Respiratory viral infections within one year after pediatric lung transplant

: To characterize epidemiology and risk factors for respiratory viral infections (RVI) in pediatric lung transplant recipients within the first post‐transplant year, a retrospective multicenter study of pediatric lung transplant recipients from 1988 to 2005 was conducted at 14 centers in the United...

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Veröffentlicht in:Transplant infectious disease 2009-08, Vol.11 (4), p.304-312
Hauptverfasser: Liu, M., Worley, S., Arrigain, S., Aurora, P., Ballmann, M., Boyer, D., Conrad, C., Eichler, I., Elidemir, O., Goldfarb, S., Mallory, G.B., Mogayzel, P.J., Parakininkas, D., Visner, G., Sweet, S., Faro, A., Michaels, M., Danziger-Isakov, L.A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:: To characterize epidemiology and risk factors for respiratory viral infections (RVI) in pediatric lung transplant recipients within the first post‐transplant year, a retrospective multicenter study of pediatric lung transplant recipients from 1988 to 2005 was conducted at 14 centers in the United States and Europe. Data were recorded for 1 year post transplant. Associations between RVI and continuous and categorical risk factors were assessed using Wilcoxon's rank‐sum and χ2 tests, respectively. Associations between time to RVI and risk factors or survival were assessed by multivariable Cox proportional hazards models. Of 576 subjects, 79 subjects (14%) had 101 RVI in the first year post transplant. Subjects with RVI were younger than those without RVI (median ages 9.7, 13; P
ISSN:1398-2273
1399-3062
DOI:10.1111/j.1399-3062.2009.00397.x