Cytomegalovirus Infections and Toxoplasmosis in Heart Transplant Recipients in Sweden

Abstract
The morbidity of cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection and toxoplasmosis was evaluated in 75 heart transplant recipients. Among the 73 patients who survived more than one week after transplantation, 16 (22%) acquired primary CMV infection and 30 (41%) had evidence of secondary infection. All CMV seronegative recipients receiving hearts from seropositive donors developed CMV infection. The majority of infections (42/46) occurred during the first 4 months after transplantation. Overall, the incidence of symptomatic CMV disease was 44%. The infections were generally mild and only 1 death was attributed to primary CMV disease complicated by bacterial septicaemia and multiple organ failure. The severity of CMV disease was greatest among those with primary infection. There were 3 cases of toxoplasmosis. Two patients were toxoplasma seronegative before transplantation and developed clinical and serological signs of infection 2-3 months after transplantation despite receiving organs from seronegative donors. Of toxoplasma seronegative recipients receiving allografts from seropositive donors 3/4 were prophylactically treated with pyrimethamine for 6 weeks. None developed clinical or serological signs of toxoplasmosis while one patient who received trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole had a subclinical infection.