BackgroundCytomegalovirus (CMV) is an important opportunistic pathogen after transplantation. Some virological variation in transplant recipients is explained by donor and recipient CMV serostatus, but not all. Circadian variability of herpesviruses has been described, so we investigated the effect of time of day of transplantation on posttransplant CMV viremia.MethodsWe performed a retrospective analysis of 1517 patients receiving liver or kidney allografts at a single center from 2002 to 2018. All patients were given preemptive therapy with CMV viremia monitoring after transplantation. Circulatory arrest and reperfusion time of donor organ were categorized into 4 periods. Patients were divided into serostatus groups based on previous CMV infection in donor and recipient. CMV viremia parameters were compared between time categories for each group. Factor analysis of mixed data was used to interrogate this complex data set.ResultsLive-donor transplant recipients were less likely to develop viremia than recipients of deceased-donor organs (48% vs 61%; P DiscussionWe found no evidence for a circadian effect of transplantation on CMV viremia, but these novel results warrant confirmation by other centers.
Journal article
The Journal of infectious diseases
08/2022
226
357 - 365
Institute for Immunity and Transplantation, UCL, London, United Kingdom.
Humans, Cytomegalovirus, Viremia, Cytomegalovirus Infections, Antiviral Agents, Organ Transplantation, Viral Load, Retrospective Studies, Circadian Rhythm