Saudi Journal of Kidney Diseases and Transplantation (Jan 2021)

Impact of frailty and viral load on acute kidney injury evolution in patients affected by Coronavirus Disease 2019

  • Gustavo Aroca-Martínez,
  • Carlos G Musso,
  • Lil Avendaño-Echavez,
  • Henry J González-Torres,
  • María Vélez-Verbel,
  • Stefani Chartouni-Narvaez,
  • William Peña-Vargas,
  • Antonio Acosta-Hoyos,
  • Leila Ferreyra,
  • Andrés Cadena-Bonfanti

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/1319-2442.344755
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 32, no. 5
pp. 1356 – 1364

Abstract

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This paper describes the main characteristics of coronavirus diseases 2019 (COVID-19) patients suffering from acute kidney injury (AKI) assisted at a high complexity clinic in Barranquilla, Colombia. The patients included in this study (n = 48) were those with a positive diagnosis of COVID-19 confirmed by polymerase chain reaction detection of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2, who had developed AKI during their hospital stay. Serum and urine parameters, as well as patient’s viral load and clinical frailty scale (CFS) were recorded. A statistical analysis of the recorded parameters, such as comparisons, and correlations between variables of interest, were explored. The prevalence of COVID-19 induced AKI was 41%, being the majority of them classified as AKI network classification 3, with a renal replacement therapy requirement of 29%, and an associated mortality of 73%. AKI patients’ mortality showed a significant positive correlation (33%) with patients’ CFS score but not with their viral load. COVID-19 induced AKI significantly correlated with patients’ frailty status but not to their viral load.