COVID-19 and kidney disease: insights from epidemiology to inform clinical practice

被引:0
|
作者
Viyaasan Mahalingasivam
Guobin Su
Masao Iwagami
Mogamat Razeen Davids
James B. Wetmore
Dorothea Nitsch
机构
[1] London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine,Department of Non
[2] Guangzhou University of Chinese Medicine,Communicable Disease Epidemiology
[3] Nanfang Hospital,Department of Nephrology, Guangdong Provincial Hospital of Chinese Medicine, The Second Affiliated Hospital, The Second Clinical College
[4] Southern Medical University,National Clinical Research Center for Kidney Disease, State Key Laboratory of Organ Failure Research, Guangdong Provincial Clinical Research Center for Kidney Disease, Department of Nephrology
[5] Karolinska Institutet,Department of Medical Epidemiology and Biostatistics
[6] University of Tsukuba,Department of Health Services Research
[7] Stellenbosch University,Division of Nephrology
[8] South African Renal Registry,Division of Nephrology
[9] African Renal Registry,Chronic Disease Research Group
[10] African Association of Nephrology,undefined
[11] Hennepin Healthcare,undefined
[12] Hennepin Healthcare,undefined
[13] UK Renal Registry,undefined
来源
Nature Reviews Nephrology | 2022年 / 18卷
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Over the course of the COVID-19 pandemic, numerous studies have aimed to address the challenges faced by patients with kidney disease and their caregivers. These studies addressed areas of concern such as the high infection and mortality risk of patients on in-centre haemodialysis and transplant recipients. However, the ability to draw meaningful conclusions from these studies has in some instances been challenging, owing to barriers in aspects of usual care, data limitations and problematic methodological practices. In many settings, access to SARS-CoV-2 testing differed substantially between patient groups, whereas the incidence of SARS-CoV-2 infection varied over time and place because of differences in viral prevalence, targeted public health policies and vaccination rates. The absence of baseline kidney function data posed problems in the classification of chronic kidney disease and acute kidney injury in some studies, potentially compromising the generalizability of findings. Study findings also require attentive appraisal in terms of the effects of confounding, collider bias and chance. As this pandemic continues and in the future, the implementation of sustainable and integrated research infrastructure is needed in settings across the world to minimize infection transmission and both prevent and plan for the short-term and long-term complications of infectious diseases. Registries can support the real-world evaluation of vaccines and therapies in patients with advanced kidney disease while enabling monitoring of rare complications.
引用
收藏
页码:485 / 498
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] COVID-19 and kidney disease: insights from epidemiology to inform clinical practice
    Mahalingasivam, Viyaasan
    Su, Guobin
    Iwagami, Masao
    Davids, Mogamat Razeen
    Wetmore, James B.
    Nitsch, Dorothea
    [J]. NATURE REVIEWS NEPHROLOGY, 2022, 18 (08) : 485 - 498
  • [2] COVID-19 and the Kidney: From Epidemiology to Clinical Practice
    Gagliardi, Ida
    Patella, Gemma
    Michael, Ashour
    Serra, Raffaele
    Provenzano, Michele
    Andreucci, Michele
    [J]. JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE, 2020, 9 (08) : 1 - 29
  • [3] Editorial: COVID-19 Related Kidney Disease: From Epidemiology to Clinical Management
    Fiorentino, Marco
    Cantaluppi, Vincenzo
    Mehta, Ravindra L.
    [J]. FRONTIERS IN MEDICINE, 2022, 9
  • [4] COVID-19: Epidemiology and clinical practice implications
    Rogge, Mary Madeline
    Gautam, Bibha
    [J]. NURSE PRACTITIONER, 2020, 45 (12): : 26 - 34
  • [5] COVID-19 and Kidney Disease: Update on Epidemiology, Clinical Manifestations, Pathophysiology and Management
    Asgharpour, Masoumeh
    Zare, Elham
    Mubarak, Muhammed
    Alirezaei, Amirhesam
    [J]. JCPSP-JOURNAL OF THE COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS PAKISTAN, 2020, 30 (06): : S19 - S25
  • [6] New Insights: COVID-19 Is Changing Clinical Practice
    Ayello, Elizabeth A.
    [J]. ADVANCES IN SKIN & WOUND CARE, 2022, 35 (04) : 191 - 191
  • [7] COVID-19 and Kidney Disease: A Clinical Perspective
    Theofilis, Panagiotis
    Vordoni, Aikaterini
    Kalaitzidis, Rigas G.
    [J]. CURRENT VASCULAR PHARMACOLOGY, 2022, 20 (04) : 321 - 325
  • [8] Chronic kidney disease in the shadow of COVID-19: insights from the bibliometric analysis
    Jingyu Wang
    Xingzi Liu
    Dikang Pan
    Xintian Cai
    Yuzhou Xue
    Jing Huang
    [J]. International Urology and Nephrology, 2024, 56 : 683 - 697
  • [9] Chronic kidney disease in the shadow of COVID-19: insights from the bibliometric analysis
    Wang, Jingyu
    Liu, Xingzi
    Pan, Dikang
    Cai, Xintian
    Xue, Yuzhou
    Huang, Jing
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL UROLOGY AND NEPHROLOGY, 2024, 56 (02) : 683 - 697
  • [10] COVID-19 in Kidney Transplantation: Epidemiology, Management Considerations, and the Impact on Kidney Transplant Practice
    Kataria, Ashish
    Yakubu, Idris
    Winstead, Ryan
    Gowda, Madan
    Gupta, Gaurav
    [J]. TRANSPLANTATION DIRECT, 2020, 6 (08):