COVID-19 in elderly kidney transplant recipients

Marta Crespo(Hospital Del Mar), María José Pérez‐Sáez(Hospital Del Mar), Dolores Redondo‐Pachón(Hospital Del Mar), Laura Llinàs-Mallol(Hospital Del Mar), M. Montero(Hospital Del Mar), Judith Villar‐García(Hospital Del Mar), Carlos Arias-Cabrales(Hospital Del Mar), Anna Buxeda(Hospital Del Mar), Carla Burballa(Hospital Del Mar), Susana Vázquez(Hospital Del Mar), Thais Torralbo Lopez-Capp(Deleted Institution), Fátima Moreno(Consorci Sanitari de Terrassa), Marisa Mir(Hospital Del Mar), Sara Outón(Hospital Del Mar), Adriana Sierra(Hospital Del Mar), Sílvia Collado(Hospital Del Mar), Clara Barrios(Hospital Del Mar), Eva Rodríguez(Hospital Del Mar), Laia Sans(Hospital Del Mar), Francesc Barbosa(Hospital Del Mar), Higini Cao(Hospital Del Mar), María Dolores Arenas(Hospital Del Mar), Robert Güerri‐Fernández(Hospital Del Mar), Juan Pablo Horcajada(Hospital Del Mar), Julio Pascual(Hospital Del Mar)
American Journal of Transplantation
May 29, 2020
Cited by 72Open Access
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Abstract

The SARS-Cov-2 infection disease (COVID-19) pandemic has posed at risk the kidney transplant (KT) population, particularly the elderly recipients. From March 12 until April 4, 2020, we diagnosed COVID-19 in 16 of our 324 KT patients aged ≥65 years old (4.9%). Many of them had had contact with healthcare facilities in the month prior to infection. Median time of symptom onset to admission was 7 days. All presented with fever and all but one with pneumonia. Up to 33% showed renal graft dysfunction. At infection diagnosis, mTOR inhibitors or mycophenolate were withdrawn. Tacrolimus was withdrawn in 70%. The main treatment combination was hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin. A subset of patients was treated with anti-retroviral and tocilizumab. Short-term fatality rate was 50% at a median time since admission of 3 days. Those who died were more frequently obese, frail, and had underlying heart disease. Although a higher respiratory rate was observed at admission in nonsurvivors, symptoms at presentation were similar between both groups. Patients who died were more anemic, lymphopenic, and showed higher D-dimer, C-reactive protein, and IL-6 at their first tests. COVID-19 is frequent among the elderly KT population and associates a very early and high mortality rate. The SARS-Cov-2 infection disease (COVID-19) pandemic has posed at risk the kidney transplant (KT) population, particularly the elderly recipients. From March 12 until April 4, 2020, we diagnosed COVID-19 in 16 of our 324 KT patients aged ≥65 years old (4.9%). Many of them had had contact with healthcare facilities in the month prior to infection. Median time of symptom onset to admission was 7 days. All presented with fever and all but one with pneumonia. Up to 33% showed renal graft dysfunction. At infection diagnosis, mTOR inhibitors or mycophenolate were withdrawn. Tacrolimus was withdrawn in 70%. The main treatment combination was hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin. A subset of patients was treated with anti-retroviral and tocilizumab. Short-term fatality rate was 50% at a median time since admission of 3 days. Those who died were more frequently obese, frail, and had underlying heart disease. Although a higher respiratory rate was observed at admission in nonsurvivors, symptoms at presentation were similar between both groups. Patients who died were more anemic, lymphopenic, and showed higher D-dimer, C-reactive protein, and IL-6 at their first tests. COVID-19 is frequent among the elderly KT population and associates a very early and high mortality rate.


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