Author: Chan, Kam Wa; Hung, Ivan Fan-Ngai; Tsang, Owen Tak-Yin; Wu, Tak Chiu; Tso, Eugene Yuk-Keung; Lung, Kwok Cheung; Lam, Chung Man; Chan, Gary Chi Wang; Wong, Sunny Sze-Ho; Yu, Kam Yan; Chan, Johnny Wai-Man; Tang, Sydney
                    Title: MO386 MASS SCREENING AND THE LOW RATES OF ACUTE KIDNEY INJURY AMONG COVID-19 PATIENTS IN HONG KONG  Cord-id: 0pa30zbv  Document date: 2021_5_29
                    ID: 0pa30zbv
                    
                    Snippet: BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Renal involvement in COVID-19 under vigilant public health surveillance, including mass screening and early hospitalization is less well-characterized. We assessed renal involvement of COVID-19 patients in Hong Kong, including the association with risk factors, length of hospitalization, critical presentation and mortality. METHOD: Linked electronic records of all confirmed patients from 5 major designated hospitals were extracted. Primary outcome was the incidence of in-hos
                    
                    
                    
                     
                    
                    
                    
                    
                        
                            
                                Document: BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Renal involvement in COVID-19 under vigilant public health surveillance, including mass screening and early hospitalization is less well-characterized. We assessed renal involvement of COVID-19 patients in Hong Kong, including the association with risk factors, length of hospitalization, critical presentation and mortality. METHOD: Linked electronic records of all confirmed patients from 5 major designated hospitals were extracted. Primary outcome was the incidence of in-hospital AKI. Secondary outcomes were AKI-associated mortality, incident RRT, intensive care admission, prolonged hospitalization and disease course (defined as >90th percentile of hospitalization duration and duration from symptom onset to discharge, respectively), and change of eGFR. Patients were further stratified into being symptomatic or asymptomatic. RESULTS: Patients were characterized by young age (median:38.4, IQR:28.4-55.8 years old) and short time (Median:5, IQR:2-9 days) from symptom onset to admission. Among the 591 patients, 22 (3.72%) developed AKI and 4 (0.68%) required RRT. AKI increased the odds of prolonged hospitalization and disease course by 2.0 and 3.5 folds, respectively. Estimated GFR 24 weeks post-discharge reduced by 7.51 and 1.06 ml/min/1.73m(2) versus baseline (at admission) in the AKI and non-AKI groups, respectively. The incidence of AKI was comparable between asymptomatic (4.8%) and symptomatic (3.7%) patients. CONCLUSION: The overall rate of AKI among COVID-19 patients in Hong Kong is low, which could be attributable to a vigilant screening program and early hospitalization. Among patients who developed in-hospital AKI, the duration of hospitalization is prolonged and kidney function impairment can persist for up to 6 months post-discharge. Mass surveillance for COVID-19 is warranted in identifying asymptomatic subjects for earlier AKI management.
 
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