Infection Impacts dd-cfDNA in Lung Transplant Recipients
American Journal of Transplantation
; 22(Supplement 3):352, 2022.
Article
in English
| EMBASE | ID: covidwho-2063369
ABSTRACT
Purpose:
Infection is the leading cause of death within 1 year post lung transplant. Graft injury secondary to infection is affected by both source and organism. Donor derived cell-free DNA (dd-cfDNA) is a consistent marker of graft injury, but previously reported dd-cfDNA levels with infections have been inconsistent. We compared dd-cfDNA concentrations across different infection types. Method(s) We reviewed infections in lung transplant recipients (LTR) between 5/2019-6/2021 with paired dd-cfDNA at time of infection. All were confirmed infections (i.e. requiring therapy). Infection source (respiratory vs non-respiratory) and organism were collected. Samples were excluded if there was concurrent ACR, AMR or CLAD at time of dd-cfDNA. The primary endpoint was dd-cfDNA levels across cohorts. Result(s) Fifty paired samples from 20 LTR were identified;31 samples were excluded due to concurrent diagnoses. Infections included viral (n=18, 36%), bacterial (n=18, 36%), and fungal (n=10, 20%). Four cultures (8%) had multiple organisms. Most common within each group were CMV (n=4) and COVID (n=4) for viral, Pseudomonas aeruginosa (n=4) for bacterial, and Aspergillus (n=7) for fungal. Median dd-cfDNA was 1.30% in viral infections, 1.93% in bacterial, and 0.99% in fungal;respiratory infections (n=42) was 1.42% and 0.95% in non-respiratory (n=8). Conclusion(s) There was a statistically significant increase in dd-cfDNA between each infection compared to a normal cohort, but no statistical differences between infection groups. The trend towards significance of respiratory vs non-respiratory indicates that dd-cfDNA may be a useful marker of injury specific to the graft caused by infection. Further investigation with serial samples prior to and following treatment of the infection will be important to better understand this trend. (Figure Presented).
Full text:
Available
Collection:
Databases of international organizations
Database:
EMBASE
Type of study:
Experimental Studies
Language:
English
Journal:
American Journal of Transplantation
Year:
2022
Document Type:
Article
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