Early Changes in Renal Function as Predictors of In-Hospital Mortality in COVID-19 Patients
Nicu Olariu, Nilima Rajpal Kundnani, Simona Ruxanda Dragan, Luciana-Elena Marc, Victor Buciu, Delia Mira Berceanu Vaduva, Andreas Valcovici, Ioana Adela Ratiu, Petru Bucuras, Adelina Mihaescu

TL;DR
This study shows that early changes in kidney function within the first 48 hours of hospitalization for COVID-19 can predict in-hospital mortality better than static kidney measures.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel approach using dynamic early kidney function patterns to improve risk stratification in hospitalized COVID-19 patients.
Findings
Early improvement in kidney function was associated with higher in-hospital mortality compared to stable function.
Early deterioration in kidney function showed a similar trend but was not statistically significant.
Early improvement was linked to higher AKI burden and increased need for hemodialysis.
Abstract
Background: Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a frequent and prognostically relevant complication of COVID-19. However, reliance on static creatinine values or binary AKI definitions may overlook clinically meaningful early renal dynamics. We evaluated whether early renal function trajectories within the first 24–48 h of hospitalization provide incremental prognostic information. Methods: We conducted a retrospective, single-center cohort study of adults hospitalized with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 between December 2020 and December 2021. Early renal function patterns were defined using KDIGO-based changes in serum creatinine between admission and 24–48 h, classifying patients as stable, early improvement, or early deterioration. The primary outcome was in-hospital mortality. Multivariable logistic regression adjusted for age, sex, chronic kidney disease, comorbidities, inflammatory…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAcute Kidney Injury Research · COVID-19 Clinical Research Studies · Muscle and Compartmental Disorders
