| Literature DB >> 35053628 |
Henry H L Wu1,2, Mohan Shenoy3, Philip A Kalra2,4, Rajkumar Chinnadurai2,4.
Abstract
Introduction: COVID-19 infections resulting in pathological kidney manifestations have frequently been reported in adults since the onset of the global COVID-19 pandemic in December 2019. Gradually, there have been an increased number of COVID-19-associated intrinsic kidney pathologies in children and adolescents reported as well. The pathophysiological mechanisms between COVID-19 and the onset of kidney pathology are not fully known in children; it remains a challenge to distinguish between intrinsic kidney pathologies that were caused directly by COVID-19 viral invasion, and cases which occurred as a result of multisystem inflammatory syndrome due to the infection. This challenge is made more difficult in children, due to the ethical limitations of performing kidney biopsies to reach a biopsy-proven diagnosis. Although previous systematic reviews have summarized the various pathological kidney manifestations that have occurred in adults following acute COVID-19 infection, such reviews have not yet been published for children and adolescents. We describe the results of a systematic review for intrinsic kidney pathology following COVID-19 infection in children and adolescents.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; SARS-CoV-2; adolescents; children; intrinsic kidney pathology
Year: 2021 PMID: 35053628 PMCID: PMC8774577 DOI: 10.3390/children9010003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Children (Basel) ISSN: 2227-9067
Figure 1PRISMA Flow Diagram.
Demographics and outcomes of children and adolescents with new-onset and relapsed nephrotic syndrome following acute COVID-19 infection.
| Author(s) and Country of Report | Age (yrs) | Sex | Ethnicity | Comorbidities | New-onset or Relapse | Clinical | Presentation Creatinine (mg/dL) | Presentation | Presentation Albumin (g/dL) | Haematuria | Kidney Biopsy | Treatment Received | Clinical Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alvarado et al. [ | 15 | M | Not Known | Nil | New-Onset | Anasarca, | 0.55 | 3.9 | 1.5 | Nil | Not done as inpatient. To be scheduled as outpatient | Chloroquine and Azithromycin, daily boluses of methylprednisolone for 5 doses | Resolution of oedema |
| Shah et al. [ | 8 | M | Not Known | Nil | New-Onset | Facial swelling, pedal/scrotal oedema | 0.32 | 11.4 | 2 | Yes, 2+ blood on urinalysis | No | Oral Prednisolone and supportive treatment | Achieved remission, continued oral prednisolone on reporting |
| Morreale et al. [ | 3 | Not Known | Italian, born to non-consanguineous parents | Nil | New-Onset | Abdominal distension/lower limb oedema | Not Known | 0.4 | 1.6 | Nil | No | Oral Prednisolone, Intravenous Albumin on Day 1, Furosemide from Day 3 | Prednisolone and furosemide were gradually tapered with disease remission |
| Morgan et al. [ | 5 | F | Not Known | Nil | New-Onset | Abdominal distension/ lower limb oedema | 0.27 | >12 | 2 | Nil | No | Intravenous albumin and furosemide for diuresis, oral vitamin D and oral corticosteroids | Achieved complete remission within 3 weeks of starting corticosteroids and urine protein was still negative after 6 weeks of therapy |
| Basalely et al. [ | Not Known | M | Hispanic | Steroid-sensitive Nephrotic Syndrome with infrequent relapses | Relapse | Anasarca | 0.5 | 18.7 | <2.0 | Moderate blood, 4–10 RBC, +hyaline casts | No | Received IV Abx. Blood Cultures +ve for Strep. Agalactiae, Stress-dose IV Hydrocortisone followed by oral Prednisolone, IV Albumin and IV Furosemide, prophylactic VTE treatment | Completed 10 days Abx treatment and 2 weeks of prophylactic VTE treatment alongside oral Prednisolone |
| Enya et al. [ | 3 | M | Japanese | Nephrotic Syndrome, Family Hx of Familial | Relapse | Eyelid oedema | 0.18 | 6.3 | 3.5 | Nil | No | Commenced on oral Prednisolone, otherwise supportive management | Achieved remission after a week of treatment |
| Al-Yazidi et al. [ | 10 | M | Arabic (Oman) | Steroid-sensitive Nephrotic Syndrome | Relapse | Facial edema, abdominal distension | Not Known | Not Known | Not Known | Nil | No | Commenced on oral Prednisolone, and required albumin infusion | Tapering of oral Prednisolone dose with resolution of proteinuria |
| Melgosa et al. [ | 2 patients with steroid-dependent nephrotic syndrome with acute COVID-19 infection provoked a relapse of their nephrotic syndrome. Both patients recovered following administration of oral Prednisolone without complications. Data were not described for each of these 2 patients individually. | ||||||||||||
| Krishnasamy | 11 out of 24 patients with previous diagnosis of nephrotic syndrome developed relapse of their nephrotic syndrome following acute COVID-19 infection. Data and outcomes were not described for each of these 11 patients individually. | ||||||||||||
Abx, antibiotics; COVID-19, coronavirus disease 2019; F, female; IV, intravenous; M, male; RBC, red blood cells; VTE, venous thromboembolism.
