Background: Campylobacteriosis in kidney transplant recipients (KTRs) is the most common identified bacterial cause of diarrhea. Risk factors in KTRs are unknown.
Methods: A 10-year multicentric, retrospective 1:1 case-control study was performed in France between 2010 and 2020. The main aim was to identify factors associated with Campylobacter-related infection in KTRs. The KTRs with a functional graft and campylobacteriosis (positive stool culture and/or blood culture and/or positive nucleic amplification test) and their controls matched on transplantation date within the same center were included.
Results: We identified 326 patients with campylobacteriosis. The estimated incidence rate of campylobacteriosis was 2.3/1000 patient-years. The infection occurred at a median of 2.4 years posttransplantation. The independent risk factors for campylobacteriosis were use of corticosteroids as maintenance regimen (75.8% vs 66%; P < .001), acute rejection (8.9% vs 4%; P = .048), low lymphocyte count (0.96 vs 1.4 giga/liter (G/L); P < .001), and low basal estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) (44.2 vs 57.5 mL/minute/1.73 m2; P < .001). A fluoroquinolone was initiated in 64 (21.4%) patients, with 51.1% of antimicrobial resistance, whereas almost all strains were erythromycin sensitive.
Conclusions: Campylobacteriosis has a higher incidence in the 2 first years of transplantation. The factors independently associated with campylobacteriosis are corticosteroids as maintenance immunosuppressive regimen, low lymphocyte counts, low eGFR, and a history of acute rejection. Due to high antimicrobial resistance with fluoroquinolone, the first line of treatment should be azithromycin.
Keywords: Campylobacter spp; Campylobacter-related infection; diarrhea; immunodepression; kidney transplant recipients.
© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Infectious Diseases Society of America.