Frequent occurrence of cytomegalovirus retinitis during immune reconstitution warrants regular ophthalmic screening in high-risk pediatric allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant recipients

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Abstract

Background. Although cytomegalovirus (CMV) retinitis (CMVR) is a well-recognized complication after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT), standard operating procedures for ophthalmic monitoring are variable. In particular, authors perceived a greater risk of CMVR after pediatric HSCT for inherited immunodeficiencies, in patients who often have pretransplantation viremia. This study was therefore performed to identify high-risk pediatric HSCT recipients who would benefit from regular ophthalmic monitoring.Methods. During a 5-year study period, we retrospectively analyzed findings in 56 of 304 consecutive HSCT recipients (age range, 0.5-197 months) in whom significant CMV viremia developed (CMV level at PCR, ≥4000 copies/mL). All HSCT recipients with significant CMV viremia underwent retinal examination weekly (inpatients) or every other week (outpatients), with examinations performed by a skilled ophthalmologist.Results. CMVR developed in 13 (4%) of 304 HSCT recipients, 23% (13 of 56) of those with significant CMV viremia. Pretransplant viremia (odds ratio, 11.3; P

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Hiwarkar, P., Gajdosova, E., Qasim, W., Worth, A., Breuer, J., Chiesa, R., … Rao, K. (2014). Frequent occurrence of cytomegalovirus retinitis during immune reconstitution warrants regular ophthalmic screening in high-risk pediatric allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant recipients. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 58(12), 1700–1706. https://doi.org/10.1093/cid/ciu201

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