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The effect of low-dose aciclovir on reactivation of varicella zoster virus after allogeneic haemopoietic stem cell transplantation.

Thomson KJ, Hart DP, Banerjee L, Ward KN, Peggs KS, Mackinnon S

Department of Haematology, University College London Hospitals, 98 Chenies Mews, London WC1E 6HX, UK. kirsty.thomson@uclh.org

Patients undergoing haemopoietic stem cell transplants (HSCT) are at high risk of varicella zoster virus (VZV) reactivation, with a significant incidence of dissemination. This study reports a retrospective analysis of 247 allogeneic HSCT recipients receiving anti-viral prophylaxis with low-dose oral aciclovir 400 mg/day, administered until immunosuppression was discontinued and the CD4(+) cell count exceeded 200/mm(3). Viral reactivation was successfully suppressed by aciclovir prophylaxis, with only one case of breakthrough infection. The cumulative incidence of zoster infection at 1 year post transplant was 2% and at 5 years 34%. In all, 64 patients discontinued prophylaxis. Zoster developed in 26 of these, giving a cumulative incidence of infection at 1 year after stopping aciclovir of 39% and at 3 years 44%. Infection occurred in a localised dermatomal distribution in 93% of cases. This supports previous findings that aciclovir prophylaxis prevents early VZV reactivation, although the long-term incidence is not affected as infection occurs once prophylaxis is discontinued. Such infection, however, is mild and localised. This study does not support the idea that use of such low-dose aciclovir regimens reduces the zoster incidence by permitting subclinical reactivation during prophylaxis, and therefore the re-establishment of protective anti-viral immunity.

Published 18 May 2005 in Bone Marrow Transplant, 35(11): 1065-9.
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