Fourteen heart transplant recipients were monitored for human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) infection based on determination of antigenemia, viremia, and DNAemia (by polymerase chain reaction [PCR]) in peripheral blood polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNL). Three patients had symptomatic primary, 10 had recurrent (3 asymptomatic), and 1 (seronegative) had no HCMV infection. Severe clinical symptoms appeared when levels of viremia/antigenemia were greater than 50 infected PMNL/2 x 10(5) cells examined. Of 200 blood samples examined, 93 (46.5%) were positive for viremia/antigenemia and DNAemia, whereas 48 (24.0%) were positive for DNAemia only; 59 (29.5%) were negative in all assays. Follow-up of HCMV infections in heart transplant recipients showed that PCR can detect viral appearance in blood 7-10 days earlier than assays for antigenemia/viremia. On the other hand, viral disappearance from blood, as assessed by PCR, occurred weeks or months later than revealed by other assays. Detection of virus by PCR only was never associated with overt HCMV-related clinical symptoms. Of the 8 symptomatic patients treated with ganiclovir, 2 became PCR-negative at the end of treatment and 1 cleared virus from blood in the following weeks, whereas 5 showed persistent or recurrent infection.
Fourteen immunocompromised patients were examined for viremia, pp65 and p72 antigenemia, and presence of viral DNA in leukocyte fractions of polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNL), monocytes/macrophages (M/M), and B and T lymphocytes after purification by fluorescence-activated cell sorting. Nearly all PMNL and M/M fractions were positive for DNA and pp65 antigenemia, while p72 antigenemia was detected in 73% and 62%, respectively. The virus isolation rate was 45% from PMNL and 17% from M/M. T lymphocytes were positive for DNA in 50% of cases and for pp65 and p72 antigenemia in only 11%, while B lymphocytes were DNA-positive in 43% of samples and consistently negative for antigenemia; neither T nor B lymphocytes had virus isolated. Immediate-early (IE)1 RNA was present in 23 (85.2%) of 27 dextran-enriched DNA-positive p72-positive PMNL samples and, in sequential PMNL samples from two heart-transplanted patients, was detected during peak infection in association with p72. Thus, PMNL and M/M are the subpopulations primarily involved in HCMV infection; PMNL may undergo IE replicative events and are not merely passive carriers of phagocytized viral material.
pp67 mRNA NASBA can safely replace antigenemia, with some apparent advantages (semiautomation and objectivity of test results) and disadvantages (overtreatment of patients and greater duration of overall treatment).
Sequential nasopharyngeal aspirates from patients without respiratory symptoms undergoing hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) were tested for genomic RNA of human metapneumovirus (hMPV). Persistent hMPV infection was documented in most of them and confirmed by virus isolation. hMPV infection etiology was also evaluated during the same period in samples from pediatric patients with acute respiratory diseases (ARDs). Sequence analysis of hMPV in HSCT recipients documented infection by hMPV genotype A and strong interhost similarity; this pattern differs from that observed in pediatric patients with ARDs. The data indicate that HSCT recipients may frequently develop symptomless hMPV infection.
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