Demographics and outcomes of children and adolescents with glomerulonephritis and other intrinsic kidney pathologies following acute COVID-19 infection.
| Author and Country of Report | Age (yrs) | Sex | Ethnicity | Comorbidities | Pathology | New-onset or Relapse | Presentation Creatinine (mg/dL) | Presentation Proteinuria (g/Day) | Presentation Albumin (g/dL) | RBC per High Powered Field | Kidney Biopsy | Treatment Received | Clinical Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Basiratnia et al. [ | 17 | M | Not Known | Nil | Acute Necrotising Glomerulonephritis | New-Onset | 17 | 5.6 | 4 | 3+ blood in urinalysis, “many” RBCs | Yes | 3 doses of pulsed Methylprednisolone followed by Prednisolone and HD with VTE treatment | Discharged DD. |
| Basiratnia et al. [ | 16 | M | Not Known | Nil significant, but episode of gastroenteritis and fever 1 month prior to admission | Acute Necrotising Glomerulonephritis | New-Onset | 15.6 | Not described. Urinalysis 3+ protein | 4 | 2+ blood in urinalysis, “many” RBCs | Yes | 3 doses of pulsed Methylprednisolone followed by Prednisolone and 2 sessions of HD with VTE treatment | Resolution of AKI. |
| Fireizen et al. [ | 17 | M | Not Known | Obesity, Asthma, had COVID-19 pneumonia 2 months prior to presentation | pANCA (MPO) vasculitis | New-Onset | 0.78 1st admission, 1.30 2nd admission 1.52 3rd admission, all admissions shortly after one another | Not described | Not stated, but presence of visible proteinuria noted | Not stated, but presence of visible haematuria noted | Yes | Initial admission-Remdesivir, Dexamethasone, and Azithromycin | Resolution Of AKI. |
| Meshram et al. [ | 10 | M | Not Known | Nil | Recurrent antifactor H antibody-associated aHUS with underlying complement factor H-related protein mutation | Relapse | 2.9 | Not described. Urinalysis 3+ protein | Not described | Nil | No | Commenced on oral Prednisolone and MMF. Eventually received IV Rituximab (2 doses) and required IV immunoglobulin as well. Regular antihypertensive medications indicated. | Discharged DD. Patient progressed to CKD eventually and requires maintenance HD. Remained on regular oral Prednisolone |
Abx, antibiotics; aHUS, atypical Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome; AKI, acute kidney injury; COVID-19, coronavirus disease 2019; CKD, chronic kidney disease; DD, dialysis dependent; DI, dialysis independent; F, female; HD, hemodialysis; HUS, Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome; IV, intravenous; M, male; MMF, mycophenolate mofetil; MPO, myeloperoxidase; pANCA, perinuclear anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibody; VTE, venous thromboembolism.
Demographics and outcomes of children and adolescents with transplant intrinsic kidney pathologies following acute COVID-19 infection.
| Author and Country of Report | Age (yrs) | Sex | Ethnicity | Comorbidities | Pathology | New-Onset or Relapse | Presentation Creatinine (mg/dL) | Presentation Proteinuria (g/Day) | Presentation Albumin (g/dL) | RBC per High Powered Field | Kidney Biopsy | Treatment Received | Clinical Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Levenson et al. [ | 16 | M | Black | Remote cerebrovascular accident, | Collapsing Glomerulopathy | New-Onset | 2.3 and increasing to 4.7 | 17 | 1.2 | Nil | Yes | Acute discontinuation of MMF, required two doses of IV immunoglobulin supportive treatment otherwise | Recovery of graft function, discharged DI, |
| Daniel et al. [ | 15 | F | Hispanic | ESKD secondary to decreased nephron mass. Patient received deceased donor kidney transplantation | T-cell-mediated rejection | New-Onset | 2.1 (baseline is 0.5) | 0.31 | 4 | 272 | Yes | Steroids and Bamlanvimab was administered as post COVID-19 therapy | Discharged with some recovery of graft function. |
| Berteloot et al. [ | 2 patients with positive COVID-19 RT-PCR results following kidney transplantation on day 2 and day 105, respectively, were described. Patient 1 had ESKD secondary to HUS, and received a deceased donor transplant. Patient 2 had CKDu, and also received a deceased donor transplant. Transplant kidney biopsy revealed <10% tubular interstitial infiltration in patient 1 and microcalcifications in patient 2. Both patients remained asymptomatic with the positive COVID-19 RT-PCR result. | ||||||||||||
COVID-19, coronavirus disease 2019; CKDu, chronic kidney disease of unknown aetiology; DI, dialysis independent; ESKD, end-stage kidney disease; HUS, Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome; MMF, mycophenolate mofetil; pANCA, perinuclear anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibody.