| Literature DB >> 33840954 |
Shane A Bobart1, Mariam P Alexander2, Andrew Bentall1.
Abstract
Renal transplantation is the preferred form of renal replacement therapy in patients who develop end-stage kidney disease (ESKD). Among the diverse etiologies of ESKD, glomerulonephritis is the third most common cause, behind hypertensive and diabetic kidney disease. Although efforts to prolong graft survival have improved over time with the advent of novel immunosuppression, recurrent glomerulonephritis remains a major threat to renal allograft survival despite concomitant immunosuppression. As a result, clinical expertise, early diagnosis and intervention will help identify recurrent disease and facilitate prompt treatment, thus minimizing graft loss, resulting in improved outcomes. In this review, we highlight the clinicopathologcal characteristics of certain glomerular diseases that recur in the renal allograft. Copyright:Entities:
Keywords: Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis; IgA nephropathy; glomerulonephritis; kidney allograft; lupus nephritis; membranoproliferative; membranous nephropathy; monoclonal gammopathy
Year: 2020 PMID: 33840954 PMCID: PMC8023028 DOI: 10.4103/ijn.IJN_193_19
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Indian J Nephrol ISSN: 0971-4065
Median time to recurrence of Glomerulopnephritides after Transplantation
| Native Disease | Median Time to Recurrence (IQR) | Increased Risk/Earlier Recurrence |
|---|---|---|
| IgA Nephropathy | 39.5 months (31-48) | Crescentic/rapidly progressive native disease. Lack of glucocorticoid use. |
| Focal Segmental Glomerulosclerosis (Primary) | 2 days (1-70) | Primary forms due to circulating factor. Genetic FSGS recurrence with APOL1 in donor. Secondary less likely to recur. |
| Membranous Nephropathy | 8.5 months (3.0-22.9) | High PLA2R antibody titer present at time of transplant |
| MPGN pattern: Immune | ||
| Complex Mediated | 1561 days (1-5591) | Lupus anticoagulant or anti-phospholipid antibody |
| Lupus Nephritis | Female, young age, Black, nonhispanic | |
| MPGN pattern: Complement | ||
| Mediated | ||
| C3GN | 21 months (14-28) | Monoclonal protein |
| Circulating Autoantibodies | ||
| DDD | 9.0 months (2.9-15) | Genetic Mutations |
| Monoclonal Gammopathy | ||
| Amyloid | 5.9 years (IQR 3.8-6.3) | AL, AA, Afib amyloid types, Inadequate suppression of precursor protein. |
| MIDD | 33.3 months (LCDD) (2-45) | |
| PGNMID | 4.7 months (3.8-5.5) |
IQR – Interquartile range, MPGN – Membranoproliferative Glomerulonephritis, C3GN – C3 Glomerulonephritis, DDD – Dense Deposit Disease, PGNMID – Proliferative Glomerulonephritis wth Monoclonal IgG Deposits, MIDD – Monoclonal Immunoglobulin Deposition Disease. LCDD – light chain deposition disease.
Figure 1IgA nephropathy: The glomerulus demonstrates very mild mesangial hypercellularity (a: PAS; 400×). Immunofluorescence studies demonstrate bright granular staining of IgA (b; 400×). Electron dense deposits are identified in the mesangium (c; 20K×)
Figure 2Membranous nephropathy: The glomerulus shows no remarkable pathology. Specifically, the glomerular basement membranes appear to be of normal thickness without spikes or craters (a; PAS; 400×). Immunofluorescence studies demonstrate bright granular peripheral capillary wall deposits of IgG (b; 400×) along with kappa and lambda light chain. C3 staining was minimal. Small subepithelial deposits (arrow) are identified on ultrastructural studies (c; 20K×)
Figure 3Proliferative glomerulonephritis with monoclonal immunoglobulin deposits: The glomerulus shows a mesangioproliferative pattern of injury with a small segmental scar (a; PAS 400×). The immunofluorescence studies are characteristic with bright granular peripheral capillary wall staining with IgG. The IgG subtype studies demonstrated IgG3 restricted staining (b; 200×). The glomeruli demonstrate kappa light chain restriction (c; 400×) without lambda light chain (d; 400×)