| Literature DB >> 33689201 |
Arnaud G L'Huillier1, Lara Danziger-Isakov2, Abanti Chaudhuri3, Michael Green4, Marian G Michaels4, Klara M Posfay-Barbe1, Dimitri van der Linden5, Anita Verma6, Mignon McCulloch7, Monica I Ardura8.
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has proven to be a challenge in regard to the clinical presentation, prevention, diagnosis, and management of SARS-CoV-2 infection among children who are candidates for and recipients of SOT. By providing scenarios and frequently asked questions encountered in routine clinical practice, this document provides expert opinion and summarizes the available data regarding the prevention, diagnosis, and management of SARS-CoV-2 infection among pediatric SOT candidates and recipients and highlights ongoing knowledge gaps requiring further study. Currently available data are still lacking in the pediatric SOT population, but data have emerged in both the adult SOT and general pediatric population regarding the approach to COVID-19. The document provides expert opinion regarding prevention, diagnosis, and management of SARS-CoV-2 infection among pediatric SOT candidates and recipients.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; SARS-CoV-2; SOT; children; pediatrics
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33689201 PMCID: PMC8237081 DOI: 10.1111/petr.13986
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Transplant ISSN: 1397-3142
Summary of published or publicly available COVID‐19 data among pediatric (≤21 year) solid organ transplant recipients
| Ref | Age (in year) | Graft, N | Manifestation/Time post‐SOT/IST at Dx | Labs | Management | Outcome | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | nd | LiTx (3) | No clinical disease | SARS‐CoV‐2 RT‐PCR+ | nd | Alive, well | 3/200 LiTx+: Low incidence of COVID‐19 in SOT in Bergamo, Italy |
| [ | 0.5 | LiTx, LD (1) |
Day 4 post‐transplant, steroid induction Fever, respiratory distress, diarrhea |
PTD 2 + SARS‐CoV‐2 RT‐PCR in donor (mother) and child (nasal); RT‐PCR not performed on blood or liver tissue PTD 6: 5x increase in LFTs and CXR with patchy lung opacities PTD 7: liver bx with moderate acute hepatitis, mixed portal inflammation (lymphocyte predominant) in most portal tracts with lymphocytic cholangitis and mild portal venulitis, c/w mild‐to‐moderate ACR (Banff 5) |
Hospitalized: PICU, requiring CPAP PTD 4: hydroxychloroquine (x5 days) and IVIG Treatment of ACR worsened LFTs; corticosteroid tapered and discontinuation of MMF improved enzymes | Alive, remains hospitalized | Raised question of hepatitis from liver of LD‐derived SARS‐CoV2 |
| [ | nd | LiTx (1) |
URI CNI, pred, tacrolimus | Not reported | nd | Alive, well | 1/190 LiTx+: Low incidence of disease in Sao Paolo, Brazil |
| [ | 3 | OHT (1), |
2 y post‐OHT Rhinorrhea, productive cough Tacrolimus monotax |
SARS‐CoV‐2 RT‐PCR+ (nasal) De novo Class II DSA |
No antivirals IVIG (0.5 g/kg) | Alive | Raised question of SARS‐CoV‐2 causing de novo DSA |
| [ | 0.1–17 | KTx (3) |
1.5–10 y post‐KTx Sxs not described Differing: MMF, tacrolimus, everolimus |
2/3 hospitalized and had AKI; 1/3 tacrolimus toxicity IST: MMF reduced/stopped and tacro stopped (1) Unclear if antiviral provided |
Alive, recovered; Return to baseline GFR | ||
| [ | 1.1–15 | OHT (3) |
0.4–2 y post‐OHT Fever, cough, URI, LRT (wheezing), pallor, rash Combination IST (MMF/Cy/pred; tacro/MMF; tacro/azathioprine) |
N = 1, hepatitis (SARS‐CoV‐2 RT‐PCRneg) Patient with rash (Gianotti Crosti with negative PCR, positive SARS‐CoV‐2 IgG ELISA) | MMF stopped (1) | Alive, recovered | |
| [ | 13 | KTx (1) |
Fever, cough, diarrhea, hypoxemia 6 y post‐KTx Sirolimus, MMF |
SARS‐CoV‐2 RT‐PCR+ (NP) ESR 7 mm/hr, CRP 4.5 mg/dL Elevated creatinine |
Hospitalized: Supplemental oxygen No antivirals Slight reduction IST (MMF and sirolimus TDM 7 ng/mL) | Alive, diarrhea persisted x 4 weeks |
SARS‐CoV‐2 RT‐PCR+ (NP) at day 28 |
| [ | n/a |
N = 2 SOT (1 LiTx, 1 NOS); n/a | n/a | Donor was found to be SARS‐CoV‐2 + post‐LiTx | Hospitalized, no further details | n/a | |
| Dr. Cecil Levy, personal communication (07/06/2020). Nelson Mandela Children's Hospital, Johannesburg, South Africa | 13 | KTx (1) |
Rash (pruritic, pustular) Tacrolimus/MMF/ pred |
SARS‐CoV‐2 RT‐PCR+ (NP) CRP<10 mg/L Mild AKI |
Hospitalized No antivirals No change in IST | Alive, recovered; return to baseline creatinine | |
| [ | 11y, 14 y | KTx, 1; LiTx, 1 |
Fever, cough KTx: pred/tacro; LiTx: pred/tacro/MMF | LRTI infiltrates |
Both hospitalized No antivirals; hydroxychloroquine in KTx Modifications in IST: KTx 50% tacro reduction; LiTx tacro decrease, MMF withdrawal, pred increase |
No complications, Discharged from hospital (after 2 and 3 days) | |
| [ | 4.5y | LiTx (1, LD) |
Fever, cough, rhinorrhea, 5 months post‐LiTx Tacrolimus |
