Ennis Samantha L, Levvey Bronwyn J, Shingles Helen V, Lee Sue J, Snell Gregory I, Gardiner Bradley J
Department of Respiratory Medicine & Lung Transplantation, Alfred Health Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Department of Respiratory Medicine & Lung Transplantation, Alfred Health Melbourne, Victoria, Australia; Central Clinical School, Monash University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
J Heart Lung Transplant. 2024 Jun;43(6):944-953. doi: 10.1016/j.healun.2024.02.1453. Epub 2024 Feb 24.
COVID-19 has become a common infection affecting lung transplant recipients (LTR), who are at high risk for poor outcomes. Outcomes early in the pandemic were poor, but since the rollout of vaccination and novel COVID-19 treatments, outcomes of LTR have not been well described. Our aim was to evaluate the effect of COVID-19 on the clinical course and lung function trajectory in an Australian cohort of LTR.
Data were retrospectively collected from LTR with confirmed COVID-19 managed at Alfred Health, between August 2020 and December 2022. Baseline demographics, COVID-19 disease details (including severity) and spirometry pre- and postinfection have been analyzed.
A total of 279 LTR were included. The cohort was comorbid, but well vaccinated, with 275/279 (98.6%) having ≥2 COVID-19 vaccines at symptom onset. Severe disease occurred in only 17 cases (6%) and overall mortality was very low (4%). Prompt treatment with antivirals, particularly remdesevir (OR 0.18, 95% CI 0.04-0.81, p = 0.02) and vaccination (OR 0.24, CI 0.08-0.81, p = 0.01), was protective. There was not a clinically significant drop in lung function post-COVID-19 with the median absolute decline in forced expiratory volume (FEV1) being 40 ml (IQR 5-120 ml, p < 0.001), with a decline of >10% occurring in only 42 patients (17%). After multivariate adjustment, only rejection before COVID-19 was significantly associated with FEV1 decline afterward (OR 3.74, 1.12-11.86, p = 0.03).
In our highly COVID-19 vaccinated, promptly treated LTR, the majority of COVID-19 infections were mild and did not result in a clinically significant decline in lung function.
新型冠状病毒肺炎(COVID-19)已成为影响肺移植受者(LTR)的常见感染,这类患者预后不良风险较高。疫情早期预后较差,但自疫苗接种和新型COVID-19治疗方法推出以来,LTR的预后情况尚未得到充分描述。我们的目的是评估COVID-19对澳大利亚一组LTR临床病程和肺功能轨迹的影响。
回顾性收集2020年8月至2022年12月在阿尔弗雷德医院接受治疗的确诊COVID-19的LTR的数据。分析了基线人口统计学特征、COVID-19疾病详情(包括严重程度)以及感染前后的肺功能测定结果。
共纳入279例LTR。该队列存在合并症,但疫苗接种情况良好,275/279(98.6%)在症状出现时接种了≥2剂COVID-19疫苗。仅17例(6%)发生重症疾病,总体死亡率很低(4%)。抗病毒药物,特别是瑞德西韦(比值比[OR]0.18,95%置信区间[CI]0.04 - 0.81,p = 0.02)和疫苗接种(OR 0.24,CI 0.08 - 0.81,p = 0.01)的及时治疗具有保护作用。COVID-19感染后肺功能没有出现具有临床意义的下降,用力呼气量(FEV1)的中位数绝对下降为40 ml(四分位间距[IQR]5 - 120 ml,p < 0.001),仅42例患者(17%)下降超过10%。多因素调整后,仅COVID-19之前的排斥反应与之后的FEV1下降显著相关(OR 3.74,1.12 - 11.86,p = 0.03)。
在我们这个COVID-19疫苗接种率高且得到及时治疗的LTR队列中,大多数COVID-19感染为轻症,并未导致肺功能出现具有临床意义的下降。