Author: Daniel, Emily; Sekulic, Miroslav; Kudose, Satoru; Kubin, Christine; Ye, Xiaoyi; Shayan, Katayoon; Patel, Ankita; Cohen, David J.; E. Ratner, Lloyd; Santoriello, Dominick; Barry Stokes, M.; Markowitz, Glen S.; Pereira, Marcus R.; D’Agati, Vivette D.; Batal, Ibrahim
Title: Kidney allograft biopsy findings after COVIDâ€19 Cord-id: bw6nxduy Document date: 2021_9_3
ID: bw6nxduy
Snippet: COVIDâ€19 has been associated with acute kidney injury and published reports of native kidney biopsies have reported diverse pathologies. Case series directed specifically to kidney allograft biopsy findings in the setting of COVIDâ€19 are lacking. We evaluated 18 kidney transplant recipients who were infected with SARSâ€CoVâ€2 and underwent allograft biopsy. Patients had a median age of 55 years, six were female, and five were Black. Fifteen patients developed COVIDâ€19 pneumonia, of which
Document: COVIDâ€19 has been associated with acute kidney injury and published reports of native kidney biopsies have reported diverse pathologies. Case series directed specifically to kidney allograft biopsy findings in the setting of COVIDâ€19 are lacking. We evaluated 18 kidney transplant recipients who were infected with SARSâ€CoVâ€2 and underwent allograft biopsy. Patients had a median age of 55 years, six were female, and five were Black. Fifteen patients developed COVIDâ€19 pneumonia, of which five required mechanical ventilation. Notably, five of 11 (45%) biopsies obtained within 1 month of positive SARSâ€CoVâ€2 PCR showed acute rejection (four with arteritis, three of which were not associated with reduced immunosuppression). The remaining six biopsies revealed podocytopathy (n = 2, collapsing glomerulopathy and lupus podocytopathy), acute tubular injury (n = 2), infarction (n = 1), and transplant glomerulopathy (n = 1). Biopsies performed >1 month after positive SARSâ€CoVâ€2 PCR revealed collapsing glomerulopathy (n = 1), acute tubular injury (n = 1), and nonspecific histologic findings (n = 5). No direct viral infection of the kidney allograft was detected by immunohistochemistry, in situ hybridization, or electron microscopy. On followâ€up, two patients died and most patients showed persistent allograft dysfunction. In conclusion, we demonstrate diverse causes of kidney allograft dysfunction after COVIDâ€19, the most common being acute rejection with arteritis.
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