2021
DOI: 10.1101/2021.12.15.21267794
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Changing of therapeutic trends between the 1st and 2nd wave did not reduce COVID-19 related mortality of renal transplant recipients: a national registry study

Abstract: SARS-CoV-2 pandemic evolved in two consecutive waves over 2020 (for France: 1st wave from March 1 to July 31; and 2nd wave from August 1 to December 31). Improvements in the management of COVID-19 led to a reduction of mortality rates in hospitalized patients during the second wave. Whether this progress also benefited to kidney transplant recipients (KTR), a population particularly vulnerable to severe COVID-19, remained unclear.In France, 957 KTR were hospitalized for COVID-19 in 2020 and their data were pro… Show more

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“…The other factors associated with poorer patient survival in multivariate analysis were age and cardiovascular disease. Survival analyses performed in transplant patients hospitalized for Covid-19 during the 2nd wave unfortunately showed the same mortality rate as these of the 1st wave ( Figure 1 ) [2] . Thus, there was no prognosis improvement despite a different treatment strategy in the 2nd wave, which was based on the recommendations in the general population (in particular the use of high dexamethasone doses).…”
Section: Manuscriptmentioning
confidence: 77%
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“…The other factors associated with poorer patient survival in multivariate analysis were age and cardiovascular disease. Survival analyses performed in transplant patients hospitalized for Covid-19 during the 2nd wave unfortunately showed the same mortality rate as these of the 1st wave ( Figure 1 ) [2] . Thus, there was no prognosis improvement despite a different treatment strategy in the 2nd wave, which was based on the recommendations in the general population (in particular the use of high dexamethasone doses).…”
Section: Manuscriptmentioning
confidence: 77%
“…Steroids were maintained or increased. 44% of patients hospitalized in the second wave received anti-inflammatory treatments: dexamethasone or tocilizumab, although their efficacy cannot be precisely studied because of the retrospective nature of the data collection[ 1 , 2 ].…”
Section: Manuscriptmentioning
confidence: 99%