Author/Authors :
Duarte, I Department of Medicine - Centro Hospitalar Universitário Lisboa Norte - Lisbon, Portugal , Gameiro, J Department of Medicine - Centro Hospitalar Universitário Lisboa Norte - Lisbon, Portugal , Outerelo, C Department of Medicine - Centro Hospitalar Universitário Lisboa Norte - Lisbon, Portugal , Nogueira, E Department of Medicine - Centro Hospitalar Universitário Lisboa Norte - Lisbon, Portugal , Lopes, J. A Department of Medicine - Centro Hospitalar Universitário Lisboa Norte - Lisbon, Portugal
Abstract :
Anemia is a common finding after kidney transplantation (KT). Herein, we present a 34-year-old
man who received a deceased-donor KT in 2017. Induction immunosuppression therapy consisted
of thymoglobulin, tacrolimus (TAC) and methylprednisolone; the maintenance therapy included
mycophenolate (MMF) 500 + 500 mg, TAC 4 + 4 mg and prednisolone (PD) 5 mg. One year
after KT, he progressively developed dyspnea and fatigue. Laboratory exams revealed hypochromic
microcytic anemia unresponsive to increasing doses of darbepoetin. Upper endoscopy and
colonoscopy were normal. Bone marrow examination revealed erythroid hyperplasia with numerous
proerythroblasts. Serology and viral load for human parvovirus B19 were both positive.
Immunosuppression was reduced; he was treated with immunoglobulin. After one week, anemia
improved. After 2 months the patient remained asymptomatic with stable hemoglobin. Although
rare, PVB19 infection is a clinically significant infection that often presents as aplastic anemia in
the post-transplantation period.