Clinical course, management and outcomes of COVID-19 in HIV-infected renal transplant recipients: A case series.

IF 1.5 4区 医学 Q2 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL
L Bertels, K Manning, A Redd, T Du Toit, Z Barday, E Muller
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: HIV-infected kidney transplant recipients with COVID-19 are at increased risk of acute illness and death owing to their underlying comorbidities and chronic immunosuppression.

Objectives: To describe the incidence, clinical presentation and course of COVID-19, vaccination status, and SARS-CoV-2 antibody positivity rate among HIV-infected-to-HIV-infected kidney transplant recipients in South Africa (SA).

Methods: This retrospective study reports on rates of SARS-CoV-2 infection, COVID-19 and mortality among SA HIV-infected kidney transplant recipients who received organs from HIV-infected donors (HIV positive to HIV positive), before and after vaccination. Patient demographics, clinical presentation, course, management and disease outcomes were analysed. Antibody serology tests were performed between May and September 2022.

Results: Among 39 HIV-positive-to-HIV-positive transplant recipients, 11 cases of COVID-19 were diagnosed from March 2020 to September 2022. Six patients (55%) required hospitalisation, of whom 3 were admitted to a high-care unit or intensive care unit. Two patients required mechanical ventilation, and 2 received acute dialysis. One patient was declined access to intensive care. Four patients (10%) died of COVID-19 pneumonia. All the COVID-19-positive patients had at least one comorbidity. Vaccination data were available for 24 patients, of whom 5 had refused SARS-CoV-2 vaccination. SARS-CoV-2 antibody data were available for 20 patients; 4 vaccinated patients had a negative nucleocapsid protein antibody test and a positive spike protein antibody test, suggesting vaccination-acquired immunity. The remaining 16 patients demonstrated immunity that was probably due to COVID infection, and of these, 14 were also vaccinated. Of the 11 COVID-19 cases, only 1 was observed after vaccination.

Conclusion: In our case series, ~10% of the HIV-positive-to-HIV-positive transplant recipients died of COVID-19 pneumonia. This mortality rate appears higher than figures reported in other transplant cohorts. However, it is likely that the actual number of cases of SARS-CoV-2 infection was much higher, as the study only included polymerase chain reaction-confirmed cases. It remains unclear whether HIV infection, transplant or the combination of the two drives poorer outcomes, and larger studies adjusting for important demographic and biological factors may isolate these effects.

感染艾滋病毒的肾移植受者 COVID-19 的临床过程、管理和结果:病例系列。
背景:感染了 COVID-19 的艾滋病毒肾移植受者由于其潜在的合并症和慢性免疫抑制,患急性疾病和死亡的风险增加:描述南非(SA)HIV感染肾移植受者中COVID-19的发病率、临床表现和病程、疫苗接种情况以及SARS-CoV-2抗体阳性率:这项回顾性研究报告了南非受 HIV 感染的肾移植受者在接种疫苗前后的 SARS-CoV-2 感染率、COVID-19 感染率和死亡率,这些受者接受的器官来自受 HIV 感染的供体(HIV 阳性对 HIV 阳性)。对患者的人口统计学特征、临床表现、病程、管理和疾病结果进行了分析。抗体血清学检测在 2022 年 5 月至 9 月期间进行:结果:2020 年 3 月至 2022 年 9 月期间,在 39 例 HIV 阳性转 HIV 阳性的移植受者中,确诊了 11 例 COVID-19 病例。6名患者(55%)需要住院治疗,其中3人住进了重症监护室或加护病房。两名患者需要机械通气,两名患者接受了急性透析。一名患者被拒绝进入重症监护室。四名患者(10%)死于 COVID-19 肺炎。所有 COVID-19 阳性患者都至少患有一种并发症。有 24 名患者的疫苗接种数据,其中 5 人拒绝接种 SARS-CoV-2 疫苗。有 20 名患者的 SARS-CoV-2 抗体数据;4 名接种过疫苗的患者核壳蛋白抗体检测结果为阴性,尖峰蛋白抗体检测结果为阳性,表明接种疫苗后获得了免疫力。其余 16 名患者的免疫力可能是由 COVID 感染引起的,其中 14 人也接种过疫苗。在 11 例 COVID-19 病例中,只有 1 例是在接种疫苗后观察到的:在我们的病例系列中,约有 10% 的 HIV 阳性到 HIV 阳性的移植受者死于 COVID-19 肺炎。这一死亡率似乎高于其他移植队列中报告的数字。不过,由于该研究只包括聚合酶链反应确诊的病例,SARS-CoV-2 感染的实际病例数可能要高得多。目前还不清楚是艾滋病病毒感染、移植还是两者结合导致了较差的预后,对重要的人口和生物因素进行调整的大型研究可能会分离出这些影响。
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来源期刊
Samj South African Medical Journal
Samj South African Medical Journal 医学-医学:内科
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
4.50%
发文量
175
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: The SAMJ is a monthly peer reviewed, internationally indexed, general medical journal. It carries The SAMJ is a monthly, peer-reviewed, internationally indexed, general medical journal publishing leading research impacting clinical care in Africa. The Journal is not limited to articles that have ‘general medical content’, but is intending to capture the spectrum of medical and health sciences, grouped by relevance to the country’s burden of disease. This will include research in the social sciences and economics that is relevant to the medical issues around our burden of disease The journal carries research articles and letters, editorials, clinical practice and other medical articles and personal opinion, South African health-related news, obituaries, general correspondence, and classified advertisements (refer to the section policies for further information).
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