Introduction

The onset of the COVID-19 pandemic has had an impact on Australia’s population and health care system in multiple ways, including on economic expenditure, mortality, disability, health workforce and disease surveillance. This article explores the impact of COVID-19 in Australia for people living with chronic kidney disease (CKD).

Data available on CKD across public health emergency period are limited by the availability of data on the continuing pandemic period, as well as the lack of longer-term data.

There will likely be long-term impacts of the COVID-19 public health emergency period on people with CKD, even on those who do not become infected with COVID-19, due to delays in care for chronic conditions such as CKD, diabetes and cardiovascular disease (Yende and Parikh, 2021).

Kidney transplants in Australia

Organ donation numbers and transplants declined as a result of the COVID-19 public health emergency period (OTA 2021). In response to COVID-19, adult kidney transplant programs were suspended from 24 March 2020 to mid-May 2020.

Pauses in transplant surgery particularly affected those with CKD, as more than half of transplanted organs are kidneys. In 2020, there was an 18% drop in the number of kidney transplants from deceased donors compared with 2019 (704 and 857 transplants, respectively). In 2021, there was a decrease of 6.8% compared with 2020 (656 transplants) (OTA 2020, 2021).

Donations from living donors are classified as elective surgery; therefore, pauses in elective surgery affected the number of transplants from living donors. There was a 24% drop in living kidney donors in 2020; in 2021, the number of living kidney donors rose by 12% compared with 2020 (202 and 182 donors) (OTA 2021).

Chronic kidney disease hospitalisations

In 2020–21, there were over 4,700 hospitalisations involving a diagnosis of COVID-19 in Australia. Of these, 394 (8.4%) had CKD recorded on their hospital admission; 64 (16%) of these required a stay in the intensive care unit, 48 (12%) required continuous ventilatory support and 113 (29%) died in hospital, the third-highest death rate for comorbid conditions after chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and dementia. This includes type 2 diabetes (19%, 188 deaths) and cardiovascular disease (20%, 189 deaths), which are often comorbid with CKD. The death rate for people with CKD and COVID-19 was also higher than for people with multiple comorbid conditions who were hospitalised with COVID-19 (26%) and people with no comorbid conditions (4.7%) (AIHW 2022).

Hospital admissions for people with CKD fell sharply between March and April 2020, when lockdown measures were introduced nationwide by the Australian Government. In April 2020, CKD hospitalisations declined by 16% among males and by 18% among females, compared with figures for April 2019 (Figure 1(b)).

Figure 1 and 1(b): Monthly trends in chronic kidney disease hospitalisations, as a principal or additional diagnosis

This figure shows the impact of the COVID-19 lockdown on hospital admissions for people with chronic kidney disease, declining in early 2020.

This figure shows the impact of the COVID-19 lockdown on hospital admissions for people with chronic kidney disease, declining in early 2020.

Chronic kidney disease emergency department presentations

From July 2018 to June 2021, the average number of CKD-related emergency department (ED) presentations each month was around 3,400. The number of presentations ranged between 2,800 (April 2020) and 4,200 (January 2020) during this period.

Between January 2020 and April 2020, the rate of CKD-related ED presentations fell by about 32% (16 to 11 presentations per 100,000 population). This decline coincided with the implementation of COVID-19 restrictions in early 2020. The rate of ED presentations gradually increased between April 2020 and January 2021 (Figure 2).

Figure 2: Number of emergency department presentations with a principal diagnosis of chronic kidney disease, July 2018 to June 2021

This figure shows the monthly variation in the number of emergency department presentations with a principal diagnosis of chronic kidney disease between July 2018 to June 2021.

This figure shows the monthly variation in the number of emergency department presentations with a principal diagnosis of chronic kidney disease between July 2018 to June 2021.

Acute kidney injury hospitalisation in Australia

International data show that COVID-19 causes acute kidney injury (AKI) in some patients. In patients hospitalised with COVID-19, rates of AKI up to 28% have been reported, increasing to around 50% in patients admitted to intensive care (Nadim et al. 2020; Silver et al 2020). Additional research suggests that cases of AKI in COVID-19 patients may be much higher than this, if an extended definition of AKI is used to capture cases where the disease occurs before hospitalisation, or early in a hospital admission (Wainstein et al. 2022).

A meta-analysis of international data published up to October 2020 showed that 19% of AKI patients with COVID-19 who were in an intensive care unit started kidney replacement therapy (Silver et al. 2020).

The long-term impacts of COVID-19 and its association with a decline in kidney function (measured by the estimated Glomerular Filtration Rate (eGFR)) are not well understood, however, early evidence suggests that people who experienced COVID-19-associated AKI are at increased risk of developing CKD – with the severity of AKI associated with larger declines in eGFR 12 months post-acute COVID-19 infection (Gu et al. 2022; Hultström et al. 2021).