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Human Herpesvirus 6 Infection after Autologous or Allogeneic Stem Cell Transplantation: A Single‐Center Prospective Longitudinal Study of 92 Patients
107
Citations
28
References
2000
Year
Prospective Longitudinal StudyTransplantation MedicineImmunologyPathologyRegenerative MedicineViral PersistenceBone Marrow FailureStem Cell TransplantationHematologyBone MarrowGraft SurvivalCell TransplantationActive InfectionTransplantationVirologyStem Cell TherapiesChronic Viral InfectionHerpesvirusesHuman Herpesvirus 6Medicine
To determine the incidence and clinical relevance of active human herpesvirus 6 (HHV-6) infection, 92 consecutive unselected recipients of autologous or allogeneic stem cell grafts were investigated in a prospective longitudinal study. Active infection was assessed by the presence of viral deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) in 846 peripheral blood mononuclear cell specimens and 115 plasma specimens, by means of a specially developed polymerase chain reaction designed to avoid detection of latent genome. The incidence of HHV-6 infection observed was 42.5%, irrespective of the type or source of graft, and infection was significantly associated with partial (P=.002) or total myelosuppression (P=.01) and fever (P<. 000001). Infusion of bone marrow as the source of graft, reactivation occurring before platelet or neutrophil engraftment, and presence of HHV-6 DNA in plasma were identified as risk factors for symptomatic HHV-6 infection (P<.002).
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