Serum antibody as a marker of protection against natural rotavirus infection and disease

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Abstract

A retrospective study was performed on a selected cohort of 40 liver transplant recipients derived from the previous prospective follow-up of 162 liver transplant patients. The criterion for selection of this cohort was the presence of human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) DNAemia after transplantation, as determined by qualitative polymerase chain reaction (PCR). These 40 patients were followed longitudinally by quantitative PCR and by the new recombinant antigen-based AxSYM immunoassay for IgM to HCMV. The detection of IgM to CMV after transplantation was significantly associated with the development of HCMV disease in patients who had evidence of active HCMV replication in the blood by PCR (P = .01). On the basis of multivariate logistic regression analyses, the maximum titer of IgM detected after transplantation was a risk factor that was independent of augmented methylprednisolone and donor seropositivity. However, in multivariate analyses, elevated virus load continued to be the predominant risk factor for progression to HCMV disease. © Oxford University Press 2001.

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Emery, V. C., Cope, A. V., Sabin, C. A., Burroughs, A. K., Rolles, K., Lazzarotto, T., … Maine, G. T. (2000). Serum antibody as a marker of protection against natural rotavirus infection and disease. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 182(6), 1602–1609. https://doi.org/10.1086/317619

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