Diagnosis and monitoring of acute cytomegalovirus infection in peripheral blood of transplant recipients by nested reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR)

2000 
The aim of this novel diagnostic approach is to monitor cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection in immunocompromised transplant recipients using early, sensitive, and specific predictors before and during antiviral therapy. The peripheral blood cells of 20 patients after transplantation (9 liver, 7 kidney, 4 simultaneous kidney-pancreas) were studied for an early diagnosis of acute infection. The mRNA and DNA of human CMV immediate-early antigen (IEA) were detected by nested-polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay. Results of nested PCR were compared with the immunological detection of antigen pp65 and serological diagnosis of CMV infection. All data were correlated with clinical symptoms like leukopenia, thrombopenia, pneumonia, and allograft-rejection reaction. Of 20 transplant recipients, 12 were infected by CMV, and 9 suffered from a CMV-related disease. CMV mRNA were detected simultaneously with antigen pp65 and CMV DNA in all patients with symptomatic infection. Additionally, CMV mRNA was found over a longer period after ganciclovir treatment of infected recipients. Nested reverse transcriptase (RT)-PCR for CMV-IEA mRNA allows a sensitive and specific diagnosis of an acute CMV infection. CMV mRNA was found to be a good marker of acute viremia and could be a useful tool for CMV monitoring over the whole period of disease management, even during antiviral therapy.
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