Antiviral medications for preventing cytomegalovirus disease in solid organ transplant recipients

May 3, 2024The Cochrane database of systematic reviews

Antiviral drugs to prevent cytomegalovirus infection in organ transplant patients

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Abstract

Prophylaxis with antiviral medications is associated with a 42% reduction in the risk of cytomegalovirus (CMV) disease in solid organ transplant recipients.

  • High-certainty evidence indicates that antiviral prophylaxis significantly lowers the risk of all-cause death (RR 0.63) and CMV infection (RR 0.61).
  • Moderate-certainty evidence suggests prophylaxis may reduce death specifically from CMV disease (RR 0.26).
  • Prophylaxis is linked to a reduction in other infections, such as herpes simplex and herpes zoster, while showing little to no effects on fungal infection, acute rejection, or graft loss.
  • Ganciclovir is found to be more effective than aciclovir for preventing CMV disease (RR 0.37).
  • Extended duration prophylaxis likely decreases the risk of CMV disease compared to a standard three-month treatment (RR 0.20).
  • Maribavir may increase the risk of CMV infection compared to ganciclovir, although there are no significant differences in other outcomes at six months.

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