicion of ganciclovir
resistance. Severity of CMV disease as quantified by a scoring system was
reduced from 8.3+/-6.7 points in controls to 3,3+/-2,6 points in ganciclovi
r-treated patients (P<.05), Mortality did not differ significantly between
the two groups (CO: n=3, GC: n=1; NS). However, there was one lethal CMV di
sease and a second death possibly attributable to CMV disease in the contro
l group, whereas in ganciclovir-treated patients there was no CMV-associate
d fatal outcome.
Conclusion. Long-term oral ganciclovir prophylaxis is effective and safe in
CMV high-risk renal transplant recipients.