PLoS ONE (Jan 2020)

High rate of renal recovery in survivors of COVID-19 associated acute renal failure requiring renal replacement therapy.

  • Jacob S Stevens,
  • Kristen L King,
  • Shelief Y Robbins-Juarez,
  • Pascale Khairallah,
  • Katherine Toma,
  • Hector Alvarado Verduzco,
  • Emily Daniel,
  • Denzil Douglas,
  • Andrew A Moses,
  • Yonatan Peleg,
  • Piotr Starakiewicz,
  • Miah T Li,
  • Daniel W Kim,
  • Kathleen Yu,
  • Long Qian,
  • Vaqar H Shah,
  • Max R O'Donnell,
  • Matthew J Cummings,
  • Jason Zucker,
  • Karthik Natarajan,
  • Adler Perotte,
  • Demetra Tsapepas,
  • Kiryluk Krzysztof,
  • Geoffrey Dube,
  • Eric Siddall,
  • Shayan Shirazian,
  • Thomas L Nickolas,
  • Maya K Rao,
  • Jonathan M Barasch,
  • Anthony M Valeri,
  • Jai Radhakrishnan,
  • Ali G Gharavi,
  • S Ali Husain,
  • Sumit Mohan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0244131
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 12
p. e0244131

Abstract

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IntroductionA large proportion of patients with COVID-19 develop acute kidney injury (AKI). While the most severe of these cases require renal replacement therapy (RRT), little is known about their clinical course.MethodsWe describe the clinical characteristics of COVID-19 patients in the ICU with AKI requiring RRT at an academic medical center in New York City and followed patients for outcomes of death and renal recovery using time-to-event analyses.ResultsOur cohort of 115 patients represented 23% of all ICU admissions at our center, with a peak prevalence of 29%. Patients were followed for a median of 29 days (2542 total patient-RRT-days; median 54 days for survivors). Mechanical ventilation and vasopressor use were common (99% and 84%, respectively), and the median Sequential Organ Function Assessment (SOFA) score was 14. By the end of follow-up 51% died, 41% recovered kidney function (84% of survivors), and 8% still needed RRT (survival probability at 60 days: 0.46 [95% CI: 0.36-0.56])). In an adjusted Cox model, coronary artery disease and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease were associated with increased mortality (HRs: 3.99 [95% CI 1.46-10.90] and 3.10 [95% CI 1.25-7.66]) as were angiotensin-converting-enzyme inhibitors (HR 2.33 [95% CI 1.21-4.47]) and a SOFA score >15 (HR 3.46 [95% CI 1.65-7.25).Conclusions and relevanceOur analysis demonstrates the high prevalence of AKI requiring RRT among critically ill patients with COVID-19 and is associated with a high mortality, however, the rate of renal recovery is high among survivors and should inform shared-decision making.