| Literature DB >> 31382904 |
Linus A Völker1, Katharina Burkert1, Niklas Scholten1, Franziska Grundmann1, Christine Kurschat1, Thomas Benzing1, Jürgen Hampl2, Jan Ulrich Becker3, Roman-Ulrich Müller4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Transplant failure requires the consideration of numerous potential causes including rejection, acute tubular necrosis, infection, and recurrence of the original kidney disease. Kidney biopsy is generally required to approach these differential diagnoses. However, the histopathological findings on their own do not always lead to a definite diagnosis. Consequently, it is crucial to integrate them with clinical findings and patient history when discussing histopathological patterns of injury. The histopathologic finding of a membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis (MPGN) is one of the most challenging constellations since it does not refer to a specific disease entity but rather reflects a pattern of injury that is the result of many different causes. Whilst MPGN is occasionally classified as immune complex mediated, careful evaluation usually reveals an underlying disorder such as chronic infection, plasma cell dyscrasia, complement disorders, and autoimmune disease. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Kidney transplantation; Membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis; Recurrence; Shunt nephritis
Year: 2019 PMID: 31382904 PMCID: PMC6683457 DOI: 10.1186/s12882-019-1472-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Nephrol ISSN: 1471-2369 Impact factor: 2.388
Fig. 1Differential diagnosis of endocapillary proliferative glomerulonephritis with subendothelial electron-dense deposits and membranoproliferative GN type I or III. Histopathological distinction into IgG/IgM-dominant forms and C3-dominant forms can help in the differential diagnosis. Note that light chain restriction may become apparent even in seemingly C3-dominant forms only after protease digestion [16]. The final diagnosis into the listed entities should always consider clinical findings, serum and urine tests for monoclonal gammopathy, complement serology, and complement genetics. Note that infection-associated glomerulonephritis can present histologically histology indistinguishable from C3-GN. C3-GN can be defined by its pathogenesis as mediated through complement dysregulation. The most common causes are hereditary or due to LPD-associated or idiopathic inhibitory autoantibodies, some of them presenting as C3-nephritic factors. Cryoglobulinemia falls into either the autoimmune-, LPD- or infection-associated categories in the left arm. Transplant glomerulopathy as a form of chronic antibody-mediated rejection may or may not show mesangial and subendothelial immune complexes, usually very few in number and [9] is thus not depicted in this scheme. Also not listed are TMA and associated lesions which are distinguished from MPGN or endocapillary proliferative GN by the absence of immune-complex-like electron dense deposits. * - Idiopathic is a diagnosis of exclusion, and the proportion of cases labelled as such is expected to shrink further with careful clinical assessment and our growing body of knowledge
Fig. 2Histopathological findings in the kidney transplant biopsy. The top left (Jones) shows increased numbers of mononuclear cells in the glomerular capillaries (arrows). Jones silver stain, original magnification × 400. The top right (IgM) shows IgM dominant deposits along the glomerular basement membrane in brown. IgA and IgG were virtually negative. Immunoperoxidase, original magnification × 630. The bottom left shows strong C1q co-deposition along the glomerular basement membrane in brown. Immunoperoxidase, original magnification × 630. The bottom right shows subendothelial electron dense immune complex deposits on the inner side of the glomerular basement membranes (arrows), typical for endocapillary proliferative GN or MPGN type I. Original magnification × 10,000
| Year | Event |
|---|---|
| 1986 | Diagnosis of hydrocephalus Placement of ventriculoperitoneal shunt |
| 1992 | Placement of ventriculoatrial shunt |
| 2004 | Diagnosis of membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis |
| 2004–2008 | Immunosuppressive therapy with cyclosporine and steroids |
| 2008 | Placement of a AV fistula as dialysis access |
| 2009–2012 | Hemodialysis |
| Feb 2012 | Kidney transplantation (cadaveric donor) |
| Mar 2012 | Allograft biopsy: No sign of rejection |
| Jun 2012 | Allograft biopsy: Borderline T cell-mediated rejection, steroid pulse |
| Jan 2016 | Allograft biopsy: Recurrence of MPGN VP−/VA-shunt-removal Endoscopic ventriculostomy |
| Feb 2016 | Surgical removal of remaining shunt fragments Transcutaneous-endovascular retrieval of VA-shunt fragments |
| Oct 2018 | Improved allograft function, complete resolution of hematuria and proteinuria |