This prospective observational cohort study is an extension of a previous study reporting effects of cytomegalovirus (CMV) on graft and patient survival in 471 patients who underwent kidney transplantation between 1994 and 1997. CMV pp65 antigen was measured every 7-14 d during the first three months after transplantation, given as number of CMV pp65-positive cells per 10(5) leukocytes. A positive test was defined as CMV infection. None of the patients received CMV prophylaxis or preemptive treatment. During a median of 13.7 (7.1-14.9) yr, the number of death-censored graft losses was 118 (25%) and of patient deaths 224 (48%). CMV infection was an independent significant risk factor for mortality in multivariate analysis (HR = 1.453, 95% CI 1.033-2.045, p = 0.032), adjusting for patient and donor age, preemptive transplantation, HLA-DR and -AB mismatches, living donor, acute rejection during the first three months, donor-recipient CMV IgG antibody status and diabetic nephropathy. In univariate analysis, CMV infection was significantly associated with death-censored graft loss but the association was not significant in multivariate model. CMV infection early after kidney transplantation is a predictor of overall mortality but not of death-censored graft loss after a median observation period of 13.7 yr.
Keywords: cytomegalovirus infection; graft loss; mortality; renal transplantation.
© 2013 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.