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Polyomavirus Bk Infection in Renal Transplant Recipients

Abstract

peer reviewedBeside acute rejection or immunosuppressive therapy toxicity, infection by Polyomavirus BK, usually not aggressive in immunoactive patients, has emerged as an important factor affecting graft function in renal transplant recipients. Indeed, one of the most important complications of BK infection is nephropathy. Viral replication in the urinary tract as assessed by the presence of "decoy cells", or by a positive PCR for BK virus has been detected in up to half of the recipients but only 5% will present nephropathy which is usually the only sign. The most common risk factors for this emerging new cause are new immunosuppressive drugs and rejection episodes. The gold standard to diagnose BK nephropathy is immunohistochemical staining for large T antigen in graft biopsy specimens. Urine cytology examination and DNA BK PCR are used as a screening test. The prognosis in BK nephropathy has been considered to be poor. The early reduction of immunosuppression can improve the prognosis and perhaps also cidofovir or leflunomide use

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