Urinary cytokines correlate with acute kidney injury in critically ill COVID-19 patients.

Cytokine

Department of Surgical Sciences, Anesthesiology and Intensive Care, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden; Department of Medical Cell Biology, Integrative Physiology, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden.

Published: October 2021

Background: Acute kidney injury is common in COVID-19 patients admitted to the ICU. Urinary biomarkers are a non-invasive way of assaying renal damage, and so far, urinary cytokines are not fully investigated. The current study aimed to assess urinary cytokine levels in COVID-19 patients.

Methods: Urine was collected from COVID-19 patients (n = 29) in intensive care and compared to a preoperative group of patients (n = 9) with no critical illness. 92 urinary cytokines were analyzed in multiplex using the Olink Target 96 inflammation panel and compared to clinical characteristics, and urinary markers of kidney injury.

Results: There were strong correlations between proinflammatory cytokines and between urinary cytokines and urinary kidney injury markers in 29 COVID-19 patients. Several cytokines were correlated to kidney injury, 31 cytokines to AKI stage and 19 cytokines correlated to maximal creatinine.

Conclusions: Urinary inflammatory cytokines from a wide range of immune cell lineages were significantly upregulated during COVID-19 and the upregulation correlated with acute kidney injury as well as urinary markers of kidney tissue damage.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8141692PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cyto.2021.155589DOI Listing

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