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Cytomegalovirus (CMV) is a common infection with 60-90% of all adults worldwide having evidence of having the infection at sometime in their life. Patients who have undergone transplantation are at risk at developing CMV, especially those patients who do not have antibodies to CMV pre-transplant, but received an organ from a recipient who has antibodies to CMV. Usually the disease CMV causes is mild and sometimes patients are not even aware they have the infection without tests to detect the virus. CMV can less commonly cause serious infections that affect many parts of the body including the intestines, liver, or lungs. In rare cases CMV infection in transplant patients can cause death.
All patients who receive a transplant are monitored for CMV infection. The purpose of this study is to determine if there is a way the investigators can determine in advance which patients are at greatest risk of CMV infection. Specifically, this study will analyze the immune system of transplant patients to determine if there are specific elements of the immune system that 1) helps protect the body against CMV infection, and 2) helps the body combat CMV once it is infected. Identifying these specific elements of the immune system could improve the physician's ability to monitor the SOT patients for CMV infection, and to help treat CMV in those patients that become infected.
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Our hypothesis is that the degree of CMV cell-mediated immune (CMI) response correlates inversely with the risk of development of CMV replication and correlates with the response to initial therapy and risk of relapse after onset of replication. The primary aim of this study is to determine an association between CMV CMI response and both the risk of CMV infection and the degree of initial CMV viremia and rate of viremia clearance with standard CMV therapy. The first secondary aim is to determine an association between CMV QnPCR, CMV microRNA expression, TLR2 expression, and CMV-specific CMI and the risk of relapse of CMV disease after initial treatment. The second secondary aim is to determine an association between CMV QnPCR, CMV microRNA expression, TLR2 expression, and CMV-specific CMI collected at CMV infection and the following prospective data: Development of CMV end organ disease, resolution of symptoms of CMV infection, other non-CMV infections after initial CMV infection, graft rejection, recurrent or resistant CMV infection, and other markers of immune function. The third secondary aim is to determine an association between CMV QnPCR, CMV microRNA expression, TLR2 expression, and CMV-specific CMI response collected at CMV infection in solid-organ transplant (SOT) recipients and the following retrospective data: Type of SOT, CMV donor/recipient status, type and degree of immunosuppression, type and length of CMV prophylaxis, prior graft rejection and infections (non-CMV).
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113 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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