P-2152. Adenovirus Viremia in Adults: Clinical Syndromes, Risk Factors, and Outcomes
Abdallah Mughrabi, Douglas Challener, Madiha Fida, Raymund R Razonable, Omar M Abu Saleh

TL;DR
This study examines adenovirus viremia in adults, finding that those with end-organ disease face worse outcomes, including higher mortality and ICU admission.
Contribution
The study identifies risk factors and outcomes of adenovirus viremia in immunocompromised adults, particularly those with end-organ disease.
Findings
End-organ disease (EOD) was more common in older patients and those with higher initial viral load.
Patients with EOD had significantly higher mortality and ICU admission rates compared to those without EOD.
Corticosteroid use, HSCT, and SOT were the most common immunocompromising conditions in the cohort.
Abstract
Adenovirus is a ubiquitous dsDNA virus with potential for end-organ disease. End-organ or disseminated adenoviral disease (EOD) occurs more frequently in hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) and solid organ transplant (SOT) recipients. We aim to characterize the clinical manifestations and outcome of adenovirus viremia in adults, including HSCT and SOT recipients. We describe severity of illness, organ-involvement, and graft and patient survival. This retrospective, multi-site, study enrolled adults patients with positive adenovirus PCR in blood and other clinical specimens from January, 2010 through April, 2025. We excluded patients with insufficient medical records, follow up less than 30 days, and isolated conjunctivitis without viremia. EOD was defined by the presence of clinical signs or symptoms consistent with organ involvement, confirmed by a positive adenovirus PCR or by…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVirus-based gene therapy research · Cytomegalovirus and herpesvirus research · Respiratory viral infections research
