| Literature DB >> 25441103 |
Aruna Nambirajan1, Dipankar Bhowmik, Geetika Singh, Sanjay Kumar Agarwal, Amit Kumar Dinda.
Abstract
Patients with light-chain deposition disease (LCDD) frequently do not meet criteria for myeloma. In such cases, despite low tumor burden, the circulating monoclonal immunoglobulins cause renal damage, are responsible for post-transplant recurrence, and are rightly categorized as monoclonal gammopathy of renal significance (MGRS) requiring chemotherapy. A 65-year male with uncharacterized nodular glomerulopathy presented with proteinuria 3 years postrenal transplant. His allograft biopsies were diagnostic of light-chain deposition disease (likely recurrent), and in the absence of myeloma, he was labeled as MGRS. Based on the limited literature available, he was treated with bortezomib which resulted in normalization of serum-free light-chain ratios and resolution of proteinuria. He, however, later succumbed to complications of chemotherapy. This case highlights the diagnostic difficulties in LCDD, the importance of an accurate pretransplant diagnosis, and treatment of the malignant clone, in the absence of which post-transplant management of recurrence is challenging with poor outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: MGRS; bortezomib; light-chain deposition disease; myeloma; transplant
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25441103 DOI: 10.1111/tri.12497
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transpl Int ISSN: 0934-0874 Impact factor: 3.782