| Literature DB >> 29872351 |
Laura Palau1, Steven Menez1, Javier Rodriguez-Sanchez1, Tessa Novick1, Marco Delsante2, Blaithin A McMahon1, Mohamed G Atta1.
Abstract
Despite the decreased incidence of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-associated nephropathy due to the widespread use of combined active antiretroviral therapy, it remains one of the leading causes of end-stage renal disease (ESRD) in HIV-1 seropositive patients. Patients usually present with low CD4 count, high viral load and heavy proteinuria, with the pathologic findings of collapsing focal segmental glomerulosclerosis. Increased susceptibility exists in individuals with African descent, largely due to polymorphism in APOL1 gene. Other clinical risk factors include high viral load and low CD4 count. Advanced kidney disease and nephrotic range proteinuria have been associated with progression to ESRD. Improvement in kidney function has been observed after initiation of combined active antiretroviral therapy. Other treatment options, when clinically indicated, are inhibition of the renin-angiotensin system and corticosteroids. Further routine management approaches for patients with chronic kidney disease should be implemented. In patients with progression to ESRD, kidney transplant should be pursued, provided that viral load control is adequate. Screening for the presence of kidney disease upon detection of HIV-1 seropositivity in high-risk populations is recommended.Entities:
Keywords: APOL1 polymorphism; ESRD; HIV; HIVAN; kidney transplant
Year: 2018 PMID: 29872351 PMCID: PMC5975615 DOI: 10.2147/HIV.S141978
Source DB: PubMed Journal: HIV AIDS (Auckl) ISSN: 1179-1373
Figure 1HIV-associated nephropathy.
Notes: (A) Collapsing glomerulopathy. The glomerular tuft is collapsed and marked podocyte hypertrophy is observed. Podocytes show marked protein overload. Light microscopy, silver-stained section, 200× magnification. (B) Diffuse podocyte injury with complete foot process effacement and focal microvillous transformation. A tubuloreticular inclusion is observed in an endothelial cell (box). Scanning electron microscopy, 6000× magnification.
Differential diagnosis of HIV-associated nephropathy
| • HIV-associated immune complex kidney disease |
| • Membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis (associated with concurrent hepatitis C infection) |
| • Classic FSGS |
| • Amyloidosis |
| • Minimal change disease |
| • Post-infectious glomerulonephritis |
| • Thrombotic microangiopathy |
| • Diabetic nephropathy |
| • Immunoglobulin A nephropathy |
| • Membranous glomerulopathy |
Abbreviations: FSGS, focal segmental glomerulosclerosis; HIV, human immunodeficiency virus.
Figure 2Spectrum of APOL1-associated kidney diseases.
Abbreviations: ESRD, end-stage renal disease; FSGS, focal segmental glomerulosclerosis; HIVAN, human immunodeficiency virus-associated nephropathy.
Risk factors and predictors of HIV-associated nephropathy
| • Black race |
| • G1/G2 high-risk alleles for APOL1 |
| • CD4 count <200/mL, high viral load >400 copies/mL |
| • Proteinuria >3 g/day |
| • eGFR <90 mL/min, serum creatinine elevated from baseline |
Abbreviations: eGFR, estimated glomerular filtration rate; HIV, human immunodeficiency virus.
Summary of previous studies regarding management
| Management | Author, journal, year of study | Patient population | Type of study | Outcome | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| cART | Atta MG, Gallant JE, Rahman MH, et al. | 263 consecutive HIV-infected patients | Retrospective | Renal survival was significantly better in the group receiving ART by both univariate ( | |
| Lucas GM, Eustace JA, Sozio S, Mentari EK, Appiah KA, Moore RD. | 4000 HIV-positive patients, clinical diagnosis of HIVAN | 12-year cohort study | The HIVAN risk was reduced to 60% (95% CI, −30% to −80%) by use of HAART | ||
| ACE inhibitors/ARB | Kimmel PL, Mishkin GJ, Umana WO. | 18 patients with biopsy-proved HIVAN | Case-control study | Renal survival was significantly enhanced in patients treated with captopril vs controls (mean renal survival 156±71 vs 37±5 days, respectively; | |
| Wei A, Burns GC, Williams BA, et al. | 44 patients with biopsy-proven HIV | Prospective study | Longer renal survival for HIV-positive patients treated with fosinopril as compared to untreated patients (relative risk: 0.003; | ||
| Corticosteroids | Eustace JA, Nuermberger E, Choi M, Scheel PJ, Jr, Moore R, Briggs WA. | 21 patients with biopsy-proved HIVAN | Retrospective cohort | The relative risk (95% CI) for progressive azotemia with corticosteroid treatment at 3 months was 0.20 (0.05, 0.76, | |
| Laradi A, Mallet A, Beaufils H, et al. | 102 patients with biopsy-proven HIVAN | Retrospective study | Delay in the initiation of hemodialysis was observed. The proportion of patients free of dialysis at 0.5, 1 and 3 years was 73%±5%, 60%±7% and 18%± 10%, respectively | ||
| Kidney transplantation | Stock PG, Barin B, Murphy B, et al. | 150 HIV-positive patients | Multicenter, prospective non-randomized, 3-year trial | A higher-than-expected rejection rate was observed, with 1- and 3 year estimates of 31% (95% CI, 24–40) and 41% (95% CI, 32–52), respectively | |
| Waheed S, Sakr A, Chheda ND, et al. | 11 patients with biopsy-proven HIVAN | Retrospective analysis | Delayed graft function: 64%; required postoperative dialysis within 1 week of transplant: 54%. Graft survival rates at 1 and 3 years were 100% and 81%, respectively, and acute rejection rates at 1 and 3 years were 18% and 27%, respectively | ||
| Muller E, Barday Z, Mendelson M, et al. | 27 HIV-positive patients | Prospective non-randomized study | Rejection rates were 8% at 1 year and 22% at 3 years | ||
| Muller E, Barday Z. | 43 kidneys from 25 HIV-positive deceased donors transplanted into HIV-positive patients | Prospective, non-randomized study | Since 2008, 43 kidneys from 25 HIV-positive deceased donors have been transplanted into patients who are HIV positive in Cape Town, South Africa |
Abbreviations: ACE, angiotensin-converting enzyme; ARB, angiotensin receptor blocker; ART, active antiretroviral therapy; cART, combined active antiretroviral therapy; HAART, highly active antiretroviral therapy; HIV, human immunodeficiency virus; HIVAN, HIV-associated nephropathy.