| Literature DB >> 30955945 |
Samih H Nasr1, Christophe Sirac2, Frank Bridoux3, Vincent Javaugue4, Sebastien Bender5, Alexia Rinsant6, Sihem Kaaki6, Emilie Pinault7, Surendra Dasari8, Mariam P Alexander9, Samar M Said9, Jonathan J Hogan10, Angela Dispenzieri11, Guy Touchard3, Ellen D McPhail9, Nelson Leung11.
Abstract
Heavy chain amyloidosis and heavy chain deposition disease are the only known kidney diseases caused by the deposition of truncated immunoglobulin heavy chains. Fibrillary glomerulonephritis typically results from deposition of DNAJB9 (DnaJ heat shock protein family [Hsp40] member B9) and polytypic immunoglobulin G (IgG). We describe a patient with monoclonal gammopathy (IgG with λ light chain) who developed DNAJB9-negative fibrillary glomerulonephritis leading to end-stage kidney disease, with recurrence in 2 kidney allografts. Pre- and postmortem examination showed glomerular deposition of Congo red-negative fibrillar material that was determined to be immunoglobulin heavy chain. We propose the term "heavy chain fibrillary glomerulonephritis" to describe this lesion, which appears to be a rare kidney complication of monoclonal gammopathy. The diagnosis should be suspected when the kidney biopsy shows fibrillary glomerulonephritis with negative staining for immunoglobulin light chains and DNAJB9; the diagnosis can be confirmed using immunochemical and molecular studies.Entities:
Keywords: Fibrillary glomerulonephritis; case report; fibrils; heavy chain fibrillary glomerulonephritis; heavy chain sequencing; immunoglobulin heavy chain; kidney biopsy; monoclonal gammopathy
Year: 2019 PMID: 30955945 DOI: 10.1053/j.ajkd.2019.01.032
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Kidney Dis ISSN: 0272-6386 Impact factor: 8.860