High rate of renal recovery in survivors of COVID-19 associated acute renal failure requiring renal replacement therapy

Jacob S. Stevens(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Kristen L. King(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Shelief Y. Robbins-Juarez(Columbia University), Pascale Khairallah(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Katherine Toma(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Hector Alvarado Verduzco(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Emily Daniel(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Denzil Douglas(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Andrew A. Moses(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Yonatan Peleg(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Piotr Starakiewicz(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Miah T. Li(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Daniel W. Kim(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Kathleen Yu(Columbia University), Long Qian(Columbia University), Vaqar H. Shah(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Max R. O’Donnell(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Matthew J. Cummings(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Jason Zucker(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Karthik Natarajan(Columbia University), Adler Perotte(Columbia University), Demetra Tsapepas(NewYork–Presbyterian Hospital), Kiryluk Krzysztof(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Geoffrey K. Dube(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Eric Siddall(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Shayan Shirazian(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Thomas L. Nickolas(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Maya K. Rao(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Jonathan Barasch(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Anthony M. Valeri(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Jai Radhakrishnan(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Ali G. Gharavi(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), S. Ali Husain(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Sumit Mohan(Columbia University Irving Medical Center)
PLoS ONE
December 28, 2020
Cited by 62Open Access
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Abstract

INTRODUCTION: A large proportion of patients with COVID-19 develop acute kidney injury (AKI). While the most severe of these cases require renal replacement therapy (RRT), little is known about their clinical course. METHODS: We describe the clinical characteristics of COVID-19 patients in the ICU with AKI requiring RRT at an academic medical center in New York City and followed patients for outcomes of death and renal recovery using time-to-event analyses. RESULTS: Our cohort of 115 patients represented 23% of all ICU admissions at our center, with a peak prevalence of 29%. Patients were followed for a median of 29 days (2542 total patient-RRT-days; median 54 days for survivors). Mechanical ventilation and vasopressor use were common (99% and 84%, respectively), and the median Sequential Organ Function Assessment (SOFA) score was 14. By the end of follow-up 51% died, 41% recovered kidney function (84% of survivors), and 8% still needed RRT (survival probability at 60 days: 0.46 [95% CI: 0.36-0.56])). In an adjusted Cox model, coronary artery disease and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease were associated with increased mortality (HRs: 3.99 [95% CI 1.46-10.90] and 3.10 [95% CI 1.25-7.66]) as were angiotensin-converting-enzyme inhibitors (HR 2.33 [95% CI 1.21-4.47]) and a SOFA score >15 (HR 3.46 [95% CI 1.65-7.25). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Our analysis demonstrates the high prevalence of AKI requiring RRT among critically ill patients with COVID-19 and is associated with a high mortality, however, the rate of renal recovery is high among survivors and should inform shared-decision making.


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