| Literature DB >> 21902819 |
Chantal Loirat1, Véronique Frémeaux-Bacchi.
Abstract
Hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS) is defined by the triad of mechanical hemolytic anemia, thrombocytopenia and renal impairment. Atypical HUS (aHUS) defines non Shiga-toxin-HUS and even if some authors include secondary aHUS due to Streptococcus pneumoniae or other causes, aHUS designates a primary disease due to a disorder in complement alternative pathway regulation. Atypical HUS represents 5 -10% of HUS in children, but the majority of HUS in adults. The incidence of complement-aHUS is not known precisely. However, more than 1000 aHUS patients investigated for complement abnormalities have been reported. Onset is from the neonatal period to the adult age. Most patients present with hemolytic anemia, thrombocytopenia and renal failure and 20% have extra renal manifestations. Two to 10% die and one third progress to end-stage renal failure at first episode. Half of patients have relapses. Mutations in the genes encoding complement regulatory proteins factor H, membrane cofactor protein (MCP), factor I or thrombomodulin have been demonstrated in 20-30%, 5-15%, 4-10% and 3-5% of patients respectively, and mutations in the genes of C3 convertase proteins, C3 and factor B, in 2-10% and 1-4%. In addition, 6-10% of patients have anti-factor H antibodies. Diagnosis of aHUS relies on 1) No associated disease 2) No criteria for Shigatoxin-HUS (stool culture and PCR for Shiga-toxins; serology for anti-lipopolysaccharides antibodies) 3) No criteria for thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (serum ADAMTS 13 activity > 10%). Investigation of the complement system is required (C3, C4, factor H and factor I plasma concentration, MCP expression on leukocytes and anti-factor H antibodies; genetic screening to identify risk factors). The disease is familial in approximately 20% of pedigrees, with an autosomal recessive or dominant mode of transmission. As penetrance of the disease is 50%, genetic counseling is difficult. Plasmatherapy has been first line treatment until presently, without unquestionable demonstration of efficiency. There is a high risk of post-transplant recurrence, except in MCP-HUS. Case reports and two phase II trials show an impressive efficacy of the complement C5 blocker eculizumab, suggesting it will be the next standard of care. Except for patients treated by intensive plasmatherapy or eculizumab, the worst prognosis is in factor H-HUS, as mortality can reach 20% and 50% of survivors do not recover renal function. Half of factor I-HUS progress to end-stage renal failure. Conversely, most patients with MCP-HUS have preserved renal function. Anti-factor H antibodies-HUS has favourable outcome if treated early.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21902819 PMCID: PMC3198674 DOI: 10.1186/1750-1172-6-60
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Figure 1The 3 pathways of complement activation. Classical, lectin and alternative pathways converge at the point of C3 activation. The lytic pathway then leads to the assembly of the membrane attack complex which destroys infectious agents. Regulators of the alternative pathway CFH, CFI and MCP cooperate to inactivate endothelial cell surface-bound C3b, thus protecting endothelial cells from complement attack. CFH: factor H; CFI: factor I; CFB: factor B; CFD: factor D; MCP: membrane cofactor protein.
Figure 2Regulated and deregulated activation of the alternative complement pathway. Figure and comments reproduced from Zuber et al [131]. a) CFH competes with CFB to bind C3b, which hampers the generation of C3 convertase. CFH binds to glycosaminoglycans on the endothelial surface and factors, such as MCP, can act as a cofactor for the CFI-mediated cleavage of C3b to generate iC3b (inactivated C3b). THBD binds to C3b and CFH and might accelerate the CFI-mediated inactivation of C3b. b) Uncontrolled activation of the alternative complement pathway leads to the generation of the membrane-attack complex (C5b-9) through the actions of CFB, CFD and through the generation of C3 convertase and C5 convertase. The resulting injury and activation of endothelial cells initiates a microangiopathic thrombotic process. CFH: factor H; CFI: factor I; CFB: factor B; CFD: factor D; MCP: membrane cofactor protein; THBD: thrombomodulin.
