| Literature DB >> 20368921 |
Abstract
JUSTIFICATION: In 2001, the Indian Pediatric Nephrology Group formulated guidelines for management of patients with steroid-sensitive nephrotic syndrome. In view of emerging scientific evidence, it was felt necessary to review the existing recommendations. PROCESS: Following a preliminary meeting in March 2007, a draft statement was prepared and circulated among pediatric nephrologists in the country to arrive at a consensus on the evaluation and management of these patients.Entities:
Keywords: Nephrotic syndrome; practice guidelines; recommendations
Year: 2008 PMID: 20368921 PMCID: PMC2847730 DOI: 10.4103/0971-4065.41289
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Indian J Nephrol ISSN: 0971-4065
Important revisions in this document
Investigations necessary at initial and subsequent evaluation are described. While updating the literature, the Group endorses the existing guidelines on therapy for the initial episode of nephrotic syndrome. The role of other medications, including mycophenolate mofetil, cyclosporine, and tacrolimus in patients with frequent relapses and steroid dependence is discussed and therapeutic choices clarified. Details on dose and duration of therapy with corticosteroids, when coadministered with other agents are included. Guidelines on immunization, isoniazid prophylaxis, and hypertension updated in conformity with recommendations of the Indian Academy of Pediatrics. Management of complications updated. |
Definitions related to nephrotic syndrome
| Remission | Urine albumin nil or trace (or proteinuria <4 mg/m2/h) for three consecutive early morning specimens. |
| Relapse | Urine albumin 3+ or 4+ (or proteinuria >40 mg/m2/h) for three consecutive early morning specimens, having been in remission previously. |
| Frequent relapses | Two or more relapses in initial 6 months or more than three relapses in any 12 months. |
| Steroid dependence | Two consecutive relapses when on alternate day steroids or within 14 days of its discontinuation. |
| Steroid resistance | Absence of remission despite therapy with daily prednisolone at a dose of 2 mg/kg per day for 4 weeks. |
Fig. 1Management of patients with steroid-sensitive nephrotic syndrome
Fig. 2Management of edema in patients with nephrotic syndrome. Patients requiring high-dose frusemide or addition of other diuretics should be under close supervision, preferably in a hospital. Monitoring of serum electrolytes is necessary in all patients receiving diuretics. Patients showing hypokalemia require potassium supplements or coadministration of spironolactone. The medications are reduced stepwise once diuresis ensues. *Management of hypovolemia consists of rapid infusion of normal saline at a dose of 15-20 ml/kg over 20-30 min; this may be repeated if clinical features of hypovolemia persist. Infusion of 5% albumin (10-15 ml/kg) or 20% albumin (0.5-1 g/kg) may be used in subjects who do not respond despite two boluses of saline
Indications for kidney biopsy
| At onset |
|---|
| Age of onset <1 year. |
| Gross hematuria, persistent microscopic hematuria or low serum C3. |
| Sustained hypertension. |
| Renal failure not attributable to hypovolemia. |
| Suspected secondary causes of nephrotic syndrome. |
| Proteinuria persisting despite 4-weeks of daily corticosteroid therapy. |
| Before treatment with cyclosporin A or tacrolimus. |
Indications for referral to a pediatric nephrologist
Onset below 1-year of age; family history of nephrotic syndrome. Nephrotic syndrome with hypertension, gross/persistent microscopic hematuria, impaired renal function, or extrarenal features (e.g., arthritis, serositis, and rash). Complications: refractory edema, thrombosis, severe infections, and steroid toxicity. Resistance to steroid therapy. Frequently relapsing or steroid dependent nephrotic syndrome. |
Clinical features and management of infections*
| Infection | Clinical features | Common organisms | Antibiotics, duration of treatment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Peritonitis | Abdominal pain, tenderness, distension; diarrhea, vomiting; ascitic fluid >100 leukocytes/mm3; >50% neutrophils | Cefotaxime or ceftriaxone for 7-10 days; ampicillin and an aminoglycoside for 7-10 days | |
| Pneumonia | Fever, cough, tachypnea, intercostal recessions, crepitations | ||
| Cellulitis | Cutaneous erythema, induration, tenderness | Staphylococci, Group A streptococci, | Cloxacillin and ceftriaxone for 7-10 days co-amoxiclav |
| Fungal infections | Pulmonary infiltrates, persistent | Skin, mucosa: fluconazole for 10 days | |
| Fever unresponsive to antibiotics, sputum/urine showing septate hyphae | Systemic: amphotericin for 14-21 days |
Supplemental stress doses of hydrocortisone or prednisolone are usually necessary