Impact of different COVID-19 waves on kidney replacement therapy epidemiology and mortality: REMER 2020

Sol Carriazo(Hospital Universitario Fundación Jiménez Díaz), Manuel Ignacio Aparicio-Madre(Comunidad de Madrid), Fernando Tornero-Molina(Hospital Universitario del Sureste), Milagros Fernández‐Lucas(Universidad de Alcalá), Vicente Paraíso-Cuevas(Hospital Universitario del Henares), Emilio González‐Parra(Hospital Universitario Fundación Jiménez Díaz), Francisco del Río-Gallegos(Comunidad de Madrid), María Marqués(Hospital Universitario Puerta de Hierro Majadahonda), Roberto Alcázar Arroyo(Hospital Universitario Infanta Leonor), Judith Martins(Hospital Universitario de Getafe), Rafáel Sánchez(Hospital Universitario La Paz), Beatriz Gil-Casares(Hospital Universitario del Sureste), Eduardo Gutiérrez-Martínez(Research Institute Hospital 12 de Octubre), María Pilar Martínez-Rubio, Alberto Ortíz(Hospital Universitario Fundación Jiménez Díaz), María Ángeles Goicoechea Diezhandino, María Luisa Rodriguez Ferrero, Soraya Abad Estébanez, Milagros Fernández Lucas(Universidad de Alcalá), Nuria Rodríguez Mendiola, Martha Díaz Domínguez, Sandra Elías Triviño, Víctor Burguera Vion, Carlos Jiménez Martín, Auxiliadora Bajo Rubio, Rafael Selgas Gutiérrez(Research Institute Hospital 12 de Octubre), Á. Alonso Melgar, Laura Espinosa Román, José María Portolés Pérez, Beatriz Sobrino, Rosario Llópez Carratalá, José Antonio Herrero Calvo, Isabel Flores, Ana Sánchez‐Fructuoso, Paula Jara Caro-Espada, Elena Gutiérrez Solís, Catalina Martín-Cleary, Ana Ramos Verde, Jesús Hernández Pérez, Guillermina Barril, Martín Giorgi González(Hospital Universitario Fundación Jiménez Díaz), Antonio Fernández Perpén, Cristina Bernis Carro, Patricia Martínez‐Miguel, María Fuensanta Moreno Barrio, Hanane Bouarich, María Pérez Fernández(Universidad de Alcalá), Enrique Gruss Vergara, Gema Fernández‐Juárez, Eduardo Gallego Valcarce, Ana Tato Ribera, Juan Carlos Herrero Berrón, María Teresa Naya Nieto, Alfonso Cubas Alcaraz, Fernando Tornero Molina(Hospital Universitario del Sureste), Beatriz Gil-Casares Casanova(Hospital Universitario del Sureste), Elda Besada Estevez, Vicente Paraíso Cuevas(Hospital Universitario del Henares), Jesús Benito García, Alicia García Pérez, Valeria Sáiz Prestel, Patricia de Sequera Ortiz(Hospital Universitario Fundación Jiménez Díaz), Rocío Echarri Carrillo, María Covadonga Hevia Ojanguren, María del Carmen Jiménez Herrero, Simona Alexandru, Saul Enrique Pampa Saíco, Rosa Sánchez Hernández, Rocío Zamora González-Mariño, Laura Rodríguez-Osorio Jiménez, Beatríz Durá Gúrpide, Elisa Ruiz Cícero, Cristina Albarracín Sierra, Ramón Delgado Lillo, M Yagüe, D Jorge Valencia Alonso, Raquel Gota Ángel, Aurelio Sanz Guajardo, Carlos Jiménez Martín, Jesús Hernández Pérez, Karina Ruth Furaz Czerpak, Ángel Agustín Méndez Abreu, Ana Botella Lorenzo, Javier Naranjo Sanz, María Teresa Villaverde Ares(Hospital Universitario del Sureste), Sandra Castellano Gasch, María del Pilar Martínez Rubio, Patricia Nora Estrada Villanueva(Hospital Universitario La Paz), José Ramón Berlanga Alvarado, Ana María Blanco Santos, Carmen Gámez Matías, Pablo Mateos Hernández, Marta Sanz Sainz
Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation
August 4, 2022
Cited by 21Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Kidney replacement therapy (KRT) confers the highest risk of death from coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). However, most data refer to the early pandemic waves. Whole-year analysis compared with prior secular trends are scarce. METHODS: We present the 2020 REMER Madrid KRT registry, corresponding to the Spanish Region hardest hit by COVID-19. RESULTS: In 2020, KRT incidence decreased 12% versus 2019, while KRT prevalence decreased by 1.75% for the first time since records began and the number of kidney transplants (KTs) decreased by 16%. Mortality on KRT was 10.2% (34% higher than the mean for 2008-2019). The 2019-2020 increase in mortality was larger for KTs (+68%) than for haemodialysis (+24%) or peritoneal dialysis (+38%). The most common cause of death was infection [n = 419 (48% of deaths)], followed by cardiovascular [n = 200 (23%)]. Deaths from infection increased by 167% year over year and accounted for 95% of excess deaths in 2020 over 2019. COVID-19 was the most common cause of death (68% of infection deaths, 33% of total deaths). The bulk of COVID-19 deaths [209/285 (73%)] occurred during the first COVID-19 wave, which roughly accounted for the increased mortality in 2020. Being a KT recipient was an independent risk factor for COVID-19 death. CONCLUSIONS: COVID-19 negatively impacted the incidence and prevalence of KRT, but the increase in KRT deaths was localized to the first wave of the pandemic. The increased annual mortality argues against COVID-19 accelerating the death of patients with short life expectancy and the temporal pattern of COVID-19 mortality suggests that appropriate healthcare may improve outcomes.


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