LRTI focal infiltrate Transaminitis and hyperbilirubinemia Concurrent EBV DNAemia |
No antivirals Tacrolimus reduced 50% | No complications | |
| [ | Median 8y | 26 total: OHT (6), KTx (8), LiTx (10), Lung (2) |
Cough (46%), fever (35%), sore throat (12%), rhinorrhea (12%), anosmia (8%), diarrhea (8%) 3.4 years (12–6574 days) post‐Tx Varied IST, most frequently tacrolimus‐based |
6 (23%) were asymptomatic 5 (19%) required hospitalization for COVID‐19‐related symptoms for a median of 3 days 8/26 (31%) underwent imaging with 2 demonstrating multifocal LRTI infiltrates |
No patient required supplemental oxygen, mechanical ventilation, or ECMO for COVID‐19 related symptoms Immunosuppression was reduced in 2/26 (8%) patients, one of whom developed ACR |
No deaths; symptomatic patients recovered within a median of 7 days One patient tested and demonstrated IgG‐specific antibody detection | Multi‐organ cohort among 5 centers |
Case definitions of COVID‐19
| Criteria | US CDC [ | EU European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control [ |
|---|---|---|
| Clinical |
At least Fever Chills Rigors Myalgia Headache Sore throat New olfactory or taste disturbances
Severe respiratory illness with at least one of the following:
Clinical or radiographic evidence of pneumonia Acute respiratory distress syndrome
. No alternative diagnosis likely |
At least Cough Fever Shortness of breath Sudden onset of anosmia, ageusia, or dysgeusia |
| Laboratory |
Confirmatory evidence:
Detection of SARS‐CoV‐2 RNA in a clinical specimen using NAT Presumptive evidence:
Detection of SARS‐CoV‐2 antigen in a clinical specimen Detection of SARS‐CoV‐2 antibody in a clinical specimen |
Detection of SARS‐CoV‐2 RNA in a clinical specimen using NAT Radiologic evidence showing lesions compatible with COVID‐19 |
| Epidemiologic |
One or more of the following exposures in the 14 days before onset of symptoms
Close contact with a confirmed of probable case of COVID‐19
Close contact with a person with:
A clinically compatible illness AND Epidemiologic link to a confirmed case of COVID‐19 Travel to or residence in a geographic area with sustained SARS‐CoV‐2 transmission Member of a risk cohort, as defined by public health authorities |
At least one of the following:
Close contact with a confirmed COVID‐19 case in the 14 days prior to symptom onset Being a resident or staff in the 14 days prior to onset of symptoms, in a residential institution for vulnerable people where ongoing COVID‐19 transmission has been confirmed |
Recommendations for SARS‐CoV‐2 testing in organ transplantation donors by transplantation societies
| Donor type | SARS‐CoV‐2 scenario | The Transplantation Society [ | AST [ | European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control [ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Deceased | No known SARS‐CoV‐2 infection | Negative RT‐PCR/NAT before organ procurement (timing not specified) |
At least one negative respiratory tract specimen RT‐PCR/NAT performed ≤72 hours of procurement Some experts recommend a second test to be performed 12–24 hrs after the initial test, and ≤24‐48hours prior to procurement, when feasible. A second test could be considered when clinical suspicion is high and the first test is negative Thoracic organs: one of the two screening tests should be performed on a LRT sample (eg, tracheal aspirate or BAL sample), when feasible |
One negative RT‐PCR/NAT, from upper or LRT, performed ≤72 hours of procurement In an area with sustained virus transmission, deceased donors without symptoms or diagnosis of COVID‐19 should have a SARS‐CoV‐2 RT‐PCR/NAT performed on BAL specimens collected ≤72 hours before organ procurement |
| Deceased | Confirmed SARS‐CoV‐2 infection | May consider if negative RT‐PCR/NAT before procurement (timing not specified) and clinically recovered from COVID‐19 prior to expiring |
Consider only if ≥28 days from symptom resolution and negative RT‐PCR/NAT Consider further evaluations for kidney and lung grafts | Consider only if death ≥28 days from symptom resolution or ≥14 days from upper respiratory negative RT‐PCR/NAT |
| Living | No known SARS‐CoV‐2 infection | Negative RT‐PCR/NAT before procurement (timing not specified) | At least one negative respiratory RT‐PCR/NAT performed ≤72 h of procurement | If SOT cannot be delayed, the donor's NP swab specimens should be tested for SARS‐CoV‐2 by RT‐PCR/NAT ≤7 days before procurement |
| Living | Confirmed SARS‐CoV‐2 infection | May consider if ≥14 days since symptom onset AND ideally have two negative RT‐PCR/NAT |
Consider only if ≥28 days from symptom resolution and RT‐PCR/NAT negative Consider further evaluations for kidney and lung grafts | Consider only if ≥28 days from symptom resolution or ≥14 days from negative upper respiratory RT‐PCR/NAT |