Serum and Urinary Biomarkers in COVID-19 Patients with or without Baseline Chronic Kidney Disease

Author:

Filev Rumen12ORCID,Lyubomirova Mila12,Hristova Julieta23ORCID,Bogov Boris12,Kalinov Krassimir4ORCID,Svinarov Dobrin23,Rostaing Lionel56ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Nephrology, Internal Disease Clinic, University Hospital “Saint Anna”, 1750 Sofia, Bulgaria

2. Faculty of Medicine, Medical University Sofia, 1504 Sofia, Bulgaria

3. Department of Clinical Laboratory, University Hospital “Alexandrovska”, 1431 Sofia, Bulgaria

4. Head Biometrics Group, Comac-Medical Ltd., 1404 Sofia, Bulgaria

5. Nephrology, Hemodialysis, Apheresis and Kidney Transplantation Department, Grenoble University Hospital, 38043 Grenoble, France

6. Medicine Faculty, University of Grenoble Alpes, 38000 Grenoble, France

Abstract

In a prospective, observational, non-interventional, single-center study, we assessed various plasma and urinary biomarkers of kidney injury (neutrophil gelatinase-associated Lipocain [NGAL], kidney-injury molecule-1 [KIM-1], and interleukin-18 [IL-18]); inflammation (IL-6, C-reactive protein [CRP]); plus angiotensin converting enzyme 2 (ACE2) in 120 COVID-19 patients (of whom 70 had chronic kidney disease (CKD) at emergency-department (ED) admission). Our aim was to correlate the biomarkers with the outcomes (death, acute kidney injury [AKI]). All patients had received a chest-CT scan at admission to calculate the severity score (0–5). Biomarkers were also assessed in healthy volunteers and non-COVID-19-CKD patients. These biomarkers statistically differed across subgroups, i.e., they were significantly increased in COVID-19 patients, except for urinary (u)KIM1 and uIL-18. Amongst the biomarkers, only IL-6 was independently associated with mortality, along with AKI and not using remdesivir. Regarding the prediction of AKI, only IL-6 and uKIM1 were significantly elevated in patients presenting with AKI. However, AKI could not be predicted. Having high baseline IL-6 levels was associated with subsequent ventilation requirement and death. The mortality rate was almost 90% when the chest CT-scan severity score was 3 or 4 vs. 6.8% when the severity score was 0–2 (p < 0.0001).

Funder

SANTÉ ET ESPOIR

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Medicine (miscellaneous)

Reference41 articles.

1. (2022, July 01). National Statistical Institute of Republic of Bulgaria; COVID-19 Statistical Data. Available online: https://www.nsi.bg/en/content/18120/basic-page/covid-19.

2. Comorbid Chronic Diseases and Acute Organ Injuries Are Strongly Correlated with Disease Severity and Mortality among COVID-19 Patients: A Systemic Review and Meta-Analysis;Wang;Research,2020

3. COVID-19 and Older Adults: What We Know;Shahid;J. Am. Geriatr. Soc.,2020

4. Incidence and Outcomes of COVID-19 in People With CKD: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis;Chung;Am. J. Kidney Dis.,2021

5. COVID-19-associated AKI;Matsumoto;Curr. Opin. Crit. Care,2022

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