Impact of high-dose oral acyclovir prophylaxis on cytomegalovirus (CMV) disease in CMV high-risk renal transplant recipients.

Abstract
Recent studies showed contradictory results concerning the efficacy of oral acyclovir in the prevention or amelioration of cytomegalovirus (CMV) disease after renal transplantation (TX). This study evaluated the incidence and severity of CMV disease within the first year after TX in high-risk renal transplant recipients (CMV-seropositive donor, seronegative recipient) treated prophylactically with oral acyclovir (800 to 3200 mg/day) over a period of 12 wk (ACY, N = 22), compared with high-risk patients randomly assigned as controls (CO, N = 10). Follow-up for CMV infection included serological determination of CMV-specific immunoglobulin G and immunoglobulin M antibodies, antigen detection in peripheral blood leukocytes (PP 65), shell vial culture (blood), and virus isolation/early antigen detection (urine). Severity of CMV disease was quantified by a scoring system for CMV-related symptoms. Nine patients (40.1%) in the acyclovir group and four patients (40%) in the control group developed CMV disease. Neither severity (ACY, 11.4 versus CO; 12.5 points score), nor duration of disease (ACY, 21 days; CO, 22 days), nor transplant function at the end of the observation period differed significantly. The onst of CMV disease was not delayed significantly in acyclovir-treated patients compared with controls (ACY, 47 +/- 34 days versus CO, 27 +/- 14 days after TX, not significant). Our results show no beneficial effect of oral acyclovir prophylaxis in CMV high-risk renal transplant recipients.