| Literature DB >> 34901567 |
Mark A Perazella1,2, Leal C Herlitz3.
Abstract
Crystalline nephropathies are a unique form of kidney disease characterized by the histologic finding of intrarenal crystal deposition. The intrinsic nature of some molecules and ions combined with a favorable tubular fluid physiology leads to crystal precipitation and deposition within the tubular lumens. Crystal deposition promotes kidney injury through tubular obstruction and both direct and indirect cytotoxicities. Further kidney injury develops from inflammation triggered by these crystals. From a clinical standpoint, the crystalline nephropathies are associated with abnormal urinalysis and urinary sediment findings, tubulopathies, acute kidney injury (AKI), and/or chronic kidney disease (CKD). Urine sediment examination is often helpful in alerting clinicians to the possibility of crystal-related kidney injury. The identification of crystals within the kidneys on biopsy by pathologists prompts clinicians to evaluate patients for medication-related kidney injury, dysproteinemia-related malignancies, and certain inherited disorders. This review will focus on the clinical and pathologic aspects of these 3 categories of crystalline nephropathies.Entities:
Keywords: acute kidney injury; chronic kidney disease; crystalline; drugs; dysproteinemias; inherited disorders
Year: 2021 PMID: 34901567 PMCID: PMC8640557 DOI: 10.1016/j.ekir.2021.09.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Kidney Int Rep ISSN: 2468-0249
Figure 1The mechanisms underlying crystal-related tubular cell injury and necroinflammation. Crystals precipitating in the tubular lumen (A) promote necroptosis of the tubular cells by activating a number of pathways. (B) Uptake of crystals into the lysosomes and phagolysosomes is associated with release of ctp-B when the lysosomes are destabilized. (C) ctp-B cleaves and degrades the negative regulator of necroptosis RIPK1, which triggers formation of the RIPK3–MLKL necrosome complex, which causes tubular cell necroptosis. (D) Inflammation occurs from DAMPs released from the necrosing tubular cells. (E) Dendritic cells phagocytose the crystals present in the interstitium and (F) initiate a similar process of lysosomal degradation with cat-B release and ROS formation, which activates the NLRP3 inflammasome and IL-1β secretion by the dendritic cells. (G) This leads to IL-1R–dependent inflammation in the kidney. The TNF-R pathway also activates the NF-κB, further activating the inflammasome. (H) Proinflammatory cytokines, such as TNF, trigger tubular cells necrosis by activating the TNF-R, leading to further DAMP release. Overall, these pathways promote an autoamplification loop of crystal-induced necroinflammation. ctp-B, cathepsin-B; DAMPs, damage-associated molecular patterns; IL-1R, interleukin-1 receptor; IL-1β, interleukin-1β; ROS, reactive oxygen species; TNF, tumor necrosis factor; TNF-R, tumor necrosis factor receptor.
Crystalline nephropathies associated with various medications
| Medication | Urinary crystal morphology | Clinical renal findings | Histologic findings of the kidney | Preventive measures |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sulfadiazine, sulfamethoxazole | Shocks or sheaves of wheat, shells, or dumbbells | Crystalluria, nephrolithiasis, AKI, and CKD | Mild mononuclear inflammation and interstitial fibrosis noted without sulfa crystals present within tubules or interstitium | Alkalinize urine; adjust dose for kidney function; assure euvolemia before drug exposure |
| Methotrexate | Annular shapes, yellow, golden, or brown | Crystalluria, AKI, and CKD | Annular structures consisting of small needle-shaped crystals that stain yellow, golden, or brown on H&E stain, weak rim staining on PAS, black staining on JS | IVFs before/during drug, alkalinize urine, adjust drug dose for kidney function; folinic acid; glucarpidase if toxic level (<60 h after methotrexate exposure) |
| Indinavir, atazanavir, darunavir | Needle, rectangle, fan-shaped or starburst aggregates | Crystalluria, nephrolithiasis, AKI, and CKD | Needle-shaped (translucent) indinavir, atazanavir, or darunavir crystals within tubules with an associated monocytic infiltrate and giant-cell reaction | No role for urine acidification; assure euvolemia during drug therapy; switch to different medication |
| Acyclovir | Thin needles with sharp or blunt ends | Crystalluria, leukocyturia, AKI, and CKD | Needle-shaped crystals within tubules ± peritubular inflammation | Avoid rapid i.v. bolus; adjust drug dose for kidney function; assure euvolemia during drug therapy |
| Triamterene | Brown, green, orange, and red spheres | Crystalluria, nephrolithiasis, AKI, and CKD | Crystals stain yellow/brown on H&E and PAS, silver positive on JS | Alkalinize urine; assure euvolemia during drug therapy |
| Ciprofloxacin, levofloxacin | Needles, stars, fans, or sheaves | Crystalluria and AKI | Needle-shaped crystals within tubules | Assure euvolemia during drug therapy and avoid alkaline urine (if possible) |
| Amoxicillin | Thin needles, broom/brush-like | Crystalluria and AKI | No histologic evidence of intrarenal deposits of amoxicillin crystals has been described on kidney biopsy findings | Assure euvolemia; adjust drug dose for kidney function |
| I.v. ascorbic acid, orlistat (by causing enteric hyperoxaluria), ethylene glycol | Calcium oxalate | Crystalluria, AKI, and CKD | Crystals are translucent to pale blue fan-like or sunburst shapes within tubules and interstitium with interstitial inflammation | Ascorbic acid and orlistat: assure euvolemia during drug therapy, avoid other nephrotoxins; fomepizole ± HD for ethylene glycol |
| Foscarnet | Crystals as plates and geometric shapes | Hematuria, proteinuria, AKI, and CKD | Plates and geometric shapes in dilated capillary loops and tubular lumens | Assure euvolemia during drug therapy and adjust drug dose for kidney function |
| Sodium phosphate purgative (oral rather than enema) | Calcium phosphate; white, amorphous, granular structures | AKI and CKD | Granular bluish-purplish crystal deposits with positive von Kossa staining | Assure euvolemia before exposure; avoid concomitant NSAIDs, diuretics, and RAS blockers |
AKI, acute kidney injury; CKD, chronic kidney disease; H&E, hematoxylin and eosin; HD, hemodialysis; IVF, i.v. fluid; JS, Jones methenamine silver; NSAID, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug; PAS, periodic acid–Schiff; RAS, renin-angiotensin system.
Therapy includes medication discontinuation, administration of i.v. fluids for hypovolemia, and provision of supportive care, including hemodialysis.
Figure 2Various crystals found in the urine sediment results and kidney biopsy findings in patients with medication-induced crystalline nephropathies. (a) Fan-shaped sulfadiazine crystals are noted in the urine. (b) Light brown-colored methotrexate crystals are observed within a urinