- Title
- COVID-19 Vaccination and new onset glomerular disease: Results from the IRocGN2 International registry
- Creator
- Waldman, Meryl; Sinaii, Ninet; Gallan, Alexander J.; El-Meanawy, Ashraf; Yagil, Yoram; Lebedev, Larissa; Baskaran, Krishoban; Vilayur, Eswari; Wai Seung, Adrienne; Weerasinghe, Nethmi; Petrakis, Ioannis; Stylianou, Kostas; Lerma, Edgar V.; Gakiopoulou, Hariklia; Hamilton, AJ; Edney, N; Millner, R; Marinaki, S; Rein, JL; Killen, JP; Rodríguez Chagolla, JM; Bassil, C; Lopez del Valle, R; Kurien, Anila Abraham; Evans, J; Urisman, A; Zawaideh, M; Baxi, PV; Rodby, RA; Vankalakunti, M; Mejia Vilet, JM; Ramirez Andrade, SE; Homan, M; Vasquez Jimenez, E; Jhaveri, Kenar D.; Perinpanayagam, N; Velez, JCQ; Mohamed, MMB; Mohammed, KMG; Sekar, A; Ollila, L; Aron, AW; Arellano Arteaga, KJ; Islam, M; Berrio, EM; Uppal, Nupur N.; Maoujoud, O; Morales, RR; Seipp, R; Schulze, CE; Yenchek, RH; Vancea, I; Muneeb, M; Howard, L; Caza, TN; Wanchoo, Rimda; Avasare, Rupali; Zuckerman, Jonathan E.; Liew, Adrian
- Relation
- Kidney360 Vol. 4, Issue 3, p. 349-362
- Publisher Link
- http://dx.doi.org/10.34067/kid.0006832022
- Publisher
- Wolters Kluwer Health
- Resource Type
- journal article
- Date
- 2023
- Description
- Background:Cases of de novo glomerular disease with various renal histologies have been reported after vaccination against SARS-CoV-2. Causality has not been established and the long-term outcomes are not known. To better characterize the glomerular diseases and clinical course/outcomes, we created the International Registry of COVID-19 vaccination and Glomerulonephritis (IRocGN2) to study in aggregate de novo glomerulonephritis cases suspected after COVID-19 vaccine exposure Methods:A RedCap survey was used for anonymized data collection. Detailed information on vaccination type and timing and glomerular disease histology were recorded in the registry. We collected serial information on laboratory values (before and after vaccination and during follow-up), treatments, and kidney-related outcomes. Results: Ninety-eight glomerular disease cases were entered into the registry over eleven months from 44 centers throughout the world. Median follow-up was 89 days after diagnosis. IgA nephropathy (IgAN) and minimal change disease (MCD) were the most the common kidney diseases reported. Recovery of kidney function and remission of proteinuria was more likely in IgAN and MCD at 4-6 months than with pauci immune glomerulonephritis /vasculitis and membranous nephropathy. Conclusions:Development of glomerular disease after vaccination against SARS-CoV-2 may be a very rare adverse event. Temporal association is present for IgAN and MCD, but causality is not firmly established. Kidney outcomes for IgAN and MCD are favorable. No changes in vaccination risk-benefit assessment is recommended based on these findings.
- Subject
- de novo; COVID-19; glomerular disease (GD); vaccination
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1481426
- Identifier
- uon:50720
- Identifier
- ISSN:2641-7650
- Language
- eng
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