Mortality Analysis of Covid-19 Infection in Chronic Kidney Disease, Haemodialysis and Renal Transplant Patients Compared With Patients Without Kidney Disease: a Nationwide Analysis From Turkey

No Thumbnail Available

Date

2020

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Oxford Univ Press

Open Access Color

HYBRID

Green Open Access

Yes

OpenAIRE Downloads

36

OpenAIRE Views

47

Publicly Funded

No
Impulse
Top 0.1%
Influence
Top 1%
Popularity
Top 1%

Research Projects

Journal Issue

Abstract

Background. Chronic kidney disease (CKD) and immunosuppression, such as in renal transplantation (RT), stand as one of the established potential risk factors for severe coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Case morbidity and mortality rates for any type of infection have always been much higher in CKD, haemodialysis (HD) and RT patients than in the general population. A large study comparing COVID-19 outcome in moderate to advanced CKD (Stages 3-5), HD and RT patients with a control group of patients is still lacking. Methods. We conducted a multicentre, retrospective, observational study, involving hospitalized adult patients with COVID-19 from 47 centres in Turkey. Patients with CKD Stages 3-5, chronic HD and RT were compared with patients who had COVID-19 but no kidney disease. Demographics, comorbidities, medications, laboratory tests, COVID-19 treatments and outcome [in-hospital mortality and combined in-hospital outcome mortality or admission to the intensive care unit (ICU)] were compared. Results. A total of 1210 patients were included [median age, 61 (quartile 1-quartile 3 48-71) years, female 551 (45.5%)] composed of four groups: control (n = 450), HD (n = 390), RT (n = 81) and CKD (n = 289). The ICU admission rate was 266/1210 (22.0%). A total of 172/1210 (14.2%) patients died. The ICU admission and in-hospital mortality rates in the CKD group [114/289 (39.4%); 95% confidence interval (CI) 33.9-45.2; and 82/289 (28.4%); 95% CI 23.9-34.5)] were significantly higher than the other groups: HD = 99/390 (25.4%; 95% CI 21.3-29.9; P < 0.001) and 63/390 (16.2%; 95% CI 13.0-20.4; P < 0.001); RT = 17/81 (21.0%; 95% CI 13.2-30.8; P = 0.002) and 9/81 (11.1%; 95% CI 5.7-19.5; P = 0.001); and control = 36/450 (8.0%; 95% CI 5.8-10.8; P < 0.001) and 18/450 (4%; 95% CI 2.5-6.2; P < 0.001). Adjusted mortality and adjusted combined outcomes in CKD group and HD groups were significantly higher than the control group [hazard ratio (HR) (95% CI) CKD: 2.88 (1.52-5.44); P = 0.001; 2.44 (1.35-4.40); P = 0.003; HD: 2.32 (1.21-4.46); P = 0.011; 2.25 (1.23-4.12); P = 0.008), respectively], but these were not significantly different in the RT from in the control group [HR (95% CI) 1.89 (0.76-4.72); P = 0.169; 1.87 (0.81-4.28); P = 0.138, respectively]. Conclusions. Hospitalized COVID-19 patients with CKDs, including Stages 3-5 CKD, HD and RT, have significantly higher mortality than patients without kidney disease. Stages 3-5 CKD patients have an in-hospital mortality rate as much as HD patients, which may be in part because of similar age and comorbidity burden. We were unable to assess if RT patients were or were not at increased risk for in-hospital mortality because of the relatively small sample size of the RT patients in this study.

