Use of Cytomegalovirus Immune Globulin to Prevent Cytomegalovirus Disease in Renal-Transplant Recipients

We undertook a prospective randomized trial to examine whether an intravenous cytomegalovirus (CMV) immune globulin would prevent primary CMV disease in renal-transplant recipients. Fifty-nine CMV-seronegative patients who received kidneys from donors who had antibodies against CMV were assigned to...

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Veröffentlicht in:The New England journal of medicine 1987-10, Vol.317 (17), p.1049-1054
Hauptverfasser: Snydman, David R, Werner, Barbara G, Heinze-Lacey, Beverly, Berardi, Victor P, Tilney, Nicholas L, Kirkman, Robert L, Milford, Edgar L, Cho, Sang I, Bush, Harry L, Levey, Andrew S, Levey, Raphael H, Strom, Terry B, Carpenter, Charles B, Harmon, William E, Zimmerman, Clarence E, Shapiro, Michael E, Steinman, Theodore, LoGerfo, Frank, Idelson, Beldon, Schröter, Gerhard P.J, Levin, Myron J, McIver, James, Leszczynski, Jeanne, Grady, George F
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We undertook a prospective randomized trial to examine whether an intravenous cytomegalovirus (CMV) immune globulin would prevent primary CMV disease in renal-transplant recipients. Fifty-nine CMV-seronegative patients who received kidneys from donors who had antibodies against CMV were assigned to receive either intravenous CMV immune globulin or no treatment. The immune globulin was administered in multiple doses over the first four months after transplantation. The incidence of virologically confirmed CMV-associated syndromes was reduced from 60 percent in controls to 21 percent in recipients of CMV immune globulin (P
ISSN:0028-4793
1533-4406
DOI:10.1056/NEJM198710223171703