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Τετάρτη 4 Ιουλίου 2018

Donor Derived Viral Infections in Liver Transplantation

Donor-derived infections are defined as any infection present in the donor that is transmitted to 1 or more recipients. Donor-derived infections can be categorized into 2 groups: 'expected' and 'unexpected' infections. Expected transmissions occur when the donor is known to have an infection, such as positive serology for CMV, EBV or hepatitis B core antibody, at the time of donation. Unexpected transmissions occur when a donor has no known infection prior to donation, but 1 or more transplant recipients develop an infection derived from the common donor. Unexpected infections are estimated to occur in far less than 1% of solid organ transplant recipients. We will review the epidemiology, risk factors and approaches to prevention and management of donor-derived viral infectious disease transmission in liver transplantation. *Co-First Authors Corresponding Author: Michael G. Ison, MD MS FIDSA FAST, Divisions of Infectious Diseases and Organ Transplantation, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, 645 N Michigan Avenue Suite 900, Chicago, Illinois 60611, 312-695-4186 (Office), 312-695-5088 (Fax). mgison@northwestern.edu Authorship Page Hannah Nam, MD and Kathy M Nilles, MD are co-first authors. Both have made substantial contributions in gathering information necessary in drafting the article, participated in writing the article, and revised it critically for important intellectual content. Josh Levitsky, MD MS and Michael G Ison, MD MS have revised the article critically for important intellectual content and gave final approval of the version to be submitted, as well as any revised versions. Disclosures: HN and KMN have nothing to disclose. JL is a paid speaker for Gilead and Novartis. MGI has received support for research, paid to Northwestern University from Beckman Coulter, Cephied, Chimerix, Emergent BioScience, Gilead, Janssen, and Shire; compensated consultation from Chimerix, Celltrion, Genentech/Roche, MediVector, Seqirus, Shionogi, and VirBio; and paid membership of DSMB from GlaxoSmithKlein, Shionogi. Copyright © 2018 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.

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