Objective: To report the clinical and histopathologic characteristics of BK virus (BKV) retinitis.
Design: Case report.
Testing: The clinical features of bilateral retinitis in a 29-year-old homosexual white male with the acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) included focal, mottled fundus pigmentation, and haloes, as documented by fundus photography. After death of the patient, the left eye was studied by light microscopic and immunohistochemical examination. The nested polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was used to detect viral deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) in the right eye and other nonocular tissues. The specificity was then confirmed by restriction enzyme analysis.
Results: The retina of the left eye showed focal necrosis and contained cells with intranuclear staining for the BKV VP1 protein. In the right eye, BKV DNA was detected in the retina and other tissues by nested PCR. Autopsy showed that BKV infection was also present in the brain, kidneys, and peripheral blood mononuclear cells.
Conclusions: A number of pathogens may cause retinitis in patients with AIDS. The authors have shown that BKV should be included among those pathogens and that some clinical features may suggest the presence of BKV retinitis.