| Literature DB >> 19247694 |
Pierre Cochat1, Sonia Fargue, Guillaume Mestrallet, Therese Jungraithmayr, Paulo Koch-Nogueira, Bruno Ranchin, Lothar Bernd Zimmerhackl.
Abstract
Renal transplantation (Tx) is the treatment of choice for end-stage renal disease. The incidence of acute rejection after renal Tx has decreased because of improving early immunosuppression, but the risk of disease recurrence (DR) is becoming relatively high, with a greater prevalence in children than in adults, thereby increasing patient morbidity, graft loss (GL) and, sometimes, mortality rate. The current overall graft loss to DR is 7-8%, mainly due to primary glomerulonephritis (70-80%) and inherited metabolic diseases. The more typical presentation is a recurrence of the full disease, either with a high risk of GL (focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis 14-50% DR, 40-60% GL; atypical haemolytic uraemic syndrome 20-80% DR, 10-83% GL; membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis 30-100% DR, 17-61% GL; membranous nephropathy approximately 30% DR, approximately 50% GL; lipoprotein glomerulopathy approximately 100% DR and GL; primary hyperoxaluria type 1 80-100% DR and GL) or with a low risk of GL [immunoglobulin (Ig)A nephropathy 36-60% DR, 7-10% GL; systemic lupus erythematosus 0-30% DR, 0-5% GL; anti-neutrophilic cytoplasmic antibody (ANCA)-associated glomerulonephritis]. Recurrence may also occur with a delayed risk of GL, such as insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, sickle cell disease, endemic nephropathy, and sarcoidosis. In other primary diseases, the post-Tx course may be complicated by specific events that are different from overt recurrence: proteinuria or cancer in some genetic forms of nephrotic syndrome, anti-glomerular basement membrane antibodies-associated glomerulonephritis (Alport syndrome, Goodpasture syndrome), and graft involvement as a consequence of lower urinary tract abnormality or human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) nephropathy. Some other post-Tx conditions may mimic recurrence, such as de novo membranous glomerulonephritis, IgA nephropathy, microangiopathy, or isolated specific deposits (cystinosis, Fabry disease). Adequate strategies should therefore be added to kidney Tx, such as donor selection, associated liver Tx, plasmatherapy, specific immunosuppression protocols. In such conditions, very few patients may be excluded from kidney Tx only because of a major risk of DR and repeated GL. In the near future the issue of DR after kidney Tx may benefit from alternatives to organ Tx, such as recombinant proteins, specific monoclonal antibodies, cell/gene therapy, and chaperone molecules.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19247694 PMCID: PMC2753770 DOI: 10.1007/s00467-009-1137-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Nephrol ISSN: 0931-041X Impact factor: 3.714
Recurrence of primary disease after the first renal transplantation [1–11] (FSGS focal segmental glomerulosclerosis, HUS haemolytic uraemic syndrome, IgA immunoglobulin A, MPGN membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis, SLE systemic lupus erythematosus)
| Primary disease | Recurrence rate | Graft loss to recurrence |
|---|---|---|
| FSGS | 14–50% | 40–60% |
| Atypical HUS | 20–80% | 10–83% |
| Typical HUS | 0–1% | 0–1% |
| MPGN type 1 | 30–77% | 17–50% |
| MPGN type 2 | 66–100% | 25–61% |
| SLE nephritis | 0–30% | 0–5% |
| IgA nephritis (Berger disease) | 35–60% | 7–10% |
| Henoch–Schönlein nephritis | 31–100% | 8–22% |
| Primary hyperoxaluria type 1 | 90–100% | 80–100% |
Risk factors for recurrence of the nephrotic syndrome [1, 13, 14] (HLA human leukocyte antigen)
| Proven increased risk | Independent/controversial risk factors | Proven decreased risk |
|---|---|---|
| Recurrence in a first graft | Gender | African–American recipients |
| Onset of NS during childhood | Mesangial hypercellularity | Genetic and syndromic NS |
| White and Asian recipients | Age at onset over 6 years | |
| Rapid course to ESRD (< 3 years) | Presence of FSGS circulating factor | |
| Donor source | ||
| HLA typing/matching | ||
| Time interval on dialysis prior to Tx | ||
| Type of immunosuppressive therapy | ||
| Use of induction therapy | ||
| Bilateral nephrectomy of native kidneys |
Two groups of steroid-resistant nephrotic syndromes (SRNS) leading to end-stage renal disease in children (GBM glomerular basement membrane, Sd syndrome)
| Primary idiopathic SRNS | Inherited SRNS | |
|---|---|---|
| T-cell dysregulation | Abnormal podocyte–GBM complex | |
| Idiopathic FSGS | ||
| Finnish type NS ( | ||
| Other recessive FSGS | Pierson Sd, Schimke Sd | |
| ( | Charcot–Marie–Tooth SRNS | |
| Dominant FSGS | ||
| ( | ||
| Circulating factor | No circulating factor | |
| Immunosuppression available | No effect of immunosuppression | |