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Copyright ©The Author(s) 2024.
World J Virol. Mar 25, 2024; 13(1): 89135
Published online Mar 25, 2024. doi: 10.5501/wjv.v13.i1.89135
Table 1 Risk factors for cytomegalovirus reactivation
Risk factors for CMV reactivation
Ref.
Statistics
High disease severityKalil et al[1]High disease severity (APACHE > 20, SAPS > 40 or SOFA > 10) 32% vs low disease severity (APACHE < 20, SAPS < 40 or SOFA < 10) 13% (P < 0.0001)
Ong et al[10]Mean APACHE IV 91 (71-113) vs 76 (62-99) (P < 0.01)
Prolonged ICU stayKalil et al[1]1% < 5 d vs 21% at > 5 d (P < 0.001)
von Müller et al[11]32% by day 14
Limaye et al[2]33% by day 12
Sepsis, septic shockKalil et al[1]Reactivation of CMV in patients with and without septic shock: 32% vs 15% (P < 0.0001)
Osawa et al[12]OR 4.62 (P = 0.02)
Ong et al[10]Reactivation of CMV in patients with and without septic shock 57% vs 41% (P = 0.02)
Previous seropositivityKalil et al[1]Reactivation of CMV in patients with and without previous seropositivity for CMV: 31% vs 7% (P < 0.0001)
Mechanical ventilationOsawa et al[12]OR: 8.5 (95%CI 1.1 to 66.5 for high-grade CMV viremia, i.e. CMV PCR > 1000 copies/mL)
Limaye et al[2]OR 2.5 (0.9-7.3) (P = 0.09)
Multiple blood transfusionsFrantzeskaki et al[9]OR 1.50 (P = 0.02)
Chiche et al[13]OR 3.31 (P = 0.04)
Limaye et al[2]OR 9.1 (1.0-84.7) (P = 0.05)
Surgical patientsKalil et al[1]Rate of CMV reactivation in medical ICUs: 8% vs surgical ICUs: 23% (P < 0.001)
Steroid useJaber et al[14]CMV reactivation in patients with and without steroid use: 55% vs 33% (P = 0.04)
Chiche et al[13]OR 2.26 (P = 0.08)
Renal failureJaber et al[14]58% vs 33% (P = 0.02)
Ong et al[10]16% vs 6% (P < 0.01)
MaleLimaye et al[2]OR 3.6 (P = 0.005)
Raised CRPFrantzeskaki et al[9]OR 1.01 (P = 0.02)
Table 2 Patient outcomes in studies in critically ill immunocompetent patients
Year of publication
Ref.
Study design
Patient population
Sample size
Prevalence of CMV (%)
Mortality rate (%) CMV positive vs negative
ICU stay
Ventilator duration
Other outcomes
1990Domart et al[22]Prospective, single centerMediastinitis following cardiac surgery1152555 vs 37 (P < 0.01)69+/-36 vs 48+/-27 (P < 0.05)ND
1996Stéphan et al[16]Prospectivecase series, single centerMedico-surgical patients on mechanical ventilation23ND52NDND
1996Papazian et al[15]Prospective single centreVentilator associated pneumonia8629NDNDNo difference (P > 0.05)Severe hypoxemia CMV +/- (72 vs 95 mmHg, P < 0.05)
1998Kutza et al[7]Prospective longitudinal, singles centreSeptic shock3432.4NDNDNDCMV active had higher TNFα, IL1ß, ALT
2006Cook et al[23]Prospective, singles centreSICU2065 vs 33 (P = 0.006)83.5 vs 36 (P < 0.03)ND92 vs 25 (P < 0.004)
2011Heininger et al[24]Prospective, singles centerMedical ICU with SAPS II > 405655 vs 3630 vs 23 (P = 0.0375)ND
2005Jaber et al[14]Retrospective matched case control study, single centreMedico-surgical ICU patients8020 vs 11 (P = 0.02)41 vs 31 (P = 0.04)35 vs 24 (P = 0.03)Bacteremia 15 vs 7 (P = 0.05)
2006von Müller et al[11]Prospective observational study, single centreSeptic shock3818.457 vs 38 (NS)54 vs 19 (P = 0.0025)42 vs 16 (P = 0.0025)
