Author: Serrano, Oscar K.; Kutzler, Heather L.; Rochon, Caroline; Radojevic, Joseph A.; Lawlor, Michael T.; Hammond, Jonathan A.; Gluck, Jason; Feingold, Andrew D; Jaiswal, Abhishek
Title: Incidental COVIDâ€19 in a Heartâ€Kidney Transplant Recipient with Malnutrition and Recurrent Infections: Implications for the SARSâ€CoVâ€2 Immune Response Cord-id: 8ph1vlkn Document date: 2020_6_13
ID: 8ph1vlkn
Snippet: The clinical course and outcomes of immunocompromised patients, such as transplant recipients, with COVIDâ€19 remains unclear. It has been postulated that a substantial portion of the disease burden seems to be mediated by the host immune activation to the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARSâ€CoVâ€2). Herein, we present a simultaneous heartâ€kidney transplant (SHKT) recipient who was hospitalized for the management of respiratory failure from volume overload complicated by
Document: The clinical course and outcomes of immunocompromised patients, such as transplant recipients, with COVIDâ€19 remains unclear. It has been postulated that a substantial portion of the disease burden seems to be mediated by the host immune activation to the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARSâ€CoVâ€2). Herein, we present a simultaneous heartâ€kidney transplant (SHKT) recipient who was hospitalized for the management of respiratory failure from volume overload complicated by failure to thrive, multiple opportunistic infections, and open nonâ€healing wounds in the setting of worsening renal dysfunction weeks prior to the first case of SARSâ€CoVâ€2 being detected in the state of Connecticut. After his third endotracheal intubation, routine nucleic acid testing (NAT) for SARSâ€CoVâ€2, in anticipation of a planned tracheostomy, was positive. His hemodynamics, respiratory status and ventilator requirements remained stable without any worsening for 4 weeks until he had a negative NAT test. It is possible that the immunocompromised status of our patient may have prevented significant immune activation leading up to clinicallyâ€significant cytokine storm that could have resulted in acute respiratory distress syndrome and multisystem organ failure.
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