Transplantation Direct (Sep 2024)

A Single-center Experience With >200 Lung Transplant Recipients With COVID-19 Infection

  • Hiromu Kehara, MD, PhD,
  • Ashley Johnson-Whiting, NP-C,
  • Roh Yanagida, MD, PhD,
  • Kewal Krishan, MD,
  • Huaqing Zhao, PhD,
  • Aaron Mishkin, MD,
  • Francis Cordova, MD,
  • Gerard J. Criner, MD,
  • Yoshiya Toyoda, MD, PhD,
  • Norihisa Shigemura, MD, PhD

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1097/TXD.0000000000001676
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 9
p. e1676

Abstract

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Background. Although COVID-19 is no longer a declared global health emergency, data remain limited on the impact of COVID-19 in lung transplant recipients. Methods. We identified lung transplant recipients who were diagnosed with COVID-19 from March 2020 through August 2022 in our institutional database and investigated clinical outcomes. We then analyzed outcomes based on date of COVID-19 diagnosis (first wave March 2020–October 2020; second wave November 2020–2021; third wave December 2021–September 2022) and compared these results. Results. Of the 210 lung transplant recipients (median age 67; 67% men) enrolled, 140 (67%) required hospital admission. Among admitted recipients, 35 (25%) were intubated and 7 (5%) were placed on extracorporeal membrane oxygenation. Overall survival was 67.1% at 1 y and 59.0% at 2 y post-COVID-19 diagnosis. COVID-19 led to mortality in all 5 patients diagnosed during their index admission for lung transplantation. Although overall survival was significantly better in recipients with COVID-19 during the third wave, in-hospital mortality remained high (first wave 28%, second wave 38%, and 28% third wave). Vaccination (partially vaccinated versus none and fully vaccinated versus none) was the only significant protective factor for hospital admission, and age 70 y and older and partially vaccinated (versus none or fully vaccinated) were independent risk factors for in-hospital mortality. Conclusions. Overall survival after COVID-19 infection in lung transplant recipients continues to improve; however, in-hospital mortality remains remarkably high. Vaccination appears to have been impactful in preventing hospital admission, but its impact on in-hospital mortality is still unclear. Further research is needed to better identify lung transplant recipients at high risk for mortality from COVID-19.