Figure 3Factor H. Factor H is constituted by 20 short consensus repeats (SCR). The two binding sites for C3b are in SCR 1-4 and 19-20. The binding sites for polyanions of cell surface (vascular endothelium) are in SCR 7 and 19-20. SCR 1-4 are involved in the binding of CFH to circulating C3b i.e. the regulation of complement alternative pathway activation in the fluid phase. SCR 7 and 19-20 are involved in the binding of CFH to polyanionic surface-bound C3b i.e. the regulation of complement alternative pathway activation at the endothelial cell surface.
Figure 4.
Percentage of patients with decreased C3 plasma concentration in the various subgroups of atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome
| Anti -CFH Ab | None | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 30-50% | 20-30% | 0-27% | 70-80% | 100% | 50% | 40-60% | up to 20% |
Normal C3 plasma concentration does not eliminate the presence of a mutation in the complement system or of anti- CFH antibodies. Conversely, decreased C3 level signs the presence of a complement abnormality.
CFH: factor H; CFI: factor I; MCP: membrane cofactor protein; CFB: factor B; THBD: thrombomodulin; Ab, antibodies.
Plasma concentration of C3, C4, CFH, CFI and CFB and expression of MCP in the various subgroups of atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome
| Protein level or expression | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| C4 | C3 | CFH | CFI | CFB | MCP | |
| N | Normal | Normal | Normal | Normal | Normal | |
| N | Normal | Normal | Normal | Normal | Normal | |
| N | Normal | Normal | Normal | Normal | Decreased | |
| N | Decreased | Normal | Normal | Normal | Normal | |
| N | Decreased | Normal | Normal | Normal | Normal | |
| N | Normal | ND | ND | ND | Normal | |
| N | Decreased | Normal | Normal | Normal | Normal | |
Very low C3 levels are observed in patients with homozygous CFH mutation (complete CFH deficiency) or compound heterozygous CFH mutation, and in patients with CFB or C3 gain-of-function mutations. In most of the other patients, C3 concentration is mildly decreased or normal. Undetectable CFH concentrations are observed only in patients with homozygous CFH mutation. Decreased CFH concentration can be observed in patients with heterozygous type 1 CFH mutation, and during flares of anti-CFH antibodies-HUS. Decreased C4 plasma levels have been reported in zero to a few % of patients of the various subgroups [18].
"Normal" and "decreased" without brackets means most frequently normal or decreased, within brackets means possible but not frequent. "Normal or decreased" without brackets means normal or decreased is equally frequent. CFH: factor H; CFI: factor I; MCP: membrane cofactor protein; CFB: factor B; THBD: thrombomodulin; Ab, antibodies. ND: not documented.
Main clinical characteristics of patients with atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome according to complement abnormality
| Gene or subgroup | Frequency in aHUS | Minimal age at onset | Risk of death or ESRD at 1st episode or within < 1 y | Risk of relapses | Risk of recurrence after renal transplantation | Plasma therapy indicated | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Children | Adults | ||||||
| 20-30% | Birth | any age | 50-70% | 50% | 75-90% | Yes | |
| 4 -10% | Birth | any age | 50% | 10-30% | 45-80% | Yes | |
| 5 -15% | > 1 y | any age | 0-6% | 70-90% | < 20% | Questionable | |
| 2 -10% | 7 m | any age | 60% | 50% | 40-70% | Yes | |
| 1-4% | 1 m | any age | 50% | 3/3 not in ESRD | 100% | Yes | |
| 3 -5% | 6 m | rare | 50% | 30% | 1 patient | Yes | |
| 6% | Mostly 7-11 y | 30-40% | 40-60% | Yes if high Ab titer | Yes (+ IS) | ||
CFH: factor H; CFI: factor I; MCP: membrane cofactor protein; CFB: factor B; THBD: thrombomodulin; Ab, antibodies; ESRD: end stage renal disease; IS: immunosuppressive treatment.
