Copyright
©The Author(s) 2022.
World J Transplant. Jan 18, 2022; 12(1): 1-7
Published online Jan 18, 2022. doi: 10.5500/wjt.v12.i1.1
Published online Jan 18, 2022. doi: 10.5500/wjt.v12.i1.1
Type of transplant and period | Country/region | Patients (n) | RNA prevalence | Seroprevalence | Comment | Ref. |
Liver transplant; 1997-2017 | Japan | 313 | 14.1% | / | No significant association between HPgV infection and liver transplant outcomes; HPgV infection induced the up-regulation of ISG expression in peripheral blood mononuclear cells | Izumi et al[27], 2019 |
Renal transplant; 1989-1996 | Italy | 155 | 24% | 17% | Not associated with disease pathogenicity; Lower serum levels of HCV-RNA in HGV/HCV co-infected carriers compared to those infected with HCV only | De Filippi et al[34], 2001 |
Renal transplant; 2015-2016 | Brazil | 61 | 36.1% | / | Most common genotype 2 (80.9%), followed by G3 (9.5%), G1 (4.85), and G5 (4.8%); no significant impact on patient outcomes | Savassi-Ribas et al[31], 2020 |
Renal transplant | France | 103 HCV positive RT recipients | 28% | / | HGV infection has no detrimental effect on liver enzymes or liver histology in HCV-positive patients | Rostaing et al[37], 1999 |
Heart transplant; 1993-1998 | Germany | 51 transplant candidates | 2.0%; 0 | 0; 6.0% | RNA persisted after transplant; anti-E2 antibodies persisted after transplant | Kallinowski et al[38], 2002 |
Post-transplant | 36.0% de novo | / | RNA persisted in 94% infected patients; No significant correlation between the number of blood transfusions and the infection; No impact on liver disease or patient outcome | |||
Liver transplant; 1993-1998 | Germany | 72 transplant candidates | 11.% | / | RNA persisted in 88% of infected patients | Kallinowski et al[38], 2002 |
Post-transplant | 36% de novo | / | RNA persisted in 87% of infected patients; no significant correlation between the number of blood transfusions and the infection; no impact on liver disease or patient outcome | |||
Kidney transplant; 1997 | Thailand | 94 | 43% | / | Co-circulation of HGV and HCV RNA was detected in 12 patients (13%) | Raengsakulrach et al[30], 1997 |
Heart transplant; 1993-1996 | Germany | 243 | 24% | / | HGV infections are transfusion related; not related to the use of mechanical circulatory assist devices or immunosuppression | Wolff et al[36], 1996 |
Liver transplant; 1989-1996 | Germany | 98 | Pre-tx 8.2%; post-tx 44% | / | None of the hepatitis B, hepatitis C, or fulminant hepatitis, were HGV-RNA positive preoperatively; HGV was frequently acquired after LT but had no impact on the short- and medium-term clinical course post-LT | Fischer et al[23], 1999 |
Liver transplant; 2007-2010 | Iran | 106 | 9.4% | / | Moderate prevalence of HGV infection in liver transplant recipients | Ebadi et al[39], 2011 |
Kidney transplant; 1986-1990 | United States | 93 | 12% | / | HGV infection does not adversely affect clinical outcome during early follow-up | Isaacson et al[32], 1999 |
Liver transplant; 1989-1996 | Italy | 136 | Pre-tx 18.4%; post-tx 47.8% | Pre-tx 26.5% | Liver transplant patients are heavily exposed to HGV before and after transplantation; HGV does not induce liver disease; most infections are self-limited and induce a protective immunity (anti-E2 antibodies presence) | Silini et al[40], 1998 |
HSCT; 1985-1996 | France | 95 | 29.5% | / | Acute GVHD, chronic GVHD, or veno-occlusive disease are similar in HGV+ and HGV- recipients in early period after allogenic BMT | Corbi et al[21],1997 |
Kidney transplant; 1997 | Germany | 221 | 14% | 40% | The majority of infected individuals eliminate the virus over time | Stark et al[33], 1997 |
Kidney transplant; NA | Turkey | 69 | 42% | / | Genotype 2 is the dominant type; subgroup 2a most common of the isolates | Erensoy et al[41], 2002 |
Liver transplant; 1993-1995 | United Kingdom | 47 | 47% | / | HGV does not cause significant liver disease after LT | Karayiannis et al[42], 1998 |
Liver transplant; 1979-1990 | Netherlands | 39 | Pre-tx 15.4%; post-tx 43.6% | / | HGV infection is highly prevalent in liver transplant patients; in the absence of HBV or HCV co-infection with, no long-term negative influence on the graft | Haagsma et al[24], 1997 |
Kidney transplant; 1997-2000 | India | 70 | 52.9% | 58.6% | GBV-C/HGV RNA significantly associated with ≥ 20 hemodialysis sessions | Abraham et al[29], 2003 |
Liver transplant; 1990-1994 | United States | 179 | Pre-tx 15%; post-tx 50% | / | HGV infection not associated with poor outcome | Hoofnagle et al[26], 1997 |
HSCT; 2011-2017 | China | 188 | 18.6% | / | HPgV is highly prevalent in HSCT patients; blood transfusions significantly increase the risk of HPgV infection | Li et al[22], 2019 |
HSCT; 2014-2015 | Switzerland | 40 | 35% | / | HPgV is highly prevalent and persists for several months | Vu et al[20], 2019 |
- Citation: Mrzljak A, Simunov B, Balen I, Jurekovic Z, Vilibic-Cavlek T. Human pegivirus infection after transplant: Is there an impact? World J Transplant 2022; 12(1): 1-7
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/2220-3230/full/v12/i1/1.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.5500/wjt.v12.i1.1