Prevention and Management of CMV Infections after Liver Transplantation: Current Practice in German Transplant Centers
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Material and Methods
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Diagnostic Means for CMV
3.1.1. Center Results for Diagnostic Approaches
3.1.2. Diagnostic Management of CMV
3.1.3. Conclusion CMV Diagnostic Strategies
- (a)
- A weekly PCR-based monitoring is necessary in case a preemptive treatment strategy was chosen. Although there is no study comparing different intervals of CMV testing, studies evaluating preemptive approaches with frequent testing have shown non-inferiority to prophylaxis even in high-risk patients (D+/R−) [34,35,36].
- (b)
- In patients with prophylaxis, testing can be reduced to monthly, followed by every 3 months (or in case of symptoms) for the first year. CMV viremia is rare during prophylaxis and current guidelines do not recommend regular testing [14,25]. However, occasional testing might detect those with CMV resistance preemptively.
- (c)
- There is currently insufficient evidence for determining a specific standard PCR threshold for initiating anti-CMV treatment. Immediate treatment was proposed in patients with “high” viral load or organ manifestations with detection of CMV in the tissue or, in the case of “lower” viral loads, treatment should be dependent upon a second positive test result considering also its dynamic change (fold increase) or the individual risk of the patient [14].
3.2. Preventive Strategies for CMV Infections
3.2.1. Center Results for Preventive Strategies
3.2.2. Universal Prophylaxis to Prevent CMV Disease
3.2.3. Preemptive Treatment to Prevent CMV Disease
3.2.4. Conclusion CMV Prevention Strategies
- Transient prophylaxis in high-risk patients (typically VGCV 900 mg/day if renal function is normal) should be given for at least 3 months and may be extended to 6 months, if no toxicities are observed, and can be performed for 3 months in intermediate-risk patients. Extension of the treatment duration to 6 months relates to a study in kidney transplant recipients, where 200 days in high-risk patients reduced the risk of CMV disease over 100 days of prophylaxis [56]. Alternatively, preemptive management seemed to be equally efficacious [36].
- The choice of strategy for preventing CMV disease and associated complications is at the discretion of the center and should also consider patients’ individual risk and logistic capacities, in particular in the outpatient setting.
- If weekly PCR-based monitoring during preemptive treatment strategy cannot be provided for patients with high and intermediate risk, a switch to prophylaxis is preferred. Longer testing intervals might increase the risk of undetected viremia and thus increased risk of CMV disease [38].
3.3. Therapy of CMV Infections and Disease
3.3.1. Center Results for CMV Treatment
3.3.2. Treatment of Manifest CMV Infections
3.3.3. Conclusion Treatment of CMV infections
- (V)GCV is the first-line treatment for CMV disease, although robust efficacy data for liver transplant patients are limited. Although both agents seem to be equally effective [57], VGCV is preferred due to its oral administration.
- Foscarnet and cidofovir can be used as second-line therapy, especially after insufficient treatment response to VGCV, but its high toxicity requires closed clinical follow-up. Foscarnet is as effective as GCV but remains a second-line therapy due to nephrotoxicity [67]. Cidefovir is less well studied as it also comprises a range of potential side-effects [14].
- Since much of the risk of CMV infection is related to the myelosuppressive effects of (V)GCV, the use alternative therapies, such as letermovir, should also be considered, at least as a considerably safer alternative to foscarnet or cidofovir. However, evidence in solid organ transplant recipients is still sparse [63].
- In case of asymptomatic viremia, VGCV at 2 × 900 mg/day until 2 consecutive negative PCR results with a time interval of one week are obtained. In cases of symptomatic disease, such as pneumonia, colitis, hepatitis, or CMV syndrome, a 2-week therapy with GCV (or longer, if no undetectable CMV levels are achieved) followed by oral VGCV is recommended. Additional use of CMV-specific IgG may be considered. If CMV viremia persists for more than two weeks despite (V)GCV, foscarnet should be initiated as a second-line treatment and resistance testing should be performed (14).
3.4. Immunosuppressive Therapy and CMV Infections
3.4.1. Center Results for Immunosuppression
3.4.2. mTOR Inhibitor-based Immunosuppressive Strategies to Reduce the Risk of CMV Disease
3.4.3. Conclusion Immunosuppression and CMV Disease
- In patients with CMV infection, cessation of MMF is recommended and tacrolimus trough levels should be kept at a low level with 5–7 µg/L if applicable.
- After repetitive CMV infection, an mTOR inhibitor-based strategy either in a CNI-minimizing manner or as the immunosuppressive backbone can be considered unless contraindicated. These suggestions are based on the fact that higher immunosuppression with mycophenolate derivates or CNI have a boosting effect on viral replication whereas the mTOR inhibitor acts as virustatic [77]. Therefore, the evidence suggests a switch to an mTOR inhibitor-based strategy as an adjunct to conventional approaches.
- However, immunosuppressive therapy remains an individual treatment, which must be tailored according to individual patient needs and characteristics.
