Journal of Medical Case Reports (May 2017)

BK polyomavirus nephropathy in two kidney transplant patients with distinct diagnostic strategies for BK virus and similar clinical outcomes: two case reports

  • Ana Luisa Figueira Gouvêa,
  • Rachel Ingrid Juliboni Cosendey,
  • Ana Lucia Rosa Nascimento,
  • Fabiana Rabe Carvalho,
  • Andrea Alice Silva,
  • Heleno Pinto de Moraes,
  • Mayra Carrijo Rochael,
  • Rafael Brandão Varella,
  • Stephanie Gomes Almeida,
  • Jorge Reis Almeida,
  • Jocemir Ronaldo Lugon

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13256-017-1300-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 6

Abstract

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Abstract Background BK polyomavirus-associated nephropathy is an important cause of post-transplantation renal failure. We present two cases of BK polyomavirus-associated nephropathy who were submitted to contrasting strategies of clinical follow-up to BK polyomavirus reactivation, but progressed to a similar final outcome. Case presentation Case 1 is a 37-year-old white man whose graft had never presented a good glomerular filtration rate function, with episodes of tacrolimus nephrotoxicity, and no urinary monitoring for BK polyomavirus; stage B BK polyomavirus-associated nephropathy was diagnosed by biopsy at 14 months post-transplant. Despite clinical treatment (dosage decrease and immunosuppressive drug change), he progressed to stage C BK polyomavirus-associated nephropathy and loss of graft function 30 months post-transplant. Case 2 is a 49-year-old mulatto man in his second renal transplantation who was submitted to cytological urinary monitoring for BK polyomavirus; he presented early, persistent, and massive urinary decoy cell shedding and concomitant tacrolimus nephrotoxicity. Even with decreasing immunosuppression, he developed BK polyomavirus-associated nephropathy 1-year post-transplant. Loss of graft function occurred 15 months post-transplant. Conclusions Cytological urinary monitoring was an efficient strategy for monitoring BK virus reactivation. Decoy cell shedding may be related to BK polyomavirus-associated nephropathy when extensive and persistent. The presence of associated tacrolimus nephrotoxicity may be a confounding factor for the clinical diagnosis of BK polyomavirus-associated nephropathy.

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