When treating patients during the pandemic, Yale School of Medicine’s Abinet Aklilu, MD, MPH, postdoctoral fellow, and F. Perry Wilson, MD, MSCE, associate professor of medicine (nephrology) and public health (chronic disease epidemiology), noticed a high incidence of acute kidney injury (AKI) in individuals with COVID-19, many of whom required dialysis. Initial studies found that in the first six months after hospital discharge, kidney function in these patients rapidly declined. Yet, until now, the long-term impact of COVID on the kidneys has remained largely unknown.
In a new study, Aklilu, Wilson, and a team of researchers set out to discover if adults with COVID-19 who develop AKI are at risk of worse kidney function trajectory and higher mortality than those who have AKI associated with other causes.