Frontiers in Medicine (Feb 2022)

A Nomogram for Predicting BK Virus Activation in Kidney Transplantation Recipients Using Clinical Risk Factors

  • Jiyan Wang,
  • Jiyan Wang,
  • Jiawei Li,
  • Jiawei Li,
  • Zhongli Chen,
  • Ming Xu,
  • Ming Xu,
  • Cheng Yang,
  • Cheng Yang,
  • Cheng Yang,
  • Ruiming Rong,
  • Ruiming Rong,
  • Ruiming Rong,
  • Tongyu Zhu,
  • Tongyu Zhu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2022.770699
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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BK virus is a common opportunistic viral infection that could cause BK virus-associated nephropathy in renal transplant recipients. Thus, we retrospectively analyzed clinical and laboratory data associated with a higher risk of BK virus activation from 195 renal transplant recipients by the multivariate logistic regression analysis and performed the external validation. Results showed that patients with BK virus active infection were associated with a deceased donor, had lower direct bilirubin levels, a higher proportion of albumin in serum protein electrophoresis, and lower red blood cells and neutrophil counts. The multivariate logistic regression analyses revealed that the living donor, direct bilirubin, and neutrophil counts were significantly associated with BK virus activation. The logistic regression model displayed a modest discriminability with the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of 0.689 (95% CI: 0.607–0.771; P < 0.01) and also demonstrated a good performance in the external validation dataset (the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve was 0.699, 95% CI: 0.5899–0.8081). The novel predictive nomogram achieved a good prediction of BK virus activation in kidney transplant recipients.

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