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BK Virus Nephropathy: Histological Evolution by Sequential Pathology
Authors:B. J. Nankivell  J. Renthawa  R. N. Sharma  K. Kable  P. J. O'Connell  J. R. Chapman
Affiliation:1. Department of Renal Medicine, Westmead Hospital, Westmead, Australia;2. Department of Tissue Pathology and Diagnostic Oncology, ICPMR, Sydney, Australia
Abstract:Reactivation of BK virus in renal allografts causes a destructive chronic infection. This single‐center retrospective cohort study describes the evolution of BK virus allograft nephropathy (BKVAN) from 63 kidneys (from 61 patients) using sequential histopathology (454 biopsies, averaging 7.8 ± 2.6 per kidney) followed for 60.1 mo. Uninfected protocol biopsies formulated time‐matched control Banff scores (n = 975). Interstitial inflammation occurred in 73% at diagnosis, correlating with viral histopathology (r = 0.413, p = 0.008) and amplifying early injury with accelerated interstitial fibrosis and tubular atrophy (IF/TA, p = 0.017) by 3 mo. Prodromal simian virus 40 large T antigen (SV40T)–negative inflammation with viremia preceded the histological diagnosis in 23.8%. Persistent subacute injury from viral cytopathic effect was associated with acute tubular necrosis and ongoing interstitial inflammation, culminating in IF/TA in 86.9%. Overall, cellular interstitial infiltration mitigated the intensity of subsequent tubular injury, SV40T, and tissue viral load, assessed by sequential paired histology (p < 0.001). Graft loss was predicted by high‐level viremia (hazard ratio [HR] 4.996, 95% CI 2.19–11.396, p < 0.001), deceased donor (HR 3.201, 95% CI 1.149–8.915, p = 0.026), and late acute rejection (HR 3.124, 95% CI 1.037–9.413, p = 0.043). Transplant failure occurred in 38.1%, with uncontrolled infection (58.3%) and SV40T‐negative chronic rejection (41.7%) causing losses. BKVAN is characterized by subacute virus‐induced tubular injury, inflammation, and progressive nephron destruction. Effective antiviral therapy remains an unmet clinical need.
Keywords:clinical research/practice  infectious disease  kidney transplantation/nephrology  pathology/histopathology  complication: infectious  infection and infectious agents  viral: BK/JC/polyoma
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