Infections in solid-organ transplantation
From IDWiki
Pretransplant Screening
Donor screen
- Bacterial: syphilis, urine and blood cultures, bronchoalveolar lavage
- Viral: CMV, EBV, HIV, HBV, HCV, HSV, VZV, HTLV-1
- Other: Strongyloides stercoralis, Chagas disease (sometimes)
Recipient Screen
- Prednisone: TB/HBV/Strongyloides
- Fludarabine:
- Lasts 6-12 months after last dose
- Listeria, PCP, and Nocardia
- Rituximab: as well as B-cell, can allow HBV and PJP infections
- Adalimumab: T-cell deficiency for months after last dose
- TNF-α inhibitors: similar to prednisone
Post-Transplant Infections
Early Infections (≤30 days)
- Major risk factor is T-cell deficit, more than than B-cell deficit
- Surgical site infection
- Bacterial
- Fungal: Aspergillus and Mucorales
- Organ-specific
- Cardiac
- LVAD infection
- Mycobacterial infection (very late)
- Lungs
- Donor-derived VAP
- Anastomotic infection, including fungal
- Liver: anastamotic leak, including VRE peritonitis
- Cardiac
- Hospital-acquired: central line infections and resistant organisms
- Donor-derived bacterial infections, including syphilis
Late Infections (30 days to 3-6 months)
- Major risk factor is T-cell deficit, more than B-cell deficit
- Occur as your withdraw prophylactic antimicrobials
- Reactivation infections
Very Late Infections (>6 months)
- B-cell deficits and variable T-cell deficits
- Usually regular community-acquired infections, but more severe