Research Describes How SARS-CoV-2 Virus is Worsening Post-Covid Kidney Injuries

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Kidney

New Delhi: A study has revealed that protein depositions caused by the SARS-CoV-2 virus, the culprit behind the devastating COVID-19 epidemic, are exacerbating kidney damage. This sheds new light on post-COVID kidney injuries.

China’s Capital Medical University and Chifeng University researchers have made a significant discovery. They found that kidney deposits of SARS-CoV-2 protein are linked to the ‘occurrence and recurrence of membranous nephropathy (MN)’—an autoimmune disease in which the body targets the kidneys’ tiny filtering units or glomeruli. This discovery opens up new possibilities for potential treatments and brings hope to those affected.

The study included 38 patients with biopsy-proven MN who developed new-onset proteinuria—elevated protein in the urine—after COVID-19 and 100 patients with primary MN diagnosed before the pandemic as controls.

“Thirteen of 38 patients were found positive for the SARS-CoV-2 nucleocapsid protein. Compared with control patients, the clinical manifestations were more severe in patients after Covid infection,” the team said in the paper published in the Kidney International Reports.

Those with positive SARS-CoV-2 protein levels “had a higher proportion of nephrotic syndrome, lower level of serum albumin, and greater severity of renal interstitial fibrosis than those of patients with negative SARS-CoV-2” protein levels.

“Our study suggests that SARS-CoV-2 infection may contribute to the deposition of viral protein under epithelial cells and lead to podocyte (kidney cells) injury,” the researchers said.

MN is the most common pathological type of adult nephrotic syndrome — a kidney disorder that causes the body to excrete too much protein in the urine.

It is characterised by the deposition of immune complexes under glomerular epithelial cells, which include specific antigens, IgG, and complement membrane attack complexes (MAC).

Approximately 70 per cent of MN are considered primary, while the remaining 30 per cent are secondary to various etiologies, including infections such as hepatitis virus as one of the important secondary causes.

While previous studies showed SARS-CoV-2 primarily in renal tubular epithelial cells of Covid patients with kidney injury, the new research, for the first time, observed deposits of SARS-CoV-2 nucleocapsid protein along the glomerular basement membrane.

Yet researchers noted that “the relationship between the SARS-CoV-2 protein deposition and the pathogenesis of MN remains unclear”. They called for further investigation.

 

–IANS

 

 

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