Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Varicella and Zoster in Children After Kidney Transplantation: Long-term Results of Vaccination
View through CrossRef
Objective. To determine the long-term prevalence of varicella infection and herpes zoster after kidney transplantation and to assess the effectiveness of varicella immunization with the Oka attenuated strain.
Methods. This study involved 704 children and adolescents who received a kidney graft in our institution from 1973 to 1994 and had routinely been given varicella vaccine beginning in 1980 in preparation for transplantation.
Results. After vaccination 62% of these patients still had varicella/zoster (VZ) antibodies at 1 year and 42% after 10 years. After transplantation the incidence of varicella was significantly lower, 26/212 (12%), in patients who received immunization than in those who did not and had no history of varicella, 22/49 (45%). The disease was also significantly less severe in the vaccinated patients (three deaths among naive patients vs none among vaccinees). In the vaccinees, varicella infection was observed only in those who did not develop or lost VZ antibodies; in addition, 21 patients of this subgroup had an asymptomatic seroconversion. Four of the 415 patients with a history of varicella had another episode of benign varicella after grafting. Herpes zoster was observed in 76 of the 704 patients included in the study. The prevalence differed according to VZ status at the time of grafting: 13% in patients with a history of varicella, 7% in the vaccinees, and 38% in the naive patients at grafting who developed varicella. Three rejection episodes occurred in association with a varicella episode and four with a zoster episode, but graft function was only transiently impaired, and as a whole varicella or zoster did not significantly affect graft function or survival.
Conclusion. Naive VZ patients with a kidney graft are at risk to develop severe varicella and this may be effectively prevented by available immunization.
American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)
Title: Varicella and Zoster in Children After Kidney Transplantation: Long-term Results of Vaccination
Description:
Objective.
To determine the long-term prevalence of varicella infection and herpes zoster after kidney transplantation and to assess the effectiveness of varicella immunization with the Oka attenuated strain.
Methods.
This study involved 704 children and adolescents who received a kidney graft in our institution from 1973 to 1994 and had routinely been given varicella vaccine beginning in 1980 in preparation for transplantation.
Results.
After vaccination 62% of these patients still had varicella/zoster (VZ) antibodies at 1 year and 42% after 10 years.
After transplantation the incidence of varicella was significantly lower, 26/212 (12%), in patients who received immunization than in those who did not and had no history of varicella, 22/49 (45%).
The disease was also significantly less severe in the vaccinated patients (three deaths among naive patients vs none among vaccinees).
In the vaccinees, varicella infection was observed only in those who did not develop or lost VZ antibodies; in addition, 21 patients of this subgroup had an asymptomatic seroconversion.
Four of the 415 patients with a history of varicella had another episode of benign varicella after grafting.
Herpes zoster was observed in 76 of the 704 patients included in the study.
The prevalence differed according to VZ status at the time of grafting: 13% in patients with a history of varicella, 7% in the vaccinees, and 38% in the naive patients at grafting who developed varicella.
Three rejection episodes occurred in association with a varicella episode and four with a zoster episode, but graft function was only transiently impaired, and as a whole varicella or zoster did not significantly affect graft function or survival.
Conclusion.
Naive VZ patients with a kidney graft are at risk to develop severe varicella and this may be effectively prevented by available immunization.
Related Results
Exploring Varicella Vaccine Coverage and Influencing Factors in Rural and Pastoral Children of Qinghai Province: A Cross-Sectional Catch-Up Vaccination Study
Exploring Varicella Vaccine Coverage and Influencing Factors in Rural and Pastoral Children of Qinghai Province: A Cross-Sectional Catch-Up Vaccination Study
<i>Background: </i>Varicella is a respiratory infectious disease caused by varicella-zoster virus (VZV) infection. Varicella vaccine has been shown to b...
#6: Varicella Outbreak Investigation in a Cancer Hospital
#6: Varicella Outbreak Investigation in a Cancer Hospital
Abstract
Background
Primary varicella infection is usually self-limited in immunocompetent hosts, whereas it can be quite severe...
Universal varicella vaccination in Denmark: Modeling public health impact, age-shift, and cost-effectiveness
Universal varicella vaccination in Denmark: Modeling public health impact, age-shift, and cost-effectiveness
We modeled the long-term clinical and economic impact of two-dose universal varicella vaccination (UVV) strategies in Denmark using a dynamic transmission model. The cost-effective...
Characteristic of Herpes Zoster in the Elderly at Prof. Dr. I.G.N.G. Ngoerah General Hospital: An Epidemiologic Study
Characteristic of Herpes Zoster in the Elderly at Prof. Dr. I.G.N.G. Ngoerah General Hospital: An Epidemiologic Study
Background: Herpes zoster is a disease caused by the reactivation of the latent varicella zoster virus. Herpes zoster is the most common infection found in the elderly population. ...
HERPES ZOSTER OF TRIGEMINAL NERVE
HERPES ZOSTER OF TRIGEMINAL NERVE
Varicella zoster virus (VZV) is the causative agent for Herpes Zoster. Varicella-zoster virus reactivates from its latent state in posterior dorsal ganglion results in its spread f...
1452. A Clinico-Epidemiological Study of Childhood Herpes Zoster
1452. A Clinico-Epidemiological Study of Childhood Herpes Zoster
Abstract
Background
Herpes Zoster (HZ) is a viral infection believed to be due to re-activation of Varicella zoster virus (VZV) ...
COPD and Herpes Zoster: Risk and Immunization
COPD and Herpes Zoster: Risk and Immunization
Varicella Zoster is a neurotropic virus which leads to acute varicella
or it may lay dormant in the spinal root ganglion. Reactivation of
varicella zoster causes Herpes Zoster (HZ)...
Chickenpox in pregnancy
Chickenpox in pregnancy
Varicella, the number one contamination with varicella-zoster virus (VZV; human herpes virus) in pregnancy, might also cause maternal mortality or extreme morbidity. It may also be...

