Division of Nephrology, Department of Medicine, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas.
Department of Medicine, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas.
Kidney360. 2020 Nov 24;2(1):141-153. doi: 10.34067/KID.0006362020. eCollection 2021 Jan 28.
The COVID-19 outbreak has had substantial effects on the incidence and management of kidney diseases, including AKI, ESKD, GN, and kidney transplantation. Initial reports from China suggested a lower AKI incidence in patients with COVID-19, but more recent studies from North America reveal a much higher incidence, likely due to the higher prevalence of comorbid conditions, such as hypertension, diabetes, and CKD. AKI in this setting is associated with worse outcomes, including the requirement for vasopressors or mechanical ventilation and death. Performing RRT in those with AKI poses challenges, such as limiting exposure of staff, preserving PPE, coagulopathy, and hypoxemia due to acute respiratory distress syndrome. Continuous RRT is the preferred modality, with sustained low-efficiency dialysis also an option, both managed without 1:1 hemodialysis nursing support. Regional citrate is the preferred anticoagulation, but systemic unfractionated heparin may be used in patients with coagulopathy. The ultrafiltration rate has to be set carefully, taking into consideration hypotension, hypoxemia, and responsiveness to presser and ventilatory support. The chance of transmission puts in-center chronic hemodialysis and other immunosuppressed patients at particularly increased risk. Limited data show that patients with CKD are also at increased risk for more severe disease, if infected. Little is known about the virus's effects on immunocompromised patients with glomerular diseases and kidney transplants, which introduces challenges for management of immunosuppressant regimens. Although there are no standardized guidelines regarding the management of immunosuppression, several groups recommend stopping the antimetabolite in hospitalized transplant patients and continuing a reduced dose of calcineurin inhibitors. This comprehensive review critically appraises the best available evidence regarding the effect of COVID-19 on the incidence and management of kidney diseases. Where evidence is lacking, current expert opinion and clinical guidelines are reviewed, and knowledge gaps worth investigation are identified.
COVID-19 疫情对肾脏疾病(包括急性肾损伤、终末期肾病、肾小球肾炎和肾移植)的发病和治疗产生了重大影响。最初来自中国的报告表明 COVID-19 患者的急性肾损伤发病率较低,但来自北美的近期研究表明发病率要高得多,这可能是由于高血压、糖尿病和慢性肾脏病等合并症的患病率较高所致。在此情况下,急性肾损伤与更差的结局相关,包括需要使用升压药或机械通气以及死亡。在急性肾损伤患者中进行肾脏替代治疗(RRT)存在一些挑战,例如限制工作人员的暴露、保存个人防护设备、因急性呼吸窘迫综合征而导致的凝血障碍和低氧血症。连续性 RRT 是首选的方式,持续低效透析也是一种选择,两者均无需 1:1 血液透析护理支持。区域枸橼酸是首选的抗凝剂,但对于有凝血障碍的患者,也可以使用普通肝素。必须仔细设定超滤率,要考虑到低血压、低氧血症以及对升压和通气支持的反应性。传播的机会使中心慢性血液透析和其他免疫抑制患者面临特别高的风险。有限的数据表明,如果感染,慢性肾脏病患者患更严重疾病的风险也会增加。对于免疫功能低下的肾小球疾病和肾移植患者,该病毒对其的影响知之甚少,这给免疫抑制剂方案的管理带来了挑战。虽然目前尚无关于免疫抑制管理的标准化指南,但有几个小组建议在住院的移植患者中停用抗代谢药物,并继续使用减少剂量的钙调磷酸酶抑制剂。本综述批判性地评估了关于 COVID-19 对肾脏疾病发病和治疗影响的最佳现有证据。在缺乏证据的情况下,审查了当前的专家意见和临床指南,并确定了值得研究的知识空白。