Figure 5Mode of transmission and intrafamilial phenotype variability of atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome: example from two families with heterozygous . CFH mutation: W1183R, SCR 20 (Family 1); W1183L, SCR 20 (Family 2). Notice i) the autosomal dominant (Family 1) or recessive (Family 2) mode of inheritance of the disease ii) the intrafamilial phenotype variability and incomplete penetrance in Family 1. Affected individuals are indicated with filled symbols. Deceased individuals are crossed. Carriers of the CFH mutation are indicated by an asterisk. Courtesy of Professor G. Deschênes (Hôpital Robert Debré, Paris), with permission.
Figure 6Unknown risk factor(s) to atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome can be associated with identified mutations: example from three families. In the 3 families, one child with aHUS has a mutation in CFH or CFI while a sibling also with aHUS has no mutation identified. Therefore the two siblings in each family share at least one unidentified risk factor. Affected individuals are indicated by filled symbols. Carriers of mutations are indicated by an asterisk. Courtesy of Professors R. Salomon (Hôpital Necker, Paris), E. Bérard (Hôpital de l'Archet, Nice) and G. Deschênes (Hôpital Robert Debré, Paris), with permission.
Methods for assessment of plasma and membrane complement proteins and screening for anti- factor H antibodies
| Plasma or membrane complement | Plasma concentration | Technique | Laboratory | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 660-1250 | Nephelometry | Basic complement screen | Severe complement consumption through the alternative pathway indicated by very low plasma levels of C3 and CFB. Frequently, there is only an isolated moderate decrease of C3 level with normal CFB level | |
| 93-380 | Nephelometry | Specialized diagnostic | ||
| 330-680 | ELISA | Specialized diagnostic | CFH or CFI less than 60% of normal are compatible with quantitative deficiency | |
| 40-80 | ELISA | Specialized diagnostic | ||
| Screening | ELISA | Specialized diagnostic | The title is expressed in Arbitrary Units (AU) | |
| Mean fluorescent intensity (MFI) | FACS (a) with anti- MCP phycoerythrin -conjugated antibodies | Specialized diagnostic | No MCP expression is detected in patients with homozygous MCP deficiency. The MFI in patients of heterozygous MCP deficiency is around 50% of the normal range | |
(a) Usually performed on peripheral granulocytes or mononuclear cells in EDTA-blood sample.
Elisa, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; EDTA, ethylene diamine tetra-acetic acid; FACS, fluorescence-activated cell sorter.
Genetic screening of the complement system
| Gene | Location | Method of choice for mutation screening | Number of exons |
|---|---|---|---|
| RCA, Chr 1q32 | Direct sequencing analysis | 22 | |
| Chr 4q25 | Direct sequencing analysis | 13 | |
| RCA, Chr 1q32 | Direct sequencing analysis | 14 | |
| Chr 19p13.3 | Direct sequencing analysis | 42 | |
| Chr 6p21.3 | Direct sequencing analysis | 18 | |
| Chr 20p11.2 | Direct sequencing analysis | 1 | |
Chr, chromosome; CFH, factor H; CFHR1, factor H-related protein 1; CFI, factor I; MCP, membrane cofactor protein; CFB, factor B; THBD, thrombomodulin.
Atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome in children: age at onset and plasma C3 concentration as indicators of complement anomaly to screen in priority
| Age at onset | Complement abnormality to screen first |
|---|---|
| Birth to < 12 months ± decreased C3 | |
| > 1 year + normal C3 | MCP decreased expression/mutation |
| > 1 year + decreased C3 | |
| 7-11 years ± decreased C3 | Anti-CFH antibodies |
CFH: factor H; CFI: factor I; MCP: membrane cofactor protein
Figure 7Complement system screening strategy in atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome. Knowledge of complement proteins plasma concentrations guides the investigator for the choice of which gene to study first and for the validation of genetic screening. Of note i. C3 may be low despite normal CFH or CFI plasma levels in patients with CFH or CFI mutations respectively. ii. C3 and CFH plasma levels are normal in patients with hybrid CFH detected by MLPA. STEC: Shiga-toxin producing Escherichia coli; ADAMTS 13, A Desintegrin And Metalloproteinase with a ThromboSpondin type 1 motif, member 13; CFH: factor H; CFI: factor I; CFB: factor B; MCP: membrane cofactor protein; THBD: thrombomodulin.; MLPA, multiplex ligation dependent probe amplification.
