| Literature DB >> 22754697 |
M Colleen Hastings1, Sabahat Afshan, John T Sanders, Oulimata Kane, T Matthew Eison, Keith K Lau, Zina Moldoveanu, Bruce A Julian, Jan Novak, Robert J Wyatt.
Abstract
Introduction. Percentage of galactose-deficient IgA1 (Gd-IgA1) relative to total IgA in serum was recently reported to correlate with proteinuria at time of sampling and during follow-up for pediatric and adult patients with IgA nephropathy. We sought to determine whether this association exists in another cohort of pediatric patients with IgA nephropathy. Methods. Subjects were younger than 18 years at entry. Blood samples were collected on one or more occasions for determination of serum total IgA and Gd-IgA1. Gd-IgA1 was expressed as serum level and percent of total IgA. Urinary protein/creatinine ratio was calculated for random specimens. Spearman's correlation coefficients assessed the relationship between study variables. Results. The cohort had 29 Caucasians and 11 African-Americans with a male : female ratio of 1.9 : 1. Mean age at diagnosis was 11.7 ± 3.7 years. No statistically significant correlation was identified between serum total IgA, Gd-IgA1, or percent Gd-IgA1 versus urinary protein/creatinine ratio determined contemporaneously with biopsy or between average serum Gd-IgA1 or average percent Gd-IgA1 and time-average urinary protein/creatinine ratio. Conclusion. The magnitude of proteinuria in this cohort of pediatric patients with IgA nephropathy was influenced by factors other than Gd-IgA1 level, consistent with the proposed multi-hit pathogenetic pathways for this renal disease.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22754697 PMCID: PMC3382943 DOI: 10.1155/2012/315467
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Nephrol
Clinical and demographic features of individual subjects (incident cases).
| Subject | Race/gender | Presentation | Age at | estGFR | Urinary protein/ | BMI | SBP/DBP | Serum Gd-IgA1 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| biopsy | (mL/min/1.73 m2) | creatinine ratio | percentile | percentile | level (units/mL) | |||
| A1 | C/M | Microhematuria, | 17.6 | 59 | 1.17 | 98 | 95–99/<50 | 262 |
| proteinuria | ||||||||
| M2 | C/M | Isolated proteinuria | 13.8 | 78 | 1.24 | 26 | 95–99/50–90 | 889 |
| M15 | C/F | Gross hematuria | 11.2 | 80 | 1.31 | <1 | <50/50–90 | 1076 |
| M16 | C/F | Gross hematuria | 8.7 | 75 | 1.00 | 57 | 50–90/<50 | 1073 |
| M17 | C/M | Gross hematuria | 13.4 | 108 | 3.10 | 11 | 50–90/50–90 | 1534 |
| M18 | C/F | Recurrent gross hematuria | 12.5 | 107 | 2.96 | 17 | >99/<50 | 1155 |
| M19 | AA/F | Gross hematuria, | 15.9 | 49 | 2.97 | 52 | <50, <50 | 3401 |
| rapidly progressive | ||||||||
| glomerulonephritis | ||||||||
| M21 | AA/M | Isolated proteinuria | 5.1 | 94 | 3.58 | 96 | <50, 50–90 | 747 |
| M22 | C/M | Gross hematuria, | 8.6 | 75 | 1.33 | 49 | 95–99/50–90 | 803 |
| acute kidney injury | ||||||||
| M26 | AA/M | Gross hematuria | 8.8 | 120 | 3.70 | 30 | 90–95/50–90 | 470 |
| M28 | C/F | Gross hematuria, | 16.7 | 63 | 1.36 | 40 | 90–95/50–90 | 1110 |
| proteinuria | ||||||||
| M29 | C/M | Gross hematuria | 12.8 | 96 | 0.95 | 41 | >99/95–99 | 659 |
| M30 | C/M | Gross hematuria, | 15.0 | 61 | 2.89 | 63 | 90–95/50–90 | 364 |
| acute kidney injury | ||||||||
| M31 | C/M | Gross hematuria | 16.2 | 84 | 0.25 | 89 | 50–90/50–90 | 2513 |
| T2 | C/M | Microhematuria, proteinuria, | 17.8 | 40 | 1.27 | 44 | 95–99/50–90 | 796 |
| Chronic kidney | ||||||||
| disease stage 3 |
AA: African-American; BMI: body mass index; C: Caucasian; estGFR, estimated glomerular filtration rate; DBP: diastolic blood pressure; SBP: systolic blood pressure; microhematuria, >5 RBC/high powered field.
