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Influence of patient characteristics and immunosuppressant management on mortality in kidney transplant recipients hospitalized with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID‐19)
Author(s) -
Santeusanio Andrew D.,
Me Madhav C.,
Liu Caroline,
Bhansali Arjun,
Patel Niralee,
Mahir Fahima,
Rana Meenakshi,
Tedla Fasika,
Mahamid Ahmad,
Fenig Yaniv,
Zendel Alexey,
Delaney Veronica,
De Boccardo Graciela,
Farouk Samira S.,
Sehgal Vinita,
Khaim Rafael,
Jacobs Samantha E.,
Dunn Dallas,
Sullivan Timothy,
Taimur Sarah,
Baneman Emily,
Florman Sander,
Shapiro Ron
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
clinical transplantation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.918
H-Index - 76
eISSN - 1399-0012
pISSN - 0902-0063
DOI - 10.1111/ctr.14221
Subject(s) - medicine , immunosuppression , tacrolimus , concomitant , retrospective cohort study , covid-19 , kidney transplantation , disease , transplantation , infectious disease (medical specialty)
The influence of patient characteristics and immunosuppression management on COVID‐19 outcomes in kidney transplant recipients (KTRs) remains uncertain. We performed a single‐center, retrospective review of all adult KTRs admitted to the hospital with confirmed COVID‐19 between 03/15/2020 and 05/15/2020. Patients were followed from the date of admission up to 1 month following hospital discharge or study conclusion (06/15/2020). Baseline characteristics, laboratory parameters, and immunosuppression were compared between survivors and patients who died to identify predictors of mortality. 38 KTRs with a mean baseline eGFR of 52.5 ml/min/1.73 m 2 were hospitalized during the review period. Maintenance immunosuppression included tacrolimus (84.2%), mycophenolate (89.5%), and corticosteroids (81.6%) in the majority of patients. Eleven patients (28.9%) died during the hospitalization. Older age (OR = 2.05; 1.04‐4.04), peak D‐dimer (OR = 1.20; 1.04‐1.39), and peak white blood cell count (OR = 1.11; 1.02‐1.21) were all associated with mortality among KTRs hospitalized for COVID‐19. Increased mortality was also observed among KTRs with concomitant HIV infection (87.5% vs. 36.1%; p < .01). Conversely, immunosuppression intensity and degree of reduction following COVID‐19 diagnosis were not associated with either survival or acute allograft rejection. Our findings potentially support a strategy of individualization of immunosuppression targets based on patient‐specific risk factors, rather than universal immunosuppression reduction for KTRs at risk from COVID‐19.