4.6 Article

Arterial oxygen saturation and hypoxemia in hemodialysis patients with COVID-19

期刊

CLINICAL KIDNEY JOURNAL
卷 14, 期 4, 页码 1222-1228

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/ckj/sfab019

关键词

chronic kidney disease; COVID-19; hemodialysis; hypoxemia; oxygen saturation

资金

  1. Renal Research Institute
  2. National Institutes of Health/National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases [R01DK130067]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Maintenance hemodialysis patients are at high risk for COVID-19, and may experience hypoxemia prior to clinical symptoms. The use of SaO(2) measurements during dialysis can help identify COVID-19 patients early. Oxygen supplementation during dialysis may be necessary post-diagnosis to improve patient outcomes.
Background. Maintenance hemodialysis (MHD) patients are particularly vulnerable to coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), a viral disease that may cause interstitial pneumonia, impaired alveolar gas exchange and hypoxemia. We ascertained the time course of intradialytic arterial oxygen saturation (SaO(2)) in MHD patients between 4 weeks pre-diagnosis and the week post-diagnosis of COVID-19. Methods. We conducted a quality improvement project in confirmed COVID-19 in-center MHD patients from 11 dialysis facilities. In patients with an arterio-venous access, SaO(2) was measured 1 x/min during dialysis using the Crit-Line monitor (Fresenius Medical Care, Waltham, MA, USA). We extracted demographic, clinical, treatment and laboratory data, and COVID-19-related symptoms from the patients' electronic health records. Results. Intradialytic SaO(2) was available in 52 patients (29 males; mean +/- standard deviation age 66.5 +/- 15.7 years) contributing 338 HD treatments. Mean time between onset of symptoms indicative of COVID-19 and diagnosis was 1.1 days (median 0; range 0-9). Prior to COVID-19 diagnosis the rate of HD treatments with hypoxemia, defined as treatment-level average SaO(2) <90%, increased from 2.8% (2-4 weeks pre-diagnosis) to 12.2% (1 week) and 20.7% (3 days pre-diagnosis). Intradialytic O-2 supplementation increased sharply post-diagnosis. Eleven patients died from COVID-19 within 5 weeks. Compared with patients who recovered from COVID-19, demised patients showed a more pronounced decline in SaO(2) prior to COVID-19 diagnosis. Conclusions. In HD patients, hypoxemia may precede the onset of clinical symptoms and the diagnosis of COVID-19. A steep decline of SaO(2) is associated with poor patient outcomes. Measurements of SaO(2) may aid the pre-symptomatic identification of patients with COVID-19.

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