Department of Surgery, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD.
Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD.
Transplantation. 2021 Jan 1;105(1):170-176. doi: 10.1097/TP.0000000000003502.
Kidney transplant recipients have higher risk of infectious diseases due to their reliance on immunosuppression. During the current COVID-19 pandemic, some clinicians might have opted for less potent immunosuppressive agents to counterbalance the novel infectious risk. We conducted a nationwide study to characterize immunosuppression use and subsequent clinical outcomes during the first 5 months of COVID-19 pandemic in the United States.
Using data from the Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients, we studied all kidney-only recipients in the United States from January 1, 2017, to March 12, 2020 ("prepandemic" era; n = 64 849) and from March 13, 2020, to July 31, 2020 ("pandemic" era; n = 5035). We compared the use of lymphocyte-depleting agents (versus basiliximab or no induction) and maintenance steroids (versus steroid avoidance/withdrawal) in the pandemic era compared with the prepandemic era. Then, we compared early posttransplant outcomes by immunosuppression regimen during the pandemic era.
Recipients in the pandemic era were substantially less likely to receive lymphocyte-depleting induction agents compared with their prepandemic counterparts (aOR = 0.400.530.69); similar trends were found across subgroups of state-level COVID-19 incidence, donor type, and recipient age. However, lymphocyte-depleting induction agents were associated with decreased rejection during admission (aOR = 0.110.230.47) but not with increased mortality in the pandemic era (aHR = 0.130.471.66). On the other hand, the use of maintenance steroids versus early steroid withdrawal remained similar (aOR = 0.711.071.62).
The use of lymphocyte-depleting induction agents has decreased in favor of basiliximab and no induction during the COVID-19 pandemic. However, this shift might have resulted in increases in rejection with no clear reductions in posttransplant mortality.
由于依赖免疫抑制,肾移植受者发生感染性疾病的风险更高。在当前 COVID-19 大流行期间,一些临床医生可能选择使用效力较弱的免疫抑制剂来平衡新型感染风险。我们开展了一项全国性研究,以描述美国 COVID-19 大流行的前 5 个月中免疫抑制药物的使用情况及其后续临床结局。
我们使用 Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients 的数据,研究了 2017 年 1 月 1 日至 2020 年 3 月 12 日(“大流行前”时期;n=64849)和 2020 年 3 月 13 日至 2020 年 7 月 31 日(“大流行”时期;n=5035)期间所有单纯肾移植受者。我们比较了大流行时期和大流行前时期淋巴细胞耗竭剂(与巴利昔单抗或无诱导相比)和维持性类固醇(与避免/停用类固醇相比)的使用情况。然后,我们比较了大流行时期根据免疫抑制方案的移植后早期结局。
与大流行前相比,大流行时期的受者接受淋巴细胞耗竭诱导剂的可能性明显降低(aOR=0.40;0.53;0.69);在州 COVID-19 发生率、供体类型和受者年龄的亚组中也发现了类似的趋势。然而,淋巴细胞耗竭诱导剂与入院期间排斥反应减少相关(aOR=0.11;0.23;0.47),但与大流行时期的死亡率增加无关(aHR=0.13;0.47;1.66)。另一方面,维持性类固醇与早期类固醇停药的使用情况相似(aOR=0.71;1.07;1.62)。
在 COVID-19 大流行期间,淋巴细胞耗竭诱导剂的使用减少,转而更多地使用巴利昔单抗和无诱导。然而,这种转变可能导致排斥反应增加,而移植后死亡率没有明显降低。