Clinical and demographic features of individual subjects (prevalent cases).
| Subject | Race/gender | Presentation | Age at | estGFR | Urinary protein/ | BMI | SBP/DBP | Serum Gd-IgA1 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A2 | AA/F | Gross hematuria, | 15.9 | 98 | 1.13 | 99 | 95–99/95–99 | 1320 |
| proteinuria | ||||||||
| A3 | C/F | Gross hematuria, | 6.8 | 82 | 5.00 | 54 | 753 | |
| nephrotic syndrome | ||||||||
| K1 | C/M | Gross hematuria | 11.2 | 87 | 1.40 | 99 | 50–90/50–90 | 704 |
| K2 | C/M | Microhematuria, | 13.2 | 138 | 0.41 | 99 | >99/50–90 | 919 |
| proteinuria | ||||||||
| M1 | AA/M | Microhematuria, | 9.3 | 108 | 300 mg/dL* | 97 | 95–99/50–90 | 1328 |
| proteinuria | ||||||||
| M3 | C/M | Isolated proteinuria, | 13.0 | 50 | 4.12 | 95 | 95–99/50–90 | 594 |
| chronic kidney disease | ||||||||
| stage 3 | ||||||||
| M4 | C/M | Recurrent gross hematuria, | 14.5 | 79 | 0.72 | 93 | 90–95/50–90 | 1867 |
| acute kidney injury | ||||||||
| M5 | C/F | Gross hematuria | 11.6 | 79 | 3.61 | 61 | 95–99/50–90 | 363 |
| M6 | C/M | Gross hematuria | 11.6 | 98 | 255 mg** | 74 | 90–95/95–99 | 2177 |
| M7 | AA/F | Gross hematuria, | 10.4 | 70 | 3.29 | 33 | 50–90/50–90 | 315 |
| nephrotic syndrome, | ||||||||
| acute kidney injury | ||||||||
| M8 | C/M | Gross hematuria | 17.4 | 67 | 0.44 | 94 | 90–95/50–90 | 1054 |
| M9 | C/M | Recurrent gross hematuria | 16.5 | 100 | 0.41 | 76 | 90–95/50–90 | 861 |
| M10 | AA/M | Recurrent gross hematuria | 7.0 | 102 | 0.64 | 90 | 95–99/50–90 | 563 |
| M11 | AA/F | Gross hematuria | 5.5 | 95 | 30 mg/dL* | 93 | 50–90/<50 | 882 |
| M12 | C/M | Gross hematuria | 8.5 | 87 | 0.04 | 15 | 50–90/50–90 | 612 |
AA: African-American; BMI: body mass index; C: Caucasian; estGFR: estimated glomerular filtration rate; DBP: diastolic blood pressure; SBP: systolic blood pressure.
*Amount of protein by urinary dipstick;
**Amount of protein in 24 hours.
Clinical and demographic features of cohorts.
| LBCH cohort | Other Cases | |
|---|---|---|
|
|
| |
| Incident cases | 13 | 2 |
| Prevalent cases | 18 | 7 |
| Male | 21 | 5 |
| Female | 10 | 4 |
| Caucasian | 21 | 8 |
| African-American | 10 | 1 |
| Age at biopsy, yrs | 11.5 ± 4.7 | 12.4 ± 4.9 |
| Follow-up after biopsy all | 4.2 ± 2.4 | 1.9 ± 2.0 |
| patients, yrs, mean ± SD | ||
| CKD5 at last follow-up | 3 | 0 |
| TA-UPCR data, patients | 29 | 3 |
| Follow-up after biopsy for | 4.2 ± 2.4 | 3.1 ± 2.1 |
| TA-UPCR patients, yr, mean ± SD | ||
| TA-UPCR ≥ 1.0 | 9 | 1 |
| TA-UPCR ≥ 0.5, < 1.0 | 7 | 0 |
| TA-UPCR < 0.5 | 13 | 2 |
CKD5: chronic kidney disease stage 5; LBCH: Le Bonheur Children's Hospital; SD: standard deviation; TA-UPCR: time-average urinary protein/creatinine ratio; yrs: years.
Figure 1Serum levels of Gd-IgA1 plotted for the initial sample for 40 pediatric patients and 97 healthy pediatric controls. (a) Represented as units/mL serum. Median is represented for each group. The serum level was significantly higher for the patient group (P < 0.0001). (b) Represented as percentage of total IgA. Median is represented for each group by the red bar. The serum level was significantly higher for the patient group (P < 0.0001).
Figure 2Random urinary protein/creatinine ratios. (a) Plotted against serum Gd-IgA1 levels. Spearman's rank correlation is r = 0.05, P = 0.72. (b) Plotted against percent Gd-IgA1 levels. Spearman's rank correlation is r = −0.11, P = 0.38.
Figure 3Time-average urinary protein/creatinine ratios. (a) Plotted against average serum Gd-IgA1 levels. Spearman's rank correlation is r = 0.06, P = 0.75. (b) Plotted against serum percent Gd-IgA1 levels. Spearman's rank correlation is r = 0.04, P = 0.87.
Figure 4Serum Gd-IgA1 levels (red circles) and concomitant urinary protein/creatinine ratios are plotted for the patient having the most serum Gd-IgA1 determinations. The red line represents the 95th percentile for serum Gd-IgA level in healthy pediatric controls, and the blue line represents the upper limit of normal for urinary protein/creatinine ratio of 0.2. This time course is of interest in that the initial value was at presentation with gross hematuria and the last three values were obtained during clinical remission (normal urinalysis and estimated GFR).