| Literature DB >> 27247945 |
Abstract
Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS) is a heterogeneous clinicopathological entity. Two frameworks for the classification of FSGS have been described: etiologic and morphologic. The etiologic classification is distinguished among genetic, adaptive, virus-associated, drug-induced, and idiopathic types. Morphologic classification is commonly referred to as the Columbia classification published in 2004, which distinguishes five variants: collapsing, tip, cellular, perihilar, and not otherwise specified (NOS). This classification is based on light microscopic patterns with rigorously defined specific criteria, which can be applied to primary and secondary forms of FSGS, and has been widely used over the past 10 years both as a diagnostic and as a prognostic clinical tool. This paper defines common histopathological features of FSGS, distinguished characters among five variants, and points out the confusion about terminology of variants, because most were proposed in the past with different definitions. Despite good interobserver reproducibility of this classification system, difficulty in its application may arise in the interpretation of lesions with mixed features of more than one variant in the same tissue specimen and with late lesions, because other variants may evolve into the NOS variant over time.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27247945 PMCID: PMC4876206 DOI: 10.1155/2016/9375753
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Figure 4Tip variant of FSGS. Foam cell accumulated segment prolapsed into the tubular pole, the origin of the proximal tubule. The remainder of the glomerular tuft appears normal. PAS stain, ×200. (Courtesy of Professor Mi Sun Choi, DongSan Hospital of Keymyung Medical College, Daegu, Korea.) Inset shows endocapillary foam cells in trichrome stain. ×400.
Figure 5Collapsing variant of FSGS. Segmental collapse of glomerular capillaries is accompanied by proliferation of overlying podocytes. PAS stain, ×200.
Figure 6Cellular variant of FSGS. Segment is expanded by endocapillary foam cells. Overlying epithelial cells are also prominent, but capillary collapse is not observed. Trichrome stain, ×200.
Columbia classification of FSGS variants.
| Variant | Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria |
|---|---|---|
| FSGS (NOS) | At least 1 glomerulus with segmental increase in matrix obliterating the capillary lumina. There may be segmental glomerulus capillary wall collapse without overlying podocyte hyperplasia. | Exclude perihilar, cellular, tip, and collapsing variants. |
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| Perihilar variant | At least 1 glomerulus with perihilar hyalinosis, with or without sclerosis. | Exclude cellular, tip, and collapsing variants. |
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| Cellular variant | At least 1 glomerulus with segmental endocapillary hypercellularity occluding lumina, with or without foam cells and karyorrhexis. | Exclude tip and collapsing variants. |
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| Tip variant | At least 1 segmental lesion involving the tip domain | Exclude collapsing variant. |
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| Collapsing variant | At least 1 glomerulus with segmental or global collapse and overlying podocyte hypertrophy and hyperplasia. | None. |
FSGS, focal segmental glomerulosclerosis; NOS, not otherwise specified.
Reprinted from [13].