| Literature DB >> 33457257 |
Yuanyuan Zhao1,2,3,4, Yang Yang1,2,3,4, Ping Zhou1,2,3,4, Jipin Jiang1,2,3,4, Zhishui Chen1,2,3,4, Dunfeng Du1,2,3,4.
Abstract
Recently, the mainstream curative treatment for primary hyperoxaluria type 1 (PH1) is combined liver and kidney transplantation, and only kidney transplantation is considered ineffective for most PH1 patients. Furthermore, vitamin B6 (B6) is the only permitted drug available for treatment. However, except for specific mutations such as G170R and F152I in gene AGXT, data of B6 effect on other mutations are lacking. Insufficient research has evaluated the efficacy of the combination of kidney transplantation and B6 treatment in the therapeutic strategy in PH1 patients. Here, we report a case of a 52-year-old male with frequent stone events and end-stage renal diseases (ESRD), and subsequently undergone kidney transplantation. Sudden rising of serum creatinine within two months after the transplantation. After gene sequencing, the mutations of A186V, R197Q, and I340M were presented in gene AGXT. Therefore, the patient was diagnosed with PH1. B6 administration was attempted during the period of waiting for liver transplantation. Four-week oral B6 therapy (50 mg tid) reduced the serum creatinine of the patient from 194 to 145 µmol/L, which revealed that the patient probably responded to B6 treatment. At the almost three-year follow-up, the patient's serum creatinine remained reduced (130 µmol/L), without urinary oxalate excretion. In this case, we established a positive effect, even a beneficial result, of the use of B6 as a retrospective therapeutic choice in PH1 treatment after kidney transplantation. 2020 Translational Andrology and Urology. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: Primary hyperoxaluria type 1 (PH1); case report; graft function; kidney transplantation; vitamin B6 (B6)
Year: 2020 PMID: 33457257 PMCID: PMC7807321 DOI: 10.21037/tau-20-979
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Androl Urol ISSN: 2223-4683
The clinical characteristics of donor
| Index | Information | Normal range |
|---|---|---|
| Sex | Male | – |
| Age | 52-year-old | – |
| Cause of death | Hematencephalon, brain herniation | – |
| Brain dead/circulatory death | Circulatory death | – |
| History of disease | Hypertension, coronary heart disease | – |
| Renal function | ||
| BUN (mmol/L) | 10.07 | 3.1–8.0 |
| Creatinine (µmol/L) | 89 | 57–97 |
| Uric Acid (µmol/L) | 131.5 | 202.3–416.5 |
| Bicarbonate (mmol/L) | 18.3 | 22.0–29.0 |
| eGFRCKD-EPI (mL/min/1.73 m2) | 85.4 | >90 |
| Urinalysis | ||
| Urine protein | 1+ | Negative |
| Red blood cell | 3+ | Negative |
| White blood cell | Negative | Negative |
| Urine glucose | Negative | Negative |
| Urine acetone bodies | Negative | Negative |
| Urine bilirubin | Negative | Negative |
| Urobilinogen | 33 | 3.2–16.0 |
Urine component analysis in 24 hours after 6 months of kidney transplantation
| Urine component | Estimated value (mg/24 h) | Reference ranges (mg/24 h) |
|---|---|---|
| Uric acid | 439.5 | 400–700* |
| Magnesium | 93.8 | 78.6–119.5 |
| Calcium | 594.6 | 108–300# |
| Phosphorus | 790.7 | 500–1,300 |
| Oxalate | 93.17 | 8.19–41.04 |
| Citrate | 356.8 | >320 |
*, reference ranges for male. #, reference ranges for male with regular diet. For patients with high calcium diet, the reference range is approximately 400 mg/24 h. For patients with low calcium diet, the reference range is <150 mg/24 h.
Figure 1Biopsy of allograft for testing the calcium oxalate crystal and BK virus infection. (A,B,C) Renal allograft biopsy didn’t show distinct calcium oxalate crystal in renal tubular and renal interstitium, nor acute/chronic rejection under light microscope (×400, H&E). (D,E) Renal allograft biopsy didn’t show BK virus infection for the patient (×200 for D and ×400 for E, IHC). (F) Positive control (×400 for IHC).
Figure 2Timeline of interventions and outcomes.