2008Ziemann et al[25]Retrospective studyMedical ICU1383528.6 vs 10.9 (P = 0.048)32.6 vs 22.1 (P < 0.001)
2008Limaye et al[2]Prospective, multicentreMixed ICU12033ND
2009Chiche et al[13]Prospective studyMedical ICU on mechanical ventilator for > 2 d24216.154 vs 37 (P = 0.082)32 vs 12 (P < 0.001)27 vs 10 (P < 0.001)Ventilator free days at 28 and 60, P < 0.001. Increased risk of bacteremia, P < 0.033, increased bacterial nosocomial pneumonia, P < 0.001
2010Chilet et al[26]Prospective observational, single centerSurgical and trauma ICU5339.761 vs 46 (P = 0.40)37 vs 11 (P = 0.01)NDTNF alpha, P = 0.80. CMV specific T cell response CD8+, P = 0.05. CD4, P = 0.04
2011Heininger et al[24]Prospective observational studyMixed ICU8640.637.1 vs 35.3, (P = 0.861)30 vs 12 (P < 0.001)22 vs 7.5 (P = 0.003)
2009Chiche et al[13]Prospective, observationMedical ICU511840 vs 13.3 (P = 0.21)28 vs 14 (P = 0.013)24 vs 8 (P = 0.019)Bacterial VAP 40 vs 26.6 (P = 0.70)
2012Coisel et al[27]Prospective studyMedical ICU93ND55 vs 20 (P < 0.01)25.5 vs 13 (P = 0.037)Bacteremia (%) 19.5 vs 10 (P = 0.009)VFD at 60 (d) median [IQR] 0 [0-25] vs 50 [11.5-58] (P = 0.001). Shock (%) 77 vs 30 (P = 0.001, acute renal failure (%) 50 vs 16 (P = 0.01)
2013Clari et al[28]Prospective observational, single center studySurgical and trauma ICU480.278 out of 17 (reactivation of CMV) vs 5 out of 14 (without CMV reactivation) (P = 0.523)
2016Ong et al[10]Prospective, multicenterARDS patients on mechanically ventilated beyond day 427127Death by day 90 46 vs 28 (P < 0.01)16 vs 9 (P < 0.01)15 vs 8 (P < 0.01)
2015Frantzeskaki et al[9]Prospective, observation, multicenterMixed ICU, Mechanical ventilated seropositive (anti CMV IgG) positive801418 vs 22 (P > 0.05), 28 D mortality rate32 vs 21 (NS)27.5 vs 18 (NS)SOFA score higher with CMV reactivation (P < 0.006), 28 d survival no difference
2016Osawa et al[12]Prospective, multicentreSeptic patients with BSI1002020 vs 15 (P = 0.585)27 vs 20 (P = 0.07)VFD 15 vs 25 (P = 0.05). ICU free days 7 vs 18 (P = 0.01)
2019Hraiech et al[17]Retrospective, observational, single centerARDS on VV ECMO, assessed for HSV and CMV12321.952 vs 59 (P = 0.58)ICU LOS 29 vs 16 P < 0.01. Hospital LOS 44 vs 24 (P < 0.01)34 vs 17.5 (P < 0.01)Duration of ECMO 15 vs 9 (P < 0.01)
2021Zhang et al[29]single-center, prospective observational studyMedical ICU patients on mechanical ventialtion7118.369.2 vs 19 (P < 0.01)ICU LOS 27 vs 12 (P < 0.01)25 vs 10 (P < 0.01)Hospital expenses higher in patients with CMV reactivation (P < 0.02)
2009Kalil et al[1]Systematic reviewIncluded patients in ICU, 9 prospective and 4 retrospective studies125817OR: 1.93 (1.29–2.88) (P = 0.01)NDNDND
2009Osawa et al[21]Systematic review13 studies, 9 prospective, 4 retrospectiveND0-33CMV + 29 to 100 as compared with CMV – 11 to 74 (OR: 5.7)33 to 69 d vs 22 to 48 d (P < 0.05)21 to 39 d vs 13 to 24 d (P < 0.05)75% vs 50% (P = 0.04)