Figure 8The various subgroups of hemolytic uremic syndrome and thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura according to age at onset. Pink arrows and boxes: complement-HUS; green arrows and boxes: TTP; upper line: immune HUS and TTP; lower line: hereditary HUS and TTP. The figure also shows the 2 main infection-induced HUS (blue arrows and boxes) and the various causes of secondary atypical HUS (violet boxes), according to age. HUS: hemolytic uremic syndrome; TTP: thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura; HIV: human immunodeficiency virus; STEC: Shiga-toxin producing Escherichia coli; ADAMTS 13, A Desintegrin And Metalloproteinase with a ThromboSpondin type 1 motif, member 13.
Clinical presentation of the various subgroups of hemolytic uremic syndrome and thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura and investigations to confirm diagnosis
| Age at onset and clinical presentation | Probable diagnosis | Investigations to confirm diagnosis |
|---|---|---|
| Congenital TTP | ADAMTS 13 deficiency (< 10%) without anti-ADAMTS 13 antibobies | |
| Methyl-malonic aciduria-associated HUS | Hyperhomocysteinemia, hypomethioninemia, methyl-malonic aciduria | |
| HUS due to | False positive Coombs test | |
| STEC-HUS | Stool or rectal swab: culture for STEC (Mac Conkey for 0157:H7); PCR for Stx | |
| Immune TTP | ADAMTS 13 deficiency (< 10%) with anti-ADAMTS13 antibodies | |
| Complement-aHUS | Complete investigation of the complement system | |
HUS, hemolytic uremic syndrome; TTP: thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura; ADAMTS13: A Desintegrin And Metalloproteinase with a ThromboSpondin type 1 motif, member 13; MMACHC: methylmalonic aciduria and homocystinuria; CSF: cerebro-spinal fluid; PCR: polymerase chain reaction; STEC: Shiga-toxin producing Escherichia coli; Stx: Shiga-like toxin; LPS: lipopolysaccharide
Figure 9Recommendations for plasmatherapy to prevent post- kidney transplant recurrence of hemolytic uremic syndrome, according to the Consensus Study Group [125]. Of note, preventive eculizumab (started before transplantation) now has to be considered for patients at very high risk of recurrence. PE, plasma exchange; FFP, fresh frozen plasma.
Figure 10Blockade of terminal complement activation, adapted from [149]. Eculizumab binds to C5 and prevents the formation of the membrane attack complex by reducing cleavage of C5 to C5a and C5b.
Case reports of patients with atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome on their native kidneys treated with eculizumab
| Reference | Mutation | Age at onset of HUS, evolution and response to plasmatherapy | Age at eculizumab initiation | Response to plasmatherapy of HUS episode at eculizumab initiation | Serum creatinine level at eculizumab initiation | Delay of hematological and renal improvement after initiation of eculizumab | Delay until complete remission of HUS after initiation of eculizumab | Protocol | Evolution of HUS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gruppo | NI | < 8 days | 19 m | PE resistant | 265 μmol/L | 2 days | 10 days | Complete protocol | Remission |
| Fremont | CFH | 4 y | 4 y | PE partially sensitive | 80 μmol/L | ND | 2 weeks | Complete protocol | Remission |
| Mache | NI | 17.8 y | 17.11 y | PE resistant | 690 μmol/L | ~ 3 days | 5 days (hematologic remission) | Single dose | Relapse at 2w |
| Kose | NI | 18 y | 18 y | PE resistant | ~310 μmol/L | 1 day | ~ 7 days | Single dose | |
| Lapeyraque | CFH | 7 m | 6 y | PI resistant | 108 μmol/L | A few days | 1 week | Complete protocol | Remission |
| Prescott | CFI | 47 y | 47 y | PE resistant | 610 μmol/L | - 7 days (Screat decrease) | ~1.5 m | Complete protocol | Remission |
