TB Research

Donor-Derived Tuberculosis in 3 Solid Organ Transplant Recipients From the Same Donor.

Paulina Vega, Renee Newby, Rachel A Bender Ignacio, Cynthia E Fisher, Eleanor Oken, Jack W Harbell, Girish K Mour, Jamilah Shubeilat, et al. (16 authors)

Open forum infectious diseases · 2025-07

Abstract

Donor-derived tuberculosis is a rare complication following solid organ transplantation, and tuberculosis screening is not a current transplant prerequisite for most donors. Donor-derived tuberculosis usually presents sooner than reactivation tuberculosis, and the most common finding is fever. We present 3 cases of donor-derived tuberculosis in the recipients of 2 kidneys and 1 liver from the same donor, who presented with unexplained fevers occurring 4-5 weeks after transplantation. Initial antibacterial therapy failed in all 3 patients, leading to further testing, which identifiedby culture and molecular studies. All recipients successfully received tuberculosis therapy but had significant morbidity and prolonged hospital stays. Donor-derived tuberculosis should be among the differential diagnoses of unexplained fever in solid organ transplant recipients in the first few months after transplantation. Screening protocols should be implemented for donors with an epidemiologic risk of tuberculosis, with special emphasis on deceased donors.