HIV can infect transplanted kidneys in HIV-positive recipients even in the absence of detectable virus in the blood, according to a study appearing in an upcoming issue of the Journal of the American Society of Nephrology (JASN). The studys investigators also developed a simple urine test to diagnose such infections.
HIV is a common cause of kidney failure, and because of this, approximately 900 HIV-infected patients start dialysis each year in the United States. Kidney transplantation has recently become a therapeutic option for these patients, and the survival rate of HIV-infected transplant recipients with undetectable HIV in the blood is similar to that of non-HIV-infected transplant recipients. For unknown reasons, however, organ rejection is more common in HIV-infected transplant recipients.
To investigate this issue, Guillaume Canaud, MD, PhD, of Necker Hospital in Paris, France, and his colleagues assessed all 19 of HIV-positive patients in their center who received kidney transplants between June 1, 2006, and Oct. 31, 2011. Genetic analyses demonstrated that HIV infection occurred in 68 percent of the HIV-positive recipients new organs even in the absence of any detectable HIV in their blood.
Biopsy experiments revealed two different forms of infection. In the first case, podocyte cellswhich constitute the barrier through which blood is filtered in the kidneysare the main target of HIV, and infection is associated with certain clinical signs of kidney dysfunction. In the second case, HIV infects tubular cells within the kidney, with fewer clinical manifestations.
The researchers also developed a new and simple urine test to detect HIV infection in the kidneys, which could be a promising non-invasive method for diagnosing problems in HIV-positive transplant recipients.
This study is going to change the way of thinking of nephrologists and will certainly modify the approach of kidney transplantation in HIV patients, giving new hope to patients, says Canaud.
According to an accompanying editorial by Peter Stock, MD, of the University of California, San Francisco, the noninvasive urine test that detects early HIV-1 infection will help clinicians identify donor and recipient factors associated with recurrent HIV kidney disease. It is less clear what intervention may control the reinfection, although identification of donor and/or recipient factors associated with early reinfection may provide some clues, he wrote.
Study co-authors include Nathalie Dejucq-Rainsford PhD, Véronique Avettand-Fenoël MD, PhD, Jean-Paul Viard, MD, Dany Anglicheau MD, PhD, Frank Bienaimé MD, PhD, Mordi Muorah, MD, Louise Galmiche MD, PhD, Olivier Gribouval, Laure-Helene Noël, MD, Anne-Pascale Satie, Frank Martinez, MD, Rebecca Sberro-Soussan, MD, Anne Scemla, MD, Marie-Claire Gubler, MD, Gérard Friedlander MD, PhD, Corinne Antignac, MD, PhD, Marc-Olivier Timsit MD, PhD, Andrea Onetti Muda, MD, Fabiola Terzi MD, PhD, Christine Rouzioux MD, PhD, and Christophe Legendre, MD.
Source: American Society of Nephrology (ASN)
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