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Characteristics and outcomes of hospitalised older patients with chronic kidney disease and COVID‐19: A multicenter nationwide controlled study

Authors :
Numan Gorgulu
Ekrem Kara
Bulent Tokgoz
Dilek Guven Taymez
Halil Zeki Tonbul
Ender Hur
Murside Esra Dolarslan
İrem Pembegül
Mustafa Arici
Zubeyde Serhan Tuglular
İdris Şahin
Mahmud Islam
Alaattin Yildiz
Gülizar Şahin
Taner Basturk
Kenan Ates
Mehmet Riza Altiparmak
Zeki Aydin
Mahmut Gok
Hamad Dheir
Zeki Soypacaci
Serhat Karadag
Siren Sezer
Necmi Eren
Kenan Turgutalp
Garip Sahin
Ali Riza Odabas
Serkan Bakirdogen
Barış Döner
Mehmet Deniz Ayli
Tuba Elif Ozler
Melike Betul Ogutmen
Savas Ozturk
Erkan Sengul
RTEÜ, Tıp Fakültesi, Dahili Tıp Bilimleri Bölümü
Kara, Ekrem
Pembegül, İrem
Ozturk, Savas
Turgutalp, Kenan
Arici, Mustafa
Gok, Mahmut
Islam, Mahmud
Altiparmak, Mehmet Riza
Aydin, Zeki
Doner, Baris
Eren, Necmi
Sengul, Erkan
Karadag, Serhat
Ozler, Tuba Elif
Dheir, Hamad
Pembegul, Irem
Taymez, Dilek Guven
Sahin, Garip
Bakirdogen, Serkan
Dolarslan, Murside Esra
Soypacaci, Zeki
Hur, Ender
Basturk, Taner
Ogutmen, Melike Betul
Gorgulu, Numan
Sahin, Idris
Ayli, Mehmet Deniz
Tuglular, Zubeyde Serhan
Sahin, Gulizar
Tokgoz, Bulent
Tonbul, Halil Zeki
Yildiz, Alaattin
Sezer, Siren
Odabas, Ali Riza
Ates, Kenan
Source :
International Journal of Clinical Practice
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
John Wiley and Sons Inc., 2021.

Abstract

Objective Older adults with co‐morbidities have been reported to be at higher risk for adverse outcomes of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID‐19). The characteristics of COVID‐19 in older patients and its clinical outcomes in different kidney disease groups are not well known. Methods Data were retrieved from a national multicentric database supported by Turkish Society of Nephrology, which consists of retrospectively collected data between 17 April 2020 and 31 December 2020. Hospitalised patients aged 18 years or older with confirmed COVID‐19 diagnosis suffering from stage 3‐5 chronic kidney disease (CKD) or on maintenance haemodialysis (HD) treatment were included in the database. Non‐uraemic hospitalised patients with COVID‐19 were also included as the control group. Results We included 879 patients [388 (44.1%) female, median age: 63 (IQR: 50‐73) years]. The percentage of older patients in the CKD group was 68.8% (n = 188/273), in the HD group was 49.0% (n = 150/306) and in the control group was 30.4% (n = 70/300). Co‐morbidities were higher in the CKD and HD groups. The rate of presentation with severe‐critical disease was higher in the older CKD and HD groups (43.6%, 55.3% and 16.1%, respectively). Among older patients, the intensive care unit (ICU) admission rate was significantly higher in the CKD and HD groups than in the control group (38.8%, 37.3% and 15.7%, respectively). In‐hospital mortality or death and/or ICU admission rates in the older group were significantly higher in the CKD (29.3% and 39.4%) and HD groups (26.7% and 30.1%) compared with the control group (8.6% and 17.1%). In the multivariate analysis, in‐hospital mortality rates in CKD and HD groups were higher than control group [hazard ratio (HR): 4.33 (95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.53‐12.26) and HR: 3.09 (95% CI: 1.04‐9.17), respectively]. Conclusion Among older COVID‐19 patients, in‐hospital mortality is significantly higher in those with stage 3‐5 CKD and on maintenance HD than older patients without CKD regardless of demographic characteristics, co‐morbidities, clinical and laboratory data on admission.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17421241 and 13685031
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Journal of Clinical Practice
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....647c0c1144cad7d98c15b46de65dd1be