Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6247177 | Transplantation Proceedings | 2015 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
BK virus belongs to Polyomaviridae family; it causes 95% of nephropathy cases related to polyomavirus, with the other 5% caused by JC virus. Nephropathy jeopardizes graft function, causing a premature failure of the graft in 1%-10% of patients with kidney transplants. Nowadays, antiviral effective treatment is unknown, which is why blood and urine screening of renal transplantation patients has become the most important recommendation to guide the decrease of immunosuppression, and the only proven method to decrease poor outcomes. Different interventions, such as cidofovir, leflunomide, fluoroquinolones, and intravenous immunoglobulin, have been attempted with no improvement at all. This review aims to summarize the most relevant features of BK virus, historical issues, transmission mechanisms, risk factors, and therapeutic interventions.
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Authors
S. Gonzalez, D.P. Escobar-Serna, O. Suarez, X. Benavides, J.F. Escobar-Serna, E. Lozano,