Critically ill patients with COVID-19-associated acute kidney injury treated with kidney replacement therapy: Comparison between the first and second pandemic waves in São Paulo, Brazil
Author:
Samaan FaridORCID, Freitas Rafaela Andrade Penalva, Viana Renata, Gâmbaro Lívia, Cunha Karlla, Vieira Tales Dantas, Feitosa Valkercyo, Correa Eric Aragão, Maciel Alexandre Toledo, Aranha Sylvia, Osawa Eduardo Atsushi, Pillar Roberta, Flato Elias Marcos da Silva, da Silva Renata Cristina, Carneiro Elisa, Souza Fabrizzio Batista Guimarães de Lima, Rossi Paula Regina Gan, Abud Munira Bittencourt, Konigsfeld Henrique Pinheiro, da Silva Riberto Garcia, de Souza Ricardo Barbosa Cintra, Coutinho Saurus Mayer, Goes Miguel ÂngeloORCID, da Silva Bárbara Antunes Bruno, Zanetta Dirce Maria Trevisan, Burdmann Emmanuel Almeida
Abstract
Introduction
This study aimed to compare the characteristics and outcomes of critically ill patients with COVID-19-associated acute kidney injury (AKI) who were treated with kidney replacement therapy (KRT) in the first and second waves of the pandemic in the megalopolis of Sao Paulo, Brazil.
Methods
A multicenter retrospective study was conducted in 10 intensive care units (ICUs). Patients aged ≥18 years, and treated with KRT due to COVID-19-associated AKI were included. We compared demographic, laboratory and clinical data, KRT parameters and patient outcomes in the first and second COVID-19 waves.
Results
We assessed 656 patients (327 in the first wave and 329 in the second one). Second-wave patients were admitted later (7.1±5.0 vs. 5.6±3.9 days after the onset of symptoms, p<0.001), were younger (61.4±13.7 vs. 63.8±13.6 years, p = 0.023), had a lower frequency of diabetes (37.1% vs. 47.1%, p = 0.009) and obesity (29.5% vs. 40.0%, p = 0.007), had a greater need for vasopressors (93.3% vs. 84.6%, p<0.001) and mechanical ventilation (95.7% vs. 87.8%, p<0.001), and had higher lethality (84.8% vs. 72.7%, p<0.001) than first-wave patients. KRT quality markers were independently associated with a reduction in the OR for death in both pandemic waves.
Conclusions
In the Sao Paulo megalopolis, the lethality of critically ill patients with COVID-19-associated AKI treated with KRT was higher in the second wave of the pandemic, despite these patients being younger and having fewer comorbidities. Potential factors related to this poor outcome were difficulties in health care access, lack of intra-hospital resources, delay vaccination and virus variants.
Publisher
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Subject
Multidisciplinary
Reference44 articles.
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