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©The Author(s) 2023.
World J Transplant. Dec 18, 2023; 13(6): 309-320
Published online Dec 18, 2023. doi: 10.5500/wjt.v13.i6.309
Published online Dec 18, 2023. doi: 10.5500/wjt.v13.i6.309
Ref. | Study type/period | Subjects | Key findings (include P value if available) |
Alterations in immunosuppression | |||
Vela et al[7], 2022 | Retrospective study; Mar 2013-Oct 2020 | 43 kidney transplant recipients with BK DNAemia; 26 received mTORi + IVIg; 17 had immunosuppression reduction | BK DNAemia and viral clearance reduced faster and more significantly in subjects with reduced immunosuppression (P < 0.001 and P = 0.033 respectively). Death-censored graft loss, rejection rates, and kidney graft function at 12 mo did not differ significantly |
Halim et al[6], 2016 | Cohort study | 55 kidney transplant recipients with BK viremia and/or BKVAN nephropathy; 22 received leflunomide + IVIg + ciprofloxaci; 33 had immunosuppression reduction alone | Administration of leflunomide, IVIg, and ciprofloxacin added no benefit to the long-term outcome of patients with established BKVAN. Treatment of BKVAN by reduction of immunosuppression alone appears to be more effective |
Huang et al[4], 2015 | Prospective study; Mar 2006-Oct 2008 | 229 kidney transplant recipients with BK viremia and BKVAN 30%-50% reduction in FK and/or MPA | BK viremia resolved in 100% of patients without increased acute rejection. All patients with BKVAN had viral clearance and showed no decline in GFR |
Saad et al[3], 2008 | Retrospective, single center study; Sept 2001-Dec 2003 | 24 kidney transplant recipients: 16 with BKVAN; 8 with BK viremia | Reduction in immunosuppression alone results in clearance of the BK viremia with good long-term outcome |
Leflunomide | |||
Krisl et al[9], 2012 | Retrospective, single center study; Jun 2001-Dec 2009 | 76 kidney transplant recipients with BK viremia with or without BKVAN; 52 received leflunomide; 24 did not receive leflunomide | No difference in BK viral clearance. Multivariate analysis demonstrated that mycophenolate mofetil discontinuation, BK viremia without nephropathy, and mean BK viral load were significantly associated with BK viral clearance. Leflunomide use lacked this association |
Canivet et al[11], 2009 | Prospective study; Jan 2006-May 2008 | 12 kidney transplant recipients with BKVAN; MMF switched to leflunomide | Not statistically significant T cell markers, BK DNAemia clearance in 41.6%, creatinine clearance stable or improved in 50%, no significant adverse events |
Teschner et al[12], 2009 | Prospective study | 13 kidney transplant recipients with BKVAN; MMF switched to leflunomide | 12 had viral clearance at a mean of 109 d. Graft function stabilized or improved (mean [median] creatinine concentration at diagnosis, 2.39 [2.5] mg/mL, vs 2.27 [2.0] mg/dL at follow-up). 1 graft loss due to refractory rejection. Leflunomide concentration did not correlate with treatment efficiency |
Faguer et al[10], 2007 | Prospective study; Jul 2002-Apr 2006 | 12 kidney transplant recipients with BKVAN; MMF switched to leflunomide | 42% had BK clearance. 66.6% had stable or improved renal allograft function |
Josephson et al[13], 2006 | Prospective study; Apr 2001-Apr 2004 | 26 kidney transplant recipients with BKVAN; 17 received leflunomide alone; 9 received leflunomide + cidofovir | 84% of cases blood and urine viral load levels uniformly decreased over time (P < 0.001). Mean serum creatinine levels stabilized over the first 6 months of treatment, and with 12 mo or more of follow-up. 16 patients had fairly unchanged serum creatinine |
Fluoroquinolones | |||
Patel et al[19], 2019 | Prospective, randomized, placebo-controlled trial; Jan 2013 -Oct 2016 | 200 adult solitary kidney transplant recipients; 133 received ciprofloxacin as BK prophylaxis; 67 did not receive ciprofloxacin | BK viremia at 6 mo post-transplant occurred in 25 (18.8%) patients in the ciprofloxacin group and 5 (7.5%) in the placebo group (P = 0.03). Increased risk of fluoroquinolone-resistant infections in those who received ciprofloxacin |
Knoll et al[18], 2014 | Prospective, double-blind, placebo-controlled randomized trial; Dec 2011 -Jun 2013 | 154 adult kidney transplant recipients; 76 received a 3-mo course of levofloxacin; 78 received placebo | BK viruria occurred in 22 (29%) in the levofloxacin group vs 26 (33.3%) in the placebo group (HR 0.91, 95%CI: P = 0.58). Increased risk of resistant infection among isolates usually sensitive to quinolones in the levofloxacin group vs placebo (58.3% vs 33.3%, respectively); (RR 1.75; 95%CI: 1.01-2.98) as well as a nonsignificant increased risk of suspected tendinitis (7.9% vs 1.3%; RR 6.16; 95%CI: 0.76-49.95) |
