Abstract

In recent studies, 5%–20% of hospitalized patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) developed AKI requiring RRT (CoV-AKI-RRT) (1,2) (L. Chan et al., unpublished observations). Hypercoagulability has been recognized as a salient feature of COVID-19 in the critically ill (3,4) and there have been anecdotal accounts of unexpectedly frequent dialysis filter clotting. However, there are limited data describing the magnitude of the problem. A recent report described clotting events in 28 of 29 patients with CoV-AKI-RRT and shorter filter lifespan compared with a historical control, but no details were provided regarding anticoagulation (4). Our objective was to examine the delivery of RRT and circuit interruptions in patients with CoV-AKI-RRT in comparison with those in the pre-COVID-19 era. With approval of the Institutional Review Board, waiver of informed consent, and in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki, we conducted a retrospective single-center study, ancillary from our previously reported cohort (2). We identified hospitalized patients with COVID-19 (positive severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 RNA PCR by nasopharyngeal swab) and AKI, who underwent RRT by sustained low-efficiency dialysis (SLED) for ≥8 hours in an intensive care unit between March and April of 2020 (study period: 4 weeks) by either prolonged intermittent or continuous RRT modality (5,6) using Fresenius 2008K/K2 (Bad Homburg, Germany) machines. At our hospital, continuous venovenous hemodiafiltration (CVVHDF) with PrismaFlex (Deerfield, IL) machines was restricted to the neurointensive care unit and was not expanded during the pandemic due to logistics. As pre-COVID-19 control, we included consecutive patients (reverse chronological order) with AKI without COVID-19 who underwent SLED in December of 2019. Electronic medical records were accessed and RRT flowsheets were manually reviewed to extract timing of initiation and interruption, blood flow rate (BFR), dialysate flow rate, and filter transmembrane pressure (TMP). Standard BFR was 200 …

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