“…Immunosuppression diminishes the quantity and quality of T cells, rendering them unable to produce cytokines essential for immune destruction, to include interferon‐gamma, interleukin 2 and tumour necrosis factor‐alpha (Wilsdorf et al , ). Chronic, persistent EBV antigenaemia can lead to upregulation of co‐inhibitory receptors such as PD‐1 (also termed PDCD1) on T lymphocytes, producing an exhausted phenotype of anti‐EBV T cells (Moran et al , ). EBV latency proteins, such as latent‐membrane protein (LMP), can activate the JAK/STAT pathway within infected B cells resulting in upregulation of PD‐L1 (also termed CD274), which can produce EBV‐specific T cell anergy when bound to its PD‐1 receptor (Ferreiro et al , ).…”