Control of BKPyV-DNAemia by a Tailored Viro-Immunologic Approach Does Not Lead to BKPyV-Nephropathy Progression and Development of Donor-Specific Antibodies in Pediatric Kidney Transplantation
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2025
Citazione:
Control of BKPyV-DNAemia by a Tailored Viro-Immunologic Approach Does Not Lead to BKPyV-Nephropathy Progression and Development of Donor-Specific Antibodies in Pediatric Kidney Transplantation / Cioni, M.; Muscianisi, S.; De Cicco, M.; Basso, S.; Hirsch, H. H.; Fontana, I.; Catenacci, L.; Bagnarino, J.; Siciliano, M.; Montana Lampo, O.; Acquafredda, G.; Boti, L. T. D.; Rotella, J.; Bozza, E.; Zumelli, J.; Mebelli, K.; Baldanti, F.; Cardillo, M.; Zecca, M.; Nocera, A.; Luppi, M.; Verrina, E.; Ginevri, F.; Comoli, P.. - In: MICROORGANISMS. - ISSN 2076-2607. - 13:1(2025), pp. 1-17. [10.3390/microorganisms13010048]
Abstract:
Polyomavirus BK (BKPyV)-associated nephropathy (BKPyV-nephropathy) remains a significant cause of premature kidney allograft failure. In the absence of effective antiviral treatments, current therapeutic approaches rely on immunosuppression (IS) reduction, possibly at the risk of inducing alloimmunity. Therefore, we sought to explore the long-term effects of a tailored viro-immunologic surveillance and treatment program for BKPyV on the development of alloimmunity and kidney graft outcome. Forty-five pediatric kidney transplant recipients were longitudinally monitored for BKPyV replication, virus-specific immunity, and donor-specific HLA antibodies (DSAs). DNAemia developed in 15 patients who were treated with stepwise IS reduction. Among the other 30 patients, 17 developed DNAuria without DNAemia and 13 always resulted as BKPyV-negative. All patients with DNAemia cleared BKPyV after having mounted a virus-specific cellular immune response, and no biopsy-proven BKPyV-nephropathy was observed. The presence of cytotoxic populations directed to the BKPyV Large-T (LT) antigen early after transplantation protected kidney recipients from developing BKPyV replication, and the appearance of LT-specific T cells in viruric patients prevented the development of BKPyV-DNAemia. In our cohort, no significant correlation was observed between BKPyV-DNAemia and the development of DSA and antibody-mediated rejection. However, patients who experienced and cleared BKPyV-DNAemia had a worse allograft survival at a median follow-up of 18.9 years (p = 0.048). These data need to be confirmed in larger cohorts.
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Articolo su rivista
Keywords:
cellular immunity; donor-specific antibodies; humoral immunity; pediatric kidney transplantation; polyomavirus BK
Elenco autori:
Cioni, M.; Muscianisi, S.; De Cicco, M.; Basso, S.; Hirsch, H. H.; Fontana, I.; Catenacci, L.; Bagnarino, J.; Siciliano, M.; Montana Lampo, O.; Acquafredda, G.; Boti, L. T. D.; Rotella, J.; Bozza, E.; Zumelli, J.; Mebelli, K.; Baldanti, F.; Cardillo, M.; Zecca, M.; Nocera, A.; Luppi, M.; Verrina, E.; Ginevri, F.; Comoli, P.
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