In an average year, severe respiratory infections likely contribute
to more than a thousand deaths among people with end-stage kidney
failure in the U.S., the authors estimate.
Senior author Dave Gilbertson of the Minneapolis Medical Research
Foundation in Minnesota and colleagues suspected that patterns of
deaths in these patients might be linked at least to some extent
with seasonal fluctuations in flu-like illnesses. To study the
issue, they looked at data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention for the years 2000 to 2013.
Compared to patterns in summers, an estimated 1 percent increase in
flu and flu-like illness in the fall was associated with a 1.5
percent increase in deaths among kidney failure patients. And in
winter, an estimated 1 percent increase in these respiratory
infections was associated with a 2 percent rise in kidney patient
deaths.
Flu-like illnesses may not be the direct cause of death in these
cases but may contribute to other causes of death, Gilbertson told
Reuters Health in an email.
For example, he said, flu-like illnesses can induce acute
inflammation, making people with kidney failure vulnerable to other
infections or even to cardiovascular events.
Flu vaccines, protective barriers such as masks and increased
disinfection of dialysis units during flu season could help protect
kidney failure patients from potentially deadly influenza-like
illnesses, the researchers write in the Journal of the American
Society of Nephrology.
These illnesses disproportionately affect vulnerable populations,
such as the elderly, and those with chronic diseases like kidney
failure, they point out.
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Many such patients have impaired immune function and so vaccines may
be less effective for them.
That's part of the reason why experts recommend preventive actions
not just for patients at high risk but for healthcare workers,
family members and other household contacts as well.
Flu-like illnesses may be caused by a wide array of viruses,
including rhinovirus and adenovirus, but influenza itself still
accounts for 10 to 50 percent of cases, the authors write.
Dr. Albert Wu, an internist and professor of health policy and
management at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in
Baltimore, said the study is a reminder that many respiratory
infections other than flu can be deadly.
Wu, who was not involved in the study, said the results reinforce
the importance of basic infection control.
The findings, say the researchers, "suggest that protection against,
surveillance of, and, where possible, treatment of infections due to
influenza and related viral respiratory illnesses may constitute an
opportunity to reduce deaths in patients with end-stage renal
disease."
SOURCE: https://bit.ly/2RWJBeB Journal of the American Society of
Nephrology, online January 31, 2019.
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