| Ohanian et al 2011 [ | ND | 50 y | 50 y | No plasmatherapy | 600 μmol/L | - 4 days (LDH decrease) | ~ 1.5 m | Complete protocol | Remission |
PC: personal communication, with permission; Screat: serum creatinine; CFH: factor H; CFI: factor I; NI: none identified; ND: not documented; ESRF: end stage renal failure; PE: plasma exchange; PI: plasma infusion
Case reports of patients with post-transplant recurrence of atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome treated with eculizumab
| Reference | Gene | Previous transplantations | Age and post-tx course before eculizumab initiation | Delay from recurrence to eculizumab initiation | Screat at eculizumab | Delay until platelet increase/hemolysis resolution/Screat decrease under eculizumab | Protocol | Recurrence after eculizumab cessation | Evolution under eculizumab |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nurnberger | CFH | 1st tx: | 37 y, 2nd tx | 5 days | 132 | 2 days/6 days/24 h | Single dose | Likely but not biopsy proven | / |
| Chatelet | C3 | 1st tx: | 43 y, 2nd tx | 14 m | 320 | A few days/a few days/~1 month | Complete protocol | NA | 2 recurrences of |
| Legault | ND | No | 34 y, 1st tx | 9 m | 323 | ND/ND/4 weeks | Complete protocol | NA | Remission |
| Davin | CFH | 1st tx: recurrence at day 3, graft loss | 17 y, 3rd tx Preventive PE | 10 m | 131 | NA (in remission at eculizumab initiation) | Complete protocol | NA | Remission |
| Larrea | NI | No | 22 y, 1st tx | 9 days | 415 | 36 h/36 h/3 days | Single dose | Yes (11.5 m) | Remission |
| Zuber | CFH | 1st tx: recurrence, graft loss | 24 y, 2nd tx Preventive PI/PE | 4 days | 500 | 24 h/24 h/3 days | Complete protocol | NA | Remission |
| Al-Akash | C3 | 1st tx: recurrence at 4 y, graft loss | 15 y, 3rd tx Preventive PE | ~20 days | 220 | A few days | Complete protocol | NA | Remission |
| Zimmerhakl | CFH | No | 10 y, 1st tx Preventive PE | Preventive | ~ 45 | NA | Complete protocol | NA | No recurrence |
| Weitz | CFH | No | 7 y, 1st tx | Preventive | NA | NA | Complete protocol | NA | No recurrence |
| Nester | Hybrid CFH | No | 12 y, 1st tx | Preventive | NA | NA | Complete protocol | NA | No recurrence |
Preventive: started before transplantation or before recurrence; PC: personal communication, with permission; Screatinine: serum creatinine; CFH: factor H; NI: none identified; Tx: transplantation; NI: none identified; ND: not documented; NA: not applicable; PE: plasma exchange
Investigations recommended in patients identified as having atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome, adapted from [90]
| Investigations | |
|---|---|
| 1. STEC infection | Stool or rectal swab: culture for STEC (Mac Conkey for 0157:H7); PCR for Stx |
| 2. Disorders of complement regulation | C3, C4 (plasma/serum) |
| 3. ADAMTS13 deficiency | Plasma ADAMTS13 activity or dosage (Elisa) ± inhibitor |
| 4. Cobalamin metabolism:methyl malonic aciduria | Plasma amino-acid chromatography (high homocysteine, low methionine); urine organic acid chromatography (methyl-malonic aciduria) |
| 5. HIV | Serology |
| 6. Pregnancy, HELLP syndrome | Pregancy test, liver enzymes. Investigate as in 2 and 3 |
| 7. Miscellaneous | Antinuclear antibody, lupus anticoagulant, anti-phospholipid antibodies |
STEC: Shiga-toxin producing Escherichia coli; Stx: Shiga-like toxin; PCR: polymerase chain reaction; ADAMTS13: A Desintegrin And Metalloproteinase with a ThromboSpondin type 1 motif, member 13;HIV: human immunodeficiency virus; HELLP: Hemolysis, Elevated Liver enzymes, Low Platelet count; MCP: membrane cofactor protein; FACS: fluorescence-activated cell sorter; MMACHC: methylmalonic aciduria and homocystinuria;