Article,

Cytomegalovirus exposure and cardiovascular disease in kidney transplant recipients.

, , , , , , and .
J Infect Dis, 207 (10): 1569--1575 (May 2013)
DOI: 10.1093/infdis/jit064

Abstract

Some data suggest that cytomegalovirus (CMV) may be involved in atherogenesis. However, there are few data suggesting that CMV may contribute to posttransplantation atherosclerosis. We studied a cohort of 570 consecutive renal transplant recipients. The impact of CMV on atherosclerotic events was analyzed with respect to other known main cardiovascular risk factors. The mean follow-up duration (± SD) was 87 ± 31 months. A total of 357 patients were considered to be CMV exposed, and 213 were considered to be CMV naive. Cox regression analysis revealed that CMV exposure (hazard ratio HR, 1.80 95\% confidence interval CI, 1.06-3.05; P = .030) was an independent risk factor for atherosclerotic events. A total of 213 patients remained CMV negative during follow-up, 225 CMV-positive patients had no replication after transplantation, and 132 CMV-positive patients experienced CMV replication after transplantation. Atherosclerotic event rates were 8.5\%, 13.3\%, and 18.2\%, respectively (P = .034). Cox regression analysis revealed that patients with posttransplantation CMV replication had an increased risk of atherosclerotic events (HR, 2.06 95\% CI, 1.03-4.15; P = .042) and death (HR, 1.76 95\% CI, 1.08-2.89; P = .024). There was also a trend toward an increased risk of atherosclerotic events in CMV-positive patients without posttransplantation replication (HR, 1.62 95\% CI, .91-3.05; P = .098). Both pretransplantation CMV exposure and posttransplantation CMV replication contribute to the increased risk of cardiovascular disease in transplant recipients.

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