Antibody maturation and viremia after primary cytomegalovirus infection, in immunocompetent patients and kidney-transplant patients

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Abstract

To investigate antibody maturation and serum levels of cytomegalovirus (CMV) DNA after primary CMV infection, we studied 51 immunocompetent and 27 kidney-transplant patients. Compared with the immunocompetent patients, the transplant patients had significantly more-prolonged and -variable antibody maturation, clearly longer durations of viremia, and higher levels of CMV DNA; however, antibody maturation continued for >1 year even in immunocompetent patients. Long-term ganciclovir prophylaxis in the transplant patients was associated with either delayed immunoglobulin-G seroconversion, inhibition of antibody maturation (n = 2), or immunoglobulin-class switching (n = 1). In conclusion, antibody maturation continues in immunocompetent patients for a period longer than previously had been thought and is significantly delayed or even inhibited in kidney-transplant patients.

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Steininger, C., Kundi, M., Kletzmayr, J., Aberle, S. W., & Popow-Kraupp, T. (2004). Antibody maturation and viremia after primary cytomegalovirus infection, in immunocompetent patients and kidney-transplant patients. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 190(11), 1908–1912. https://doi.org/10.1086/424677

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