Abstract
In 73 consecutive kidney transplant recipients, anti-Toxoplasma antibodies were determined before transplantation and during a 3-year follow-up after transplantation. In 9 patients, antibody titers increased significantly after transplantation. Antibody titers to various viral antigens determined in parallel remained unchanged, suggesting that the anti-Toxoplasma antibody increase was not due to polyclonal nonspecific stimulation. In 2 of the 24 pretransplant seronegative patients, acquired toxoplasmosis was diagnosed serologically after transplantation, with the observation of a strong IgM and IgG antibody response. The incidence of toxoplasmosis in this group of patients was not found to be significantly different from that in a normal population, suggesting that transmission of Toxoplasma from the transplanted kidney may not be a significant mode of contamination. Among the 49 patients who were seropositive before transplantation, reactivation of toxoplasmosis was suspected in 7 cases on the basis of a significant increase in IgG antibodies. Reactivation occurred more frequently in patients treated with azathioprine and antithymocyte globulin, and a direct relationship between administration of steroids and antibody increase was demonstrated in three patients. Although toxoplasmosis has occasionally been reported as a major infectious problem in kidney transplant recipients, our clinical and serological data show that the potential risk of developing Toxoplasma infection is low since none of the patients with either acquired or reactivated toxoplasmosis developed clinical disease.
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