Description

Ayar, Yavuz/0000-0003-4607-9220; Turkmen, Kultigin/0000-0002-1667-7716; Ozturk, Savas/0000-0002-0961-3810; Ayar, Yavuz/0000-0003-4607-9220; GUREL, ALI/0000-0001-8087-8814; berke, ilay/0000-0001-7610-7830; Dheir, Hamad/0000-0002-3569-6269; Dolarslan, Murside Esra/0000-0002-8669-4212; Oto, Özgür Akın/0000-0003-0928-8103; islam, Mahmud/0000-0003-1284-916X; Hasbal, Nuri Baris/0000-0002-2229-5140; Oruç, Ayşegül/0000-0002-0342-9692; Sahutoglu, Tuncay/0000-0003-2015-4421; Bakirdogen, Serkan/0000-0002-3448-0490; Kazancıoğlu, Rümeyza/0000-0003-1217-588X; Yüksel, ENVER/0000-0003-0302-932X; Sahin, Idris/0000-0002-8683-3737; Dheir, Hamad/0000-0002-3569-6269; Ayar, Yavuz/0000-0003-4607-9220; Duranay, Murat/0000-0002-2893-4484; hur, ender/0000-0002-8066-4629; AZAK, Alper/0000-0001-6228-8829; BAKAR, BETÜL/0000-0003-1053-7269; Adibelli, Zelal/0000-0001-7091-5204; ARICI, MUSTAFA/0000-0002-4055-7896; sezer, siren/0000-0002-7326-8388; sevinc, mustafa/0000-0003-2804-4884; alagoz, selma/0000-0001-5416-2257; turgutalp, kenan/0000-0003-0245-1844; Altiparmak, Mehmet Riza/0000-0002-3579-1100; bora, feyza/0000-0003-2379-2090; Seyahi, Nurhan/0000-0001-7427-618X

Keywords

COVID-19, haemodialysis, kidney disease, mortality, renal transplantation, Risk, Adult, Male, Time Factors, Turkey, Urology, kidney disease, Replacement, Population, Comorbidity, Medicine; Transplantation; Urology; Nephrology, Renal Dialysis, Risk Factors, Humans, Hospital Mortality, Mortality, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic, POPULATION, Aged, Retrospective Studies, RISK, Transplantation, SARS-CoV-2, COVID-19, Renal transplantation, Kidney disease, renal transplantation, Middle Aged, mortality, Kidney Transplantation, REPLACEMENT, haemodialysis, Hospitalization, Haemodialysis, Nephrology, Medicine, Female, COVID-19; Haemodialysis; Kidney disease; Mortality; Renal transplantation, ORIGINAL ARTICLES

Turkish CoHE Thesis Center URL

Fields of Science

03 medical and health sciences, 0302 clinical medicine

Citation

WoS Q

Q1

Scopus Q

Q1
OpenCitations Logo
OpenCitations Citation Count
150

Source

Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation

Volume

35

Issue

12

Start Page

2083

End Page

2095

Collections

PlumX Metrics
Citations

Scopus : 174

PubMed : 121

Captures

Mendeley Readers : 294

Web of Science™ Citations

170

checked on Jan 26, 2026

Page Views

4

checked on Jan 26, 2026

Google Scholar Logo
Google Scholar™
OpenAlex Logo
OpenAlex FWCI
4.819397

Sustainable Development Goals

1

NO POVERTY
NO POVERTY Logo

3

GOOD HEALTH AND WELL-BEING
GOOD HEALTH AND WELL-BEING Logo

4

QUALITY EDUCATION
QUALITY EDUCATION Logo

5

GENDER EQUALITY
GENDER EQUALITY Logo

7

AFFORDABLE AND CLEAN ENERGY
AFFORDABLE AND CLEAN ENERGY Logo

8

DECENT WORK AND ECONOMIC GROWTH
DECENT WORK AND ECONOMIC GROWTH Logo

9

INDUSTRY, INNOVATION AND INFRASTRUCTURE
INDUSTRY, INNOVATION AND INFRASTRUCTURE Logo

10

REDUCED INEQUALITIES
REDUCED INEQUALITIES Logo

12

RESPONSIBLE CONSUMPTION AND PRODUCTION
RESPONSIBLE CONSUMPTION AND PRODUCTION Logo

16

PEACE, JUSTICE AND STRONG INSTITUTIONS
PEACE, JUSTICE AND STRONG INSTITUTIONS Logo

17

PARTNERSHIPS FOR THE GOALS
PARTNERSHIPS FOR THE GOALS Logo