Abstract

The group most at risk of death due to COVID-19 are patients on maintenance hemodialysis (HD). The study aims to describe the clinical course of the early phase of SARS-CoV-2 infection and find predictors of the development of COVID-19 severe pneumonia in this population. This is a case series of HD nonvaccinated patients with COVID-19 stratified into mild pneumonia and severe pneumonia group according to the chest computed tomography (CT) pneumonia total severity score (TSS) on admission. Epidemiological, demographic, clinical, and laboratory data were obtained from hospital records. 85 HD patients with a mean age of 69.74 (13.19) years and dialysis vintage of 38 (14–84) months were included. On admission, 29.14% of patients had no symptoms, 70.59% reported fatigue followed by fever—44.71%, shortness of breath—40.0%, and cough—30.59%. 20% of the patients had finger oxygen saturation less than 90%. In 28.81% of patients, pulmonary parenchyma was involved in at least 25%. The factors associated with severe pneumonia include fever, low oxygen saturation and arterial partial pressure of oxygen, increased C-reactive protein and ferritin serum levels, low blood count of lymphocytes as well as chronic treatment with angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors; while the chronic active vitamin D treatment was associated with mild pneumonia. In conclusion, even though nearly one-third of the patients were completely asymptomatic, while the remaining usually reported only single symptoms, a large percentage of them had extensive inflammatory changes at diagnosis with SARS-CoV-2 infection. We identified potential predictors of severe pneumonia, which might help individualize pharmacological treatment and improve clinical outcomes.

Highlights

  • Stratification based on median chest computed tomography (CT) COVID-19 pneumonia total severity score (TSS) on admission divided the cohort into a severe changes group with extensive inflammatory changes and a mild changes group with limited inflammatory changes

  • We originally found that in HD patients who were treated with active vitamin D, there may be a lower risk of 3 month death from COVID-19 [39]

  • Fever, elevated markers of inflammation, and decreased blood oxygenation are predictors of the extent of the inflammatory changes in the lungs expressed by a high TSS score in CT

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Summary

Introduction

The global fatality rate is currently estimated in most countries to be between 1% and 2%. This changes over time and is dependent on many factors, including the number of tests performed (which helps identify more asymptomatic and mild cases), the dominant virus variant, increased rate of infection in younger people, improvements in health care management, and more recently, the vaccination rate of the population [1]. The 28-day probability of death before commencing field vaccination was 25% for all patients, and 33.5% for subjects who were admitted into hospitals according to the European Renal Association COVID-19 Database (ERACODA). We showed the extremely high mortality of COVID-19

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