2017Lachance et al[18]Systematic review and meta-analysis22 studies, randomized trials, observational studies (either retrospective or prospective), or case-control studies21999–71CMV reactivation was associated with a 2.5-fold increase in ICU mortality with low heterogeneity (10 studies, n = 970 patients, OR = 2.55, 95%CI = 1.87–3.47; P < 0.001)MD 6.60 d, 95%CI = 3.09–10.12; P = 0.0002, I2 = 79%ICU LOS was higher in CMV positive n (9 studies, n = 973 patients, MD 8.18 d, 95%CI = 6.14–10.22; P < 0.001)Increase in nosocomial infections (OR 2.37-3.2) P < 0.05. Most common infections being ventilator-acquired pneumonia, bacteremsia, and fungal infections
2018Li et al[3]SR and MA18 studies, mixed population2398CMV infection 27; CMV reactivation 31All cause mortality OR: 2.16 (1.7-2.74)ICU LOS stay (MD: 12 d)9 d
Table 3 Polymerase chain reaction tests for cytomegalovirus and the cut offs used in various studies
Ref.
Test
Threshold copies/ml
Threshold as per IU/mL
Papazian et al[15]PCR500 IU/mL whole blood
Park et al[51]RT-PCR> 270 copies/mL in whole blood
Hraiech et al[17]PCRCopy number > 500/mL CMV“High reactivation” for viral loads greater than or equal to 1000 IU/mL or “low reactivation” for viral loads of 100–999 IU/mL
Zhang et al[29]PCRCopies > 500/mL
Osawa et al[12]Copies > 500 copies/mL
Ong et al[10]100 IU/mL
Table 4 Therapeutic options for cytomegalovirus
No.
Drug
Mechanism
Dose
Salient features
Adverse effects
1Ganciclovir1[63]Nucleoside analog, needs intracellular phosphorylation to inhibit DNA polymerase, hence can develop resistance5 mg/kg iv q12hPreferable in life threatening disease, very high viral load and when there is a concern for inadequate gastrointestinal absorptionSevere neutropenia may become a therapy limiting adverse effect in up to 32% patients. May respond to G-CSF or GM-CSF
2Valganciclovir1Prodrug of ganciclovir900 mg po q12hOral bioavailability is equivalent to iv ganciclovir, once-daily dosing and reduced risk of development of resistanceNeutropenia, thrombocytopenia, anemia, acute renal failure
3Foscarnet or Phosphonoformate1Does not require intracellular phosphorylation and therefore, retains activity against most GCV-resistant strains of CMV90 mg/kg iv q12hIntravenous PFA may be used under conditions of failure of GCV treatment, GCV resistance or excessive side effects such as leukopeniaPFA is nephrotoxic in 1/3rd patients, which limits its use in many critically ill patients
4Cidofovir1Acts directly on DNA polymerase5 mg/kg iv once weeklyMay be used as an alternative to PFA in case of GCV resistance. FDA approved only for CMV retinitis in HIVNephrotoxic on proximal tubular cells (Fanconi like syndrome). Pre-hydration and probenecid before the dose
5Maribavir1[64] (Livtencity, Takeda)Inhibition of human CMV encoded kinase pUL97: Required for viral replication400 mg po q12hUsed in resistance to GCV, PFA, CDVNo renal or hepatic dose adjustment required. It can cause nausea, vomiting, diarrhea and neutropenia
6Letermovir1[65] (Prevymis, Merck)CMV viral terminase inhibitor480 mg q24h po or ivFDA approval for post HSCT and post renal transplant prophylaxisNausea, diarrhoea, vomiting, oedema. Various drug interactions requiring dose adjustments
7Hyperimmune serumPassive immune prophylaxis400 U/kg on day 1, 4 and 8 and then 200 U/kg on day 12 and 16As salvage therapy in severe recurrent CMV infectionsHigh cost and heterogeneity of the preparation. Infusion related adverse effects like fever, shivering, rash