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Oxford University Press - PMC COVID-19 Collection logoLink to Oxford University Press - PMC COVID-19 Collection
. 2021 Feb 12:gfab042. doi: 10.1093/ndt/gfab042

The spectrum of kidney biopsies in hospitalized patients with COVID-19, acute kidney injury, and/or proteinuria

Sophie Ferlicot 1,2,3,#, Matthieu Jamme 4,5,#, François Gaillard 6,#, Julie Oniszczuk 7,#, Aymeric Couturier 5,8, Olivia May 9, Anne Grünenwald 10,11,12, Aurélie Sannier 3,13, Anissa Moktefi 3,14, Ophélie Le Monnier 15, Camille Petit-Hoang 16, Nadine Maroun 17, Albane Brodin-Sartorius 18, Arthur Michon 11, Hélène Dobosziewicz 11, Fabrizio Andreelli 19, Matthieu Guillet 11, Hassane Izzedine 20, Christian Richard 10, Manon Dekeyser 11, Romain Arrestier 21, Thomas Sthelé 7, Edouard Lefèvre 11, Alexis Mathian 15, Christophe Legendre 11, Charlotte Mussini 1,3, Marie-Christine Verpont 22, Nicolas Pallet 23, Zahir Amoura 15, Marie Essig 5,8, Renaud Snanoudj 18, Isabelle Brocheriou-Spelle 3,24, Hélène François 16, Xavier Belenfant 9, Guillaume Geri 5,25, Eric Daugas 6, Vincent Audard 7, David Buob 3,26, Ziad A Massy 5,8, Mohamad Zaidan 2,11,27,; the AP-HP/Universities/Inserm COVID-19 research collaboration
PMCID: PMC7928708  PMID: 33576823

Abstract

We report a multicentric retrospective case series of patients with COVID-19 who developed acute kidney injury and/or proteinuria and underwent a kidney biopsy in the Paris and its metropolitan area.

Forty-seven patients (80.9% men) with COVID-19 who underwent a kidney biopsy between March 08 and May 19, 2020 were included. Median age was 63 years IQR [52–69]. Comorbidities included hypertension (66.0%), diabetes mellitus (27.7%), obesity (27.7%), history of chronic kidney (25.5%), cardiac (38.6%) and respiratory (27.3%) diseases. Initial symptoms were fever (85.1%), cough (63.8%), shortness of breath (55.3%), and diarrhea (23.4%). Almost all patients developed acute kidney injury (97.9%) and 63.8% required renal replacement therapy. Kidney biopsy showed two main histopathological patterns, including acute tubular injury in 20 (42.6%) patients, and glomerular injury consisting of collapsing glomerulopathy and focal segmental glomerulosclerosis in 17 (36.2%) patients.

Two (4.3%) patients had acute vascular nephropathy, while eight (17%) had alternative diagnosis most likely unrelated to COVID-19. Acute tubular injury occurred almost invariably in the setting of severe forms of COVID-19, whereas patients with glomerular injury had various profiles of COVID-19 severity and collapsing glomerulopathy was only observed in patients harboring a combination of APOL1 risk variants. At last follow-up, 16 of the 30 patients who initially required dialysis were still on dialysis, and 9 died.

The present study describes the spectrum of kidney lesions in patients with COVID-19. While acute tubular injury is correlated with COVID-19 severity, the pattern of glomerular injury is intimately associated with the expression of APOL1 risk variants.

Keywords: acute tubular injury, collapsing glomerulopathy, COVID-19, focal segmental glomerulosclerosis, kidney


Articles from Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation are provided here courtesy of Oxford University Press

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