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SARS-CoV-2 infection in chronic kidney disease patients with pre-existing dialysis: description across different pandemic intervals and effect on disease course (mortality)

Authors :
Pilgram, Lisa
Eberwein, Lukas
Jensen, Bjoern-Erik O.
Jakob, Carolin E. M.
Koehler, Felix C.
Hower, Martin
Kielstein, Jan T.
Stecher, Melanie
Hohenstein, Bernd
Prasser, Fabian
Westhoff, Timm
de Miranda, Susana M. Nunes
Vehreschild, Maria J. G. T.
Lanznaster, Julia
Dolff, Sebastian
Spinner, Christoph
Ruethrich, Maria Madeleine
Tometten, Lukas
Borgmann, Stefan
Jung, Norma
Hertenstein, Bernd
Degenhardt, Christian
Voigt, Ingo
Hanses, Frank
Wille, Kai
vom Dahl, Jürgen
Rothfuss, Katja
Hellwig, Kerstin
Rupp, Jan
Isberner, Nora
Nattermann, Jacob
Strauss, Richard
Göpel, Siri
Vehreschild, Jörg Janne
Schulze, Nick
Fuhrmann, Sandra
Schons, Max
Claßen, Annika
Franke, Bernd
Source :
Infection. 51:71-81
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

Purpose Patients suffering from chronic kidney disease (CKD) are in general at high risk for severe coronavirus disease (COVID-19) but dialysis-dependency (CKD5D) is poorly understood. We aimed to describe CKD5D patients in the different intervals of the pandemic and to evaluate pre-existing dialysis dependency as a potential risk factor for mortality. Methods In this multicentre cohort study, data from German study sites of the Lean European Open Survey on SARS-CoV-2-infected patients (LEOSS) were used. We multiply imputed missing data, performed subsequent analyses in each of the imputed data sets and pooled the results. Cases (CKD5D) and controls (CKD not requiring dialysis) were matched 1:1 by propensity-scoring. Effects on fatal outcome were calculated by multivariable logistic regression. Results The cohort consisted of 207 patients suffering from CKD5D and 964 potential controls. Multivariable regression of the whole cohort identified age (> 85 years adjusted odds ratio (aOR) 7.34, 95% CI 2.45–21.99), chronic heart failure (aOR 1.67, 95% CI 1.25–2.23), coronary artery disease (aOR 1.41, 95% CI 1.05–1.89) and active oncological disease (aOR 1.73, 95% CI 1.07–2.80) as risk factors for fatal outcome. Dialysis-dependency was not associated with a fatal outcome—neither in this analysis (aOR 1.08, 95% CI 0.75–1.54) nor in the conditional multivariable regression after matching (aOR 1.34, 95% CI 0.70–2.59). Conclusions In the present multicentre German cohort, dialysis dependency is not linked to fatal outcome in SARS-CoV-2-infected CKD patients. However, the mortality rate of 26% demonstrates that CKD patients are an extreme vulnerable population, irrespective of pre-existing dialysis-dependency.

Details

ISSN :
14390973 and 03008126
Volume :
51
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Infection
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....de3a086747366a7d432ae05476145351