1. A multi-center retrospective cohort study defines the spectrum of kidney pathology in Coronavirus 2019 Disease (COVID-19)
- Author
-
Josephine M. Ambruzs, Mark M. Belz, Ghadeer N. Hannoudi, Nidia C. Messias, Laith Al-Rabadi, Randy S. Haun, L. Nicholas Cossey, Brent Alper, Gustavo Espino, Matthew B. Palmer, Samar I. Hassen, Ariana Gaspert, Tiffany Caza, Juan Carlos Q. Velez, Valerie A. Luyckx, Anatoly Urisman, Vighnesh Walavalkar, Andrew Hannoudi, Edgar V. Lerma, Pravir V. Baxi, Jonathan E. Zuckerman, Christie L. Boils, Saurabh Chawla, Mohamad El Kassem, Deborah A. Price, Alexander J. Gallan, Yuvraj Sharma, Ian Meyer, Clarissa A. Cassol, Uday Ranjit, Chetana Rondla, Marcus L. Britton, Sean R. Williamson, Gary G. Singer, Philipp Grosse, Shree S. Sharma, T. David Bourne, Dwight Matthew, Patrick D. Walker, Christine VanBeek, Jon Wilson, Prasad Bichu, Christopher P. Larsen, Brahm Vasudev, Rebecca M. May, Juarez R. Braga, Srikanth Kunaparaju, Srivilliputtur Santhana-Krishnan, Mahesha Vankalakunti, Mazen A. Abdalla, Lilli Barnum, Roger A. Rodby, Subir Paul, and Son G. Lam
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Kidney Disease ,Clinical Sciences ,kidney biopsy ,Renal and urogenital ,coronavirus ,Kidney ,Gastroenterology ,Nephropathy ,Vaccine Related ,Clinical Research ,renal pathology ,Diabetes mellitus ,Internal medicine ,Biodefense ,Biopsy ,medicine ,Genetics ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Humans ,Clinical Investigation ,Lung ,Retrospective Studies ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Prevention ,Acute kidney injury ,COVID-19 ,Glomerulonephritis ,Retrospective cohort study ,Acute Kidney Injury ,Urology & Nephrology ,medicine.disease ,Apolipoprotein L1 ,Infectious Diseases ,Renal pathology ,acute kidney injury ,Nephrology ,HIV/AIDS ,business ,Infection ,Kidney disease - Abstract
Kidney failure is common in patients with Coronavirus Disease-19 (COVID-19) resulting in increased morbidity and mortality. In an international collaboration, 284 kidney biopsies were evaluated to improve understanding of kidney disease in COVID-19. Diagnoses were compared to five years of 63,575 native biopsies prior to the pandemic and 13,955 allograft biopsies to identify diseases increased in patients with COVID-19. Genotyping for APOL1 G1 and G2 alleles was performed in 107 African American and Hispanic patients. Immunohistochemistry for SARS-CoV-2 was utilized to assess direct viral infection in 273 cases along with clinical information at the time of biopsy. The leading indication for native biopsy was acute kidney injury (45.4%), followed by proteinuria with or without concurrent acute kidney injury (42.6%). There were more African American patients (44.6%) than patients of other ethnicities. The most common diagnosis in native biopsies was collapsing glomerulopathy (25.8%) which associated with high-risk APOL1 genotypes in 91.7% of cases. Compared to the five-year biopsy database, the frequency of myoglobin cast nephropathy and proliferative glomerulonephritis with monoclonal IgG deposits was also increased in patients with COVID-19 (3.3% and 1.7%, respectively), while there was a reduced frequency of chronic conditions (including diabetes mellitus, IgA nephropathy, and arterionephrosclerosis) as the primary diagnosis. In transplants, the leading indication was acute kidney injury (86.4%), for which rejection was the predominant diagnosis (61.4%). Direct SARS-CoV-2 viral infection was not identified. Thus, our multi-center large case series identified kidney diseases that disproportionately affect patients with COVID-19, demonstrated a high frequency of APOL1 high-risk genotypes within this group, with no evidence of direct viral infection within the kidney., Graphical abstract
- Published
- 2021