Abstract

Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) is a member of the herpesvirus family and represents a major human pathogen causing severe disease in newborns and immunocompromised patients, e.g., organ transplant recipients and patients with AIDS. One characteristic of herpesviruses is their ability to establish lifelong latency in their hosts; thus, reactivation during immunosuppression leads to recurrent episodes of disease. In several recent reports, it has been shown that HCMV infection may occur in patients with malignancy. This study focused on HCMV infection in patients with multiple myeloma (MM). In order to determine the IgM and IgG humoral immune response, sera from MM patients and healthy donors were analyzed with an accredited immunoblot test, and the IgM response was analyzed with an accredited enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. A response against HCMV was detected in 80% of the MM patients. While the IgG pattern varied in each patient, the most prominent IgM response was against the tegument protein pp150 and two nonstructural proteins, the processivity factor (pUL44) and the single-stranded DNA binding protein (pUL57). An IgG avidity test revealed that 4 out of 20 MM patients had a fresh infection and 2 MM patients had a recent infection. The combination of IgG avidity and the IgM pattern will be a useful tool for reliable clinical diagnostics concerning HCMV and for application of early therapy for those MM patients suffering from a high viral load.

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