| Literature DB >> 34495361 |
Jürgen Floege1, Thomas Rauen2, Sydney C W Tang3.
Abstract
IgA nephropathy (IgAN) is the most common type of glomerulonephritis in Asia and the Western world. In most patients, it follows an asymptomatic to oligosymptomatic course and GFR loss, if any, is slow. The mainstay of therapy therefore is optimized supportive care, i.e., measures that lower blood pressure, reduce proteinuria, minimize lifestyle risk factors, and otherwise help to reduce non-specific insults to the kidneys. The value of immunosuppression has become controversial and if at all, systemic high-dose corticosteroid therapy should be considered for a few months taking into account patient characteristics that would caution against or preclude such therapy. In addition, adverse events related to corticosteroid therapy markedly increase as GFR declines. Beyond corticosteroids, there is little evidence that any additional immunosuppression is helpful, with the exception of mycophenolate mofetil in patients of Asian descent. A considerable number of clinical trials ranging from enteric coated budesonide to blockade of B-cell function to complement inhibitors are currently ongoing and will hopefully allow a more targeted therapy of high-risk patients with progressive IgAN in the future.Entities:
Keywords: Complement; Glucocorticoids; IgA nephropathy; Mesangioproliferative glomerulonephritis; Supportive therapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34495361 PMCID: PMC8551131 DOI: 10.1007/s00281-021-00888-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Semin Immunopathol ISSN: 1863-2297 Impact factor: 9.623
Fig. 1Cornerstones of supportive therapy in IgA nephropathy adapted from [22,23]
Fig. 2Patients and key study results from the long-term observation of the STOP-IgAN cohort [24,32]
Situations in which corticosteroids should be used with extreme caution or avoided entirely in patients with IgAN (modified from KDIGO 2021 CLINICAL PRACTICE GUIDELINE FOR THEMANAGEMENT OF GLOMERULAR DISEASES. Kidney Int Suppl 2021 in press.)
| •eGFR < 30 ml/min/1.73 m2. |
| •Diabetes. |
| •Obesity (body mass index > 30 kg/m2). |
| •Latent infections (e.g., viral hepatitis, tuberculosis). |
| •Secondary IgAN (e.g., liver cirrhosis). |
| •Acute peptic ulceration. |
| •Uncontrolled psychiatric illness. |
| •Severe osteoporosis. |
Fig. 3Treatment of primary IgAN (adapted from KDIGO 2021 CLINICAL PRACTICE GUIDELINE FOR THE MANAGEMENT OF GLOMERULAR DISEASES. Kidney Int Suppl 2021 in press.). *Specific considerations apply to some ethnic groups: (1) if Japanese, consider tonsillectomy; (2) if Chinese consider mycophenolate mofetil as a corticosteroid-sparing agent
Immunosuppression beyond corticosteroids in IgAN (
modified from KDIGO 2021 CLINICAL PRACTICE GUIDELINE FOR THEMANAGEMENT OF GLOMERULAR DISEASES. Kidney Int Suppl 2021 in press.)
| Agent | Suggested usage |
|---|---|
| Azathioprine | Not recommended |
| Cyclophosphamide | Not recommended unless in the setting of rapidly progressive IgAN |
| Calcineurin inhibitors | Not recommended |
| Rituximab | Not recommended |
| Mycophenolate mofetil | Chinese—can be considered as a steroid-sparing agent Non-Chinese—insufficient evidence for efficacy |
| Hydroxychloroquine | Chinese—in patients at high risk of progression despite optimized supportive care Non-Chinese—no data available |