Renalytix AI plc (LSE: RENX), the AIM-traded developer of clinical grade artificial intelligence in vitro diagnostics for kidney disease, announces that the KidneyIntelX™ platform will be used by investigators from the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai to assess the risk of adverse kidney events in patients diagnosed wi
NEW YORK, April 20, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- Renalytix AI plc (LSE: RENX), the AIM-traded developer of clinical grade artificial intelligence in vitro diagnostics for kidney disease, announces that the KidneyIntelX™ platform will be used by investigators from the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai to assess the risk of adverse kidney events in patients diagnosed with COVID-19. Acute and chronic kidney disease is strongly associated with severity of disease and fatal outcomes in COVID-19 patients. Evaluation of a patient’s kidney risk status at the time of COVID-19 diagnosis, through recovery and during follow-on monitoring, can be of potentially high clinical value. The KidneyIntelX platform will be used in a large study of COVID-19 admitted patients at Mount Sinai called “Pred-MAKER” (Prediction of Major Adverse Kidney Events and Recovery). Pred-MAKER will study clinical features and biomarkers, including multiple plasma biomarkers and urine proteomics and RNA sequences, as predictors of major adverse kidney events in patients hospitalized with COVID-19. The study has been submitted for Institutional Review Board (IRB) review and approval. “Given the evidence that there is extensive systemic inflammation as well as kidney tubular injury in patients with COVID-19, the KidneyIntelX platform is well positioned to play a prominent role in understanding which patients are at highest risk of severe kidney complications and which patients are more likely to experience longer-term detrimental effects of COVID-19 infection,” said Dr. Steven Coca, co-founder of RenalytixAI and co-Investigator in Pred-MAKER. The overall goal of the study is to improve the understanding of mechanisms of COVID-19-associated kidney disease, and to leverage the KidneyIntelX platform to deploy comprehensive machine-learned prediction models that utilize clinical data along with plasma and urine biomarkers to risk stratify COVID-19 patients into low, medium and high-risk strata for major adverse events. Dr. Coca anticipates an accelerated timeline for the conduct of the study, given the current clinical work-load impact of COVID-19 at Mount Sinai and other New York City area hospitals. The number of cases of COVID-19 requiring hospitalization and intensive care has been highest in the New York City metro area. The Mount Sinai Hospital and the Mount Sinai Health System have been severely affected by the enormous caseload of COVID-19 in March to April of 2020.1 A system-wide effort led by Drs. Alexander Charney, Miriam Merad, and others, called the “Mount Sinai COVID-19 Biospecimen Collection”,2 began daily sampling of blood from people admitted with COVID-19 in early April and will serve as a robust resource for several research efforts including Pred-MAKER. Other faculty members in the Division of Nephrology at Mount Sinai involved specifically in Pred-MAKER include Drs. Evren Azeloglu (PI of the project), Girish Nadkarni, Lili Chan, Cijiang He, Barbara Murphy and several others.3 Acute and chronic kidney disease is strongly associated with COVID-19 severity and outcomes. Preliminary reports indicate that acute kidney injury (AKI) occurs in approximately 20% of patients hospitalized with COVID-19.4 Moreover, the mortality rate in patients that experience AKI in the setting of COVID-19 is 2- to 7 times higher than patients without AKI.5 In addition, reports suggest that 34-63% of COVID-19 patients develop significant proteinuria,6 which is associated with a 3- to 15-fold increase in mortality. A recently published study, that utilized autopsy specimens from 26 patients that died of COVID-19 in China, demonstrated that there is evidence of the invasion of SARSCoV-2 into kidney tissue, along with significant acute tubular injury, endothelial damage, as well as glomerular and vascular changes indicative of underlying diabetic or hypertensive disease.7 While published reports on the incidence, severity and consequences of kidney disease in New York City and other urban centers in the United States are still lacking, it has been publicly noted that there is a severe shortage of dialysis nurses, dialysis machines and dialysis fluids to keep up with the burden of acute and chronic kidney disease in COVID-19 diagnosed patients in many New York City area hospitals.8 About Kidney Disease * https://www.cdc.gov/kidneydisease/publications-resources/2019-national-facts.html About RenalytixAI Notes:
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Company Codes: LSE:RENX |