• J. Neurol. Neurosurg. Psychiatr. · Aug 2003

    Case Reports

    Post-transplantation HTLV-1 myelopathy in three recipients from a single donor.

    • J J Zarranz Imirizaldu, J C Gomez Esteban, I Rouco Axpe, T Perez Concha, F Velasco Juanes, I Allue Susaeta, and J M Corral Carranceja.
    • Department of Neurology, Hospital of Cruces, s/n CP 48903 Baracaldo, Vizcaya, Spain.
    • J. Neurol. Neurosurg. Psychiatr. 2003 Aug 1; 74 (8): 1080-4.

    ObjectivesThis paper reports for the first time three cases of infection by HTLV-I via organ transplantation; all the organs coming from the same asymptomatic infected donor. The need is considered for the implementation of compulsory screenings for HTLV antibodies on organ donors and on blood banks.MethodsThe determination of antibodies for HTLV-I/II on samples of serum and cerebral spinal fluid from the patients and the donor was performed by enzyme immunoassay and western blot. Analysis of proviral DNA was performed by polymerase chain reaction. To detect changes in the sequence of amino acids, the tax gene was sequentiated, amplified, and compared with ATK prototype stocks. Spinal cord magnetic resonance imaging, cerebral spinal fluid, and somatosensory evoked potential studies were carried out in all patients.ResultsAll three transplanted patients developed a myelopathy within a very short period of time. In all three patients and donor the virus belonged to the Cosmopolitan A subtype. The homology of HTLV-I sequences recovered from the patients and donor was 100% in all four cases. Proviral load was high in all three patients. The factors that certainly contributed to the infection in the first place, and the development of the disease later, were on the one hand the high proviral load and their immunosuppressed condition, and on the other the virus genotype, which proved to be an aggressive variant. However, the analysis of the histocompatibility antigen showed that two of the patients carried an haplotype that has been associated with a lower risk of developing this disease.ConclusionsIt is argued that, although in Spain and other European countries there is not compulsory screening for HTLV antibodies because of the studies that show a low seroprevalence, in view of the cases here reported, and to avoid the serious consequences that such infection has on transplanted patients, compulsory screenings, both on organ donors and on blood banks, should be implemented.

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