Dummer J S, Erb S, Breinig M K, Ho M, Rinaldo C R, Gupta P, Ragni M V, Tzakis A, Makowka L, Van Thiel D
Department of Medicine, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pennsylvania.
Transplantation. 1989 Jan;47(1):134-40. doi: 10.1097/00007890-198901000-00030.
We performed a retrospective serologic survey of 583 organ donors and 1043 transplant recipients for antibodies to human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1). Two (0.34%) of the 583 donors and 18 (1.7%) of the 1043 recipients had HIV-1 antibodies by enzyme immunoassay and by Western blot. Two of 5 seropositive recipients tested also had blood cultures positive for HIV-1. Seven (0.7%) of the 1043 transplant recipients had antibodies to HIV-1 before transplantation; 2 of these had hemophilia A, and 5 had previous transfusions. Eleven (1.3%) of 860 recipients followed for 45 days or more seroconverted to HIV-1 a mean of 96 days after transplantation. Likely sources of HIV-1 infection for 3 of these 11 recipients included a seropositive organ donor in 1 patient and high-risk blood donors in 2 patients. A definite source of HIV-1 infection was not found for the other 8 recipients, 3 of whom seroconverted to HIV-1 after institution of blood donor screening for HIV-1 antibodies. Seroconversion to HIV-1 was less common in kidney recipients than in liver, heart, or multiple-organ recipients (P less than 0.02). Nine (50%) of the 18 HIV-1 seropositive transplant recipients died a mean of 6 months after transplant surgery, and 9 (50%) are still alive a mean of 43 months after transplantation. AIDS-like illnesses occurred in 3 of the dead and 1 of the living patients and included pneumocystis pneumonia (3 cases), miliary tuberculosis (1 case), and recurrent cytomegalovirus infection (1 case). These data suggest that the course of HIV-1 infection is not more severe in transplant recipients receiving cyclosporine than in other hosts and that, despite screening of blood and organ donors, a small number of transplant recipients will become infected with HIV-1.
我们对583名器官捐献者和1043名移植受者进行了一项关于1型人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV-1)抗体的回顾性血清学调查。583名捐献者中有2名(0.34%)以及1043名受者中有18名(1.7%)通过酶免疫测定法和蛋白质印迹法检测出HIV-1抗体。5名血清反应阳性的受者中有2名的血液培养物中HIV-1也呈阳性。1043名移植受者中有7名(0.7%)在移植前就有HIV-1抗体;其中2名患有甲型血友病,5名曾接受过输血。在860名随访45天或更长时间的受者中,有11名(1.3%)在移植后平均96天血清转化为HIV-1。这11名受者中有3名感染HIV-1的可能来源包括1名患者的血清反应阳性器官捐献者和2名患者的高危献血者。另外8名受者未发现明确的HIV-1感染源,其中3名在对献血者进行HIV-1抗体筛查后血清转化为HIV-1。肾移植受者中血清转化为HIV-1的情况比肝移植、心脏移植或多器官移植受者少见(P<0.02)。18名HIV-1血清反应阳性的移植受者中有9名(50%)在移植手术后平均6个月死亡,9名(50%)在移植后平均43个月仍存活。死亡患者中有3名和存活患者中有1名出现了类似艾滋病的疾病,包括肺孢子菌肺炎(3例)、粟粒性肺结核(1例)和复发性巨细胞病毒感染(1例)。这些数据表明,接受环孢素治疗的移植受者中HIV-1感染的病程并不比其他宿主更严重,而且尽管对血液和器官捐献者进行了筛查,但仍有少数移植受者会感染HIV-1。