They prescribed Valcyte for six months post transplant. It is an anti viral infection preventative/treatment that is supposed to give your body time to develop antibodies to the virus. It is an expensive drug costing over $2,000 a month.
Did they check you and you dad for CMV before the transplant? Most adults have CMV (can be active or latent) so Jenna's transplant team treats routinely immediately following the transplant.Here's more general info: http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/heic/ID/CMV/.
I had CMV many years after my first transplant, and let me say, it was miserable!!!
I landed in hospital last Monday with what I thought was gastro. Renal docs, upon hearing of my fever, suspected CMV and had me admitted to the ward. I was treated intensely for CMV for days, awaiting various test results. I felt lousier than I can remember feeling in a loooong time, if ever. Cut a long story short - it wasn't CMV. I had noravirus (sp?) a type of gastro which is in epidemic proportions around Australia right now. The dehydration on Monday sent my creatinine up to 186, which - along with the possibility of CMV infection - put me in a state of abject terror. On Wednesday, my husband also came down sick, presumably with the same virus. So he had to stay home and could not come to visit me. I was in an isolated room to prevent the spread of the infection around the hospital (as they have already had whole wards shut down because of it). So, stuck in a closed room, with no visitors - I just sat there and bawled for a few days. It was boring, lonely and frightening. Perhaps I was overreacting, who knows. But I'm home now, and feeling very well. So all is good.