Evaluation of liver failure in a pediatric transplant recipient of a liver allograft with inherited chromosomally integrated HHV‐6B
Résumé
BACKGROUND:
Active infections of human herpesvirus 6B (HHV-6B) are frequent in immunocompromised recipients after transplantation. Nevertheless, they need to be distinguished from latent inherited chromosomally integrated genomes (iciHHV-6) present in about 1% of the population to avoid unnecessary administration of toxic antivirals.
METHODS:
A 5-year-old child presented with acute liver allograft rejection associated with HHV-6 DNA in plasma, which led to an unfavorable outcome. We investigated the possibility of HHV-6 infection derived from an iciHHV-6 present in the donor's liver using molecular and histopathology studies in various tissues, including quantification of HHV-6 DNA, genotyping, sequencing for antiviral resistance genes, relative quantification of viral transcripts, and detection of gB and gH viral proteins.
RESULTS:
The presence of iciHHV-6B was evidenced in the donor with signs of reactivation in the gallbladder and transplanted liver (detection of HHV-6B mRNA and late proteins). This localized expression could have played a role in liver rejection. Low viral loads in the recipient's plasma, with identical partial U39 sequences, were in favor of viral DNA released from the transplanted liver rather than a systemic infection.
CONCLUSIONS:
Determination of iciHHV-6 status before transplantation should be considered to guide clinical decisions, such as antiviral prophylaxis, viral load monitoring, and antiviral therapy.
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Bonnafous et al. - Evaluation of liver failure in a pediatric transpl.pdf (1.15 Mo)
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