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Norovirus and sapovirus infections after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation: is it worth it to look for them?

Arthur MageauKatia Ambert-BalayDavid BoutolleauIsabelle SchuffeneckerSonia BurelJérome KaplonStéphanie Nguyen QuocMadalina UzunovLaetitia SouchetAlexis de RougemontDamien Roos-WeilMarine Baron
Published in: Leukemia & lymphoma (2023)
Norovirus (NoV) and Sapovirus (SaV) are potential causative agents of diarrhea after allogeneic HSCT but little is known in this population. We performed a retrospective analysis by RT-PCR of calicivirus (NoV and SaV), Human adenovirus (HAdV), rotavirus (RV), Aichi virus (AiV), enterovirus (EV), human parechovirus (HPeV) and Human bocavirus (HBoV) in the diarrheal stools of patients after allogeneic HSCT. 49/162 patients had positive viral assays: HAdV (17%), EV (7%), NoV (4.3%), RV and HBoV (3.1% each), SaV (1.9%), AiV (1.2%), HPeV (0.6%). Seven patients were positive for NoV and 3 for SaV. Among viruses-positive samples, the frequency of caliciviruses cases was 7% in the 6 months post-HSCT compared to 40% after ( p  < 0.0001). The median duration of symptom was 0.7 months but 2 cases, occurring more than one year after HSCT, were chronic, undiagnosed and strongly contributed to morbidity. Systematic testing of caliciviruses appears especially useful in late chronic diarrhea.
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