key: cord-0046980-g7kpdmms authors: Zhu, Lan; Chen, Gang title: Reply to Amit Bansal and Anant Kumar’s Letter to the Editor re: Lan Zhu, Nianqiao Gong, Bin Liu, et al. Coronavirus Disease 2019 Pneumonia in Immunosuppressed Renal Transplant Recipients: A Summary of 10 Confirmed Cases in Wuhan, China. Eur Urol 2020;77:748–54 date: 2020-07-04 journal: Eur Urol DOI: 10.1016/j.eururo.2020.06.062 sha: 4a8f29c81b178ce14ae6e8fff4be5818101d995a doc_id: 46980 cord_uid: g7kpdmms nan The absence of co-infection was probably related to our prophylactic strategy: all patients were routinely given broad-spectrum antibiotics (eg, carbapenem or sulbactam/cefoperazone) after admission, and patients with a longer course of illness were given echinocandins to prevent fungal infections [2] . Although Yang et al [3] reported 13.5% incidence of hospitalacquired bacterial or fungal co-infection, all of the patients they observed were critically ill patients requiring treatment in the intensive care unit (ICU), and nearly half received invasive ventilation. By contrast, only one of the ten patients in our study required short-term treatment in the ICU, and none received invasive ventilation. This difference in incidence of critical illness may also be an important reason for the difference in the incidence of coinfection between the two studies. Regarding the use of intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG), we recommend that transplant recipients with COVID-19 should receive a small daily dose of IVIG during the early period of their hospitalization, until chest computed tomography shows a significant improvement in inflammation. However, since our ten patients were admitted to five different designated hospitals, three of the patients did not receive IVIG because of the lack of that resource in the corresponding hospital at the time. We agree that underlying diseases are associated with the severity, duration, and prognosis of COVID-19 pneumonia in some patients. We should have emphasized the impact of comorbidities more strongly in our paper. Three of our patients had severe and complex underlying diseases, which contributed to the death of one patient and to severe illness that required treatment in the ICU in another patient. However, the remaining patients without underlying disease (four cases) or with controllable hypertension alone (three cases) still had more severe COVID-19 pneumonia and a longer viral shedding time than the control group did, indicating that immunosuppressive status is the most important factor affecting the clinical progression of COVID-19 in most transplant patients. Although diabetic nephropathy is a common cause of end-stage renal failure, such patients receive simultaneous pancreaskidney transplantation rather than simple kidney transplantation in China [4, 5] . In our study, none of the ten renal transplant patients had primary diabetic nephropathy or new-onset diabetes mellitus after transplantation. Only one individual (patient 2) experienced transient hyperglycemia during treatment of pneumonia, but the patient's blood glucose returned to normal shortly after reduction of glucocorticoid treatment. Coronavirus disease 2019 pneumonia in immunosuppressed renal transplant recipients: a summary of 10 confirmed cases in Wuhan, China Successful recovery of COVID-19 pneumonia in a renal transplant recipient with long-term immunosuppression Clinical course and outcomes of critically ill patients with SARS-CoV-2 pneumonia in Wuhan, China: a single-centered, retrospective, observational study The current state of pancreas-kidney transplantation in China: the indications, surgical techniques and outcome The homolateral simultaneous pancreas-kidney transplantation: a single-center experience in China