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Coronavirus Disease 2019 in Heart Transplant Recipients: Risk Factors, Immunosuppression, and Outcomes

Authors :
Jeremy A. Mazurek
Supriya Shore
Jeffrey J. Teuteberg
Rhondalyn C. McLean
Eileen Hsich
Donna M. Mancini
Jesús Álvarez-García
Brian A. Houston
Esther Vorovich
Michael V. Genuardi
Maria Molina
Ross Zimmer
Noah Moss
Arman Kilic
Ezequiel J. Molina
R. Garcia-Cortes
Jerry D. Estep
MDc Joyce Wald
Pavan Atluri
Himabindu Vidula
Tiffany Sharkoski
Katherine S. Dodd
Samer S. Najjar
Susan Chambers
Emily A. Blumberg
Maria E. Rodrigo
Edo Y. Birati
Lee R. Goldberg
Kenneth B. Margulies
Ryan J. Tedford
Anjali T. Owens
Kevin M. Alexander
Thomas C. Hanff
Sunit-Preet Chaudhry
Source :
The Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
ished by Elsevier Inc. on behalf of International Society for Heart and Lung Transplantation., 2021.

Abstract

Background COVID-19 continues to inflict significant morbidity and mortality, particularly on patients with preexisting health conditions. The clinical course, outcomes, and significance of immunosuppression regimen in heart transplant recipients with COVID-19 remains unclear. Methods We included the first 99 heart transplant recipients at participating centers with COVID-19 and followed patients until resolution. We collected baseline information, symptoms, laboratory studies, vital signs, and outcomes for included patients. The association of immunosuppression regimens at baseline with severe disease were compared using logistic regression , adjusting for age and time since transplant. Results The median age was 60 years, 25% were female, and 44% were white. The median time post-transplant to infection was 5.6 years. Overall, 15% died, 64% required hospital admission, and 7% remained asymptomatic. During the course of illness, only 57% of patients had a fever, and gastrointestinal symptoms were common. Tachypnea , oxygen requirement, elevated creatinine and inflammatory markers were predictive of severe course. Age ≥ 60 was associated with higher risk of death and the use of the combination of calcineurin inhibitor , antimetabolite , and prednisone was associated with more severe disease compared to the combination of calcineurin inhibitor and antimetabolite alone (adjusted OR = 7.3, 95% CI 1.8-36.2). Among hospitalized patients, 30% were treated for secondary infection, acute kidney injury was common and 17% required new renal replacement therapy . Conclusions We present the largest study to date of heart transplant patients with COVID-19 showing common atypical presentations and a high case fatality rate of 24% among hospitalized patients and 16% among symptomatic patients.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15573117 and 10532498
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....185ac9c5d1dfea544518e0499673c5f5