4. Summary
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Seroprofile | Centers Reporting Standard Prevention, n/N (%) | Centers with Prophylaxis Drug, n/N (%) | Centers with (V)GCV Prophylaxis dose, n/N (%) | Centers with Prophylaxis Duration, n/N (%) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Preemptive | Prophylaxis | (V)GCV | Other | 450 mg/d | 900 mg/d | 3 Months (or 100d) | 6 Months (or 200d) | |
D+/R− | 3/20 (15%) | 19/20 (90%) | 18/19 (95%) a | 1/19 (IgG) (5%) | 2/18 (11%) b | 15/18 (83%) b | 9/17 (53%) b,c | 7/17 (41%) b,c |
D+/R+ | 10/20 (50%) | 7/20 (35%) | 7/7 (100%) | - | 1/7 (14%) | 6/7 (86%) | 4/7 (57%) | 3/7 (43%) |
D−/R+ | 10/20 (50%) | 7/20 (35%) | 7/7 (100%) | - | 1/7 (14%) | 6/7 (86%) | 6/7 (86%) | 1/7 (14%) |
D−/R- | 8/20 (40%) | 1/20 (5%) | 1/1 (100%) | - | 0/1 (0%) | 1/1 (100% | 1/1 (100%) | 0/1 (0%) |
Use of Induction Therapy | 11/20 (55%) |
---|---|
Standard de novo IS | |
CNI + CS | 4/20 (20%) |
CNI + MMF | 3/20 (15%) |
CNI + MMF + CS | 12/20 (60%) |
CNI + MMF/mTOR | 1/20 (5%) |
IS adjustment with CMV | |
Stop/pause MMF | 15/16 (94%) |
Reduce/stop CNI | 2/16 (13%) |
Reduce/stop CS | 2/16 (13%) |
Introduce mTOR (±CNI) | 9/16 (56%) |
Viral load threshold for treatment (copies/mL) | Median = 1000 copies/mL |
Any positive value | 4/17 |
≤200 | 2/17 |
>200 to ≤1000 | 8/17 |
>1000 | 3/17 |
Treatment | |
(V)GCV | 16/16 |
Organ therapy and IgG | 1/16 (6%) (+1/16 if leucopenic/renal insuff.) |
Dose | |
Viremia: N = 6 | |
VGCV: 900 mg/day PO | 2/6 (33%) |
VGCV: 1800 mg/day PO | 4/6 (67%) |
Symptomatic: N = 6 | |
GCV: 2 × 5 mg/kg/day | 5/6 (83%) |
VGCV: 1800 mg/day | 1/6 (17%) |
Not specific: N = 9 | |
GCV: 2 × 5 mg/kg/day | 7/9 (78%) |
VGCV: 450 mg/day | 1/9 (11%) |
VGCV: 900 mg/day | 3/9 (33%) |
VGCV: 1800 mg/day | 2/9 (22%) |
Duration, N = 12 | |
Up to ≤ 2 weeks negative test | 7/12 (58%) |
Up to > 2–4 weeks negative test | 2/12 (17%) |
2 weeks treatment | 1/12 (8%) |
3 months treatment | 2/12 (17%) |
Followed by prophylaxis | 6 a |
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Engelmann, C.; Sterneck, M.; Weiss, K.H.; Templin, S.; Zopf, S.; Denk, G.; Eurich, D.; Pratschke, J.; Weiss, J.; Braun, F.; et al. Prevention and Management of CMV Infections after Liver Transplantation: Current Practice in German Transplant Centers. J. Clin. Med. 2020, 9, 2352. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm9082352
Engelmann C, Sterneck M, Weiss KH, Templin S, Zopf S, Denk G, Eurich D, Pratschke J, Weiss J, Braun F, et al. Prevention and Management of CMV Infections after Liver Transplantation: Current Practice in German Transplant Centers. Journal of Clinical Medicine. 2020; 9(8):2352. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm9082352
Chicago/Turabian StyleEngelmann, Cornelius, Martina Sterneck, Karl Heinz Weiss, Silke Templin, Steffen Zopf, Gerald Denk, Dennis Eurich, Johann Pratschke, Johannes Weiss, Felix Braun, and et al. 2020. "Prevention and Management of CMV Infections after Liver Transplantation: Current Practice in German Transplant Centers" Journal of Clinical Medicine 9, no. 8: 2352. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm9082352
APA StyleEngelmann, C., Sterneck, M., Weiss, K. H., Templin, S., Zopf, S., Denk, G., Eurich, D., Pratschke, J., Weiss, J., Braun, F., Welker, M.-W., Zimmermann, T., Knipper, P., Nierhoff, D., Lorf, T., Jäckel, E., Hau, H.-M., Tsui, T. Y., Perrakis, A., ... Tacke, F. (2020). Prevention and Management of CMV Infections after Liver Transplantation: Current Practice in German Transplant Centers. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 9(8), 2352. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm9082352