AKI and Collapsing Glomerulopathy Associated with COVID-19 and APOL1 High-Risk Genotype

Author:

Wu Huijuan,Larsen Christopher P.,Hernandez-Arroyo Cesar F.ORCID,Mohamed Muner M.B.ORCID,Caza Tiffany,Sharshir Moh’d,Chughtai Asim,Xie Liping,Gimenez Juan M.,Sandow Tyler A.,Lusco Mark A.,Yang Haichun,Acheampong Ellen,Rosales Ivy A.,Colvin Robert B.,Fogo Agnes B.,Velez Juan Carlos Q.

Abstract

BackgroundKidney involvement is a feature of COVID-19 and it can be severe in Black patients. Previous research linked increased susceptibility to collapsing glomerulopathy, including in patients with HIV-associated nephropathy, to apo L1 (APOL1) variants that are more common in those of African descent.MethodsTo investigate genetic, histopathologic, and molecular features in six Black patients with COVID-19 presenting with AKI and de novo nephrotic-range proteinuria, we obtained biopsied kidney tissue, which was examined by in situ hybridization for viral detection and by NanoString for COVID-19 and acute tubular injury–associated genes. We also collected peripheral blood for APOL1 genotyping.ResultsThis case series included six Black patients with COVID-19 (four men, two women), mean age 55 years. At biopsy day, mean serum creatinine was 6.5 mg/dl and mean urine protein-creatinine ratio was 11.5 g. Kidney biopsy specimens showed collapsing glomerulopathy, extensive foot process effacement, and focal/diffuse acute tubular injury. Three patients had endothelial reticular aggregates. We found no evidence of viral particles or SARS-CoV-2 RNA. NanoString showed elevated chemokine gene expression and changes in expression of genes associated with acute tubular injury compared with controls. All six patients had an APOL1 high-risk genotype. Five patients needed dialysis (two of whom died); one partially recovered without dialysis.ConclusionsCollapsing glomerulopathy in Black patients with COVID-19 was associated with high-risk APOL1 variants. We found no direct viral infection in the kidneys, suggesting a possible alternative mechanism: a “two-hit” combination of genetic predisposition and cytokine-mediated host response to SARS-CoV-2 infection. Given this entity’s resemblance with HIV-associated nephropathy, we propose the term COVID-19–associated nephropathy to describe it.

Publisher

American Society of Nephrology (ASN)

Subject

Nephrology,General Medicine

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2. The changing landscape of HIV-associated kidney disease;Nature Reviews Nephrology;2024-01-25

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