Lee et al[17], 2014 | Prospective, multicenter, double-blinded, placebo-controlled trial; Jul 2009 -Mar 2012 | 43 adult kidney transplant recipients with documented BK viremia; 22 received levofloxacin for 30 d; 21 received placebo | At the 3-mo follow up, there was no significant difference in BK viral load reduction between the levofloxacin and placebo group (70.3% vs 69.1%, respectively, P = 0.93). The percentage reductions in BK viral load were also equivalent at 1 mo (58% vs 67.1%, P = 0.47), and 6 months (82.1% vs 90.5%, P = 0.38) |
Wojciechowski et al[16], 2012 | Retrospective study; First cohort (group 1): Jul-Dec 2009 Second cohort (group 2): Jan-Jun 2010 | 236 adult renal transplant recipients; Group 1: 106 did not receive BK virus prophylaxis; Group 2: 130 received ciprofloxacin as BK virus prophylaxis | At 3 mo post-transplant, the group that did not receive ciprofloxacin (group 1) had a higher risk of developing BK viremia than the group that received ciprofloxacin (group 2) (0.161 vs 0.065, P = 0.0378) and viruria (0.303 vs 0.146, P = 0.0067), but this difference progressively narrowed until there was no significant difference anymore at 12 mo for both viremia ( 0.297 vs 0.261, P = 0.6061) and viruria (0.437 vs 0.389, P = 0.5363) |
Gabardi et al[15], 2010 | Retrospective analysis; Jan 2004-Dec 2008 | 185 adult kidney transplant recipients; 25 received a 30-d course of ciprofloxacin; 160 did not receive a fluoroquinolone | Higher rate of BK viremia in those who did not receive a 1-mo course of levofloxacin 36 (22.5%) vs 1 (4%) who received levofloxacin; P = 0.03 |
Cidofovir | |||
Schneidewind et al[29], 2018 | Systematic review | 189 adult patients with BK virus associated hemorrhagic cystitis after allogenic stem cell transplant; 172 received intravenous cidofovir; 17 patients received intravesical cidofovir (2 patients received both routes of administration) | Complete response: 68% in intravenous cidofovir group, 88.2% in intravesical cidofovir. Kidney toxicity: 9.3% in intravenous cidofovir group, none in intravesical cidofovir group |
Papanicolaou et al[30], 2015 | Case report | 58 yr old male post hematopoietic stem cell transplant; developed biopsy-proven polyomavirus associated nephropathy; received brincidofovir 100 mg twice weekly for 6 mo; no immunosuppression reduction | 4-log decrease in BK virus viremia. No drug-related adverse events. Stable kidney function, and did not require dialysis |
Caruso Brown et al[28], 2015 | Open-label, non-randomized, single-dose, pilot study | 12 pediatric patients (ages 6-18) with a hematopoietic stem cell transplant within 2 yr, with symptomatic infection of adenovirus, nucleoside-resistant CMV, human polyomavirus (BK or JC virus), and/or nucleoside-resistant HSV diagnosed by viral culture or PCR; all patients received cidofovir | 2/12 acute kidney injury after the first dose 2/12 developed nephrotoxicity. Mean drug half-life 9.5 h (longer than documented half-life for adults based on other studies). No correlation between nephrotoxicity and plasma maximum concentration, clearance, or half-life. Cidofovir was well- tolerated in majority of patients |
Kuten et al[27], 2014 | Single-center, retrospective review; Jan 2007 to Jun 2012 | 75 kidney and kidney-pancreas transplant recipients who received cidofovir combined with reduced immunosuppression | 32 (43%) had short-term BK (≤ 6 mo); 43 (57%) had long-term BK. 53 (71%) eventually cleared BK at a median of 4.2 mo (interquartile range 2.1-9.3 mo). Factors associated with long-term BK: older age (OR 1.1, P = 0.02), Delayed graft function (OR 31.4, P = 0.01); higher peak BK (OR 12.8, P = 0.02. This group was associated with a 15% decline in estimated glomerular filtration rate. Factor associated with short-term BK: BK reduction by at least 1 log10copies/mL at 1 mo of treatment (OR 49.3, P < 0.01). This group maintained stable graft function and no graft loss was noted |
Reisman, et al[31], 2014 | Case report | pediatric patient who received kidney transplant for bilateral dysplastic kidneys, developed BKVAN; did not respond to decreased immunosuppression, ciprofloxacin, leflunomide; given brincidofovir | BK viral load decreased, but still detectable. Urine viral load declined but still elevated. Creatinine declined to baseline level and was stable for 2 yr. No drug-related adverse events |
Kuypers et al[26], 2009 | Single-center study | 41 adult renal transplant recipients with biopsy-proven BKVIN; 26 received cidofovir at 1 mg/kg for a maximum duration of 10 wk and without probenecid; 15 did not receive cidofovir; All patients had immunosuppression reduction | Graft loss: 4/26 (15.4%) in cidofovir group, 11/15 (73.3%) in no cidofovir group (P = 0.0002). Percentage of patients who completely cleared the virus from the blood was not different between the 2 groups. 3 patients in the cidofovir group developed severe anterior uveitis at 6, 7 and 8 doses, respectively (later switched to leflunomide). No BM or renal toxicity was observed in the cidofovir group. One patient developed a skin rash during infusion of cidofovir |
IVIg | |||
Naef et al[39], 2021 | Retrospective analysis; Jan 2009-Mar 2019 | Kidney transplant recipients with high level BK viremia; 79 transplanted before 2014 and had immunosuppression reduction alone; 52 transplanted after 2014 and had immunosuppression reduction + IVIg | IVIg group showed lower eGFR (44 mL/min vs 52 mL/min). IVIg did not shorten duration of BK viremia |
Kable et al[38], 2017 | Retrospective, single-center cohort study | 50 BKVAN patients received IVIg 1 g/kg | Better clearance of BK viremia and fewer graft loss (not statistically significant) |
Vu et al[37], 2015 | Retrospective analysis; 2008-2012 | 30 kidney transplant recipients with BKVAN received IVIg 2 g/kg | 90% of patients showed positive response in clearing viremia. Graft survival rate was 96.7% at 12 mo follow-up |
Sener et al[34], 2006 | Case series; Jul 2000-Jul 2003 | 8 kidney transplant recipients with IVIg 2 g/kg | 88% of patients showed functioning graft at 15 mo follow-up |
Monoclonal antibodies | |||
In the study | Ongoing RCT (NCT 04294472) | 30 kidney transplant recipients with BK viremia; 22 received MAU868; 8 received placebo | Better BK viral clearance in MAU group |
Virus-specific T-cell therapy | |||
Pfeiffer et al[44], 2023 | Open-label, phase II trial; Apr 2014-Jul 2021 | 27 pediatric and adult HSCT recipients with BK infection; 25 with hemorrhagic cystitis; 2 with nephritis | 100% had partial response at 6 weeks of treatment. 74% of patients who developed hemorrhagic cystitis had symptom resolution. 9/24 (37.5%) had increase in IFN-γ ELISpot counts |
Koldehoff et al[1], 2023 | Sequential analysis | 17 HSCT recipients with BK hemorrhagic cystitis; 7 received VST; 10 did not receive VST (immunosuppression reduction or cidofovir) | 6/7 from the VST group vs 6/10 from the non-VST group had T-specific cellular response, in most cases parallel to decrease in BK viral load |
Olson et al[43], 2021 | Single-arm, phase II clinical trial; Oct 2015-Sept 2019 | 59 HSCT recipients with BK hemorrhagic cystitis; received single IV infusion of partially HLA-matched BKV-CTL | Response rate and clinical improvement following the off-the-shelf BK-specific cytotoxic T-cells: 67.7% at day 14; 81.6% at day 45 |
Nelson et al[51], 2020 | Phase II study; Jun 2017-Dec 2019 | 38 HSCT recipients; 3 solid organ transplant recipients: 1 kidney transplant recipient; 1 heart transplant recipient; 1 heart-kidney transplant recipient | Response rates: 86% in patients with BK viremia, 100% in patients with hemorrhagic cystitis, 87% in patients with BK viremia and hemorrhagic cystitis. Of the 3 solid organ transplant recipients, 1 had complete response and 2 had partial response |
Tzannou et al[42], 2017 | Phase II study | 16 HSCT recipients; 14 with BK hemorrhagic cystitis; 2 with BKVAN | Decrease in urine BK viral load following VST: 85.5% at week 6, 96% at week 12. 13/14 with hemorrhagic cystitis had resolution of hematuria. 1/2 with BKVAN had improved renal function |
Jahan et al[50], 2020 | Case report; Sept 2018 | 1 kidney transplant recipient with BKVAN who failed other treatments | BK viral load decreased significantly following T-cell therapy, but allograft eventually failed due to interstitial fibrosis and tubular atrophy |
- Citation: Gorriceta JH, Lopez Otbo A, Uehara G, Posadas Salas MA. BK viral infection: A review of management and treatment. World J Transplant 2023; 13(6): 309-320
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/2220-3230/full/v13/i6/309.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.5500/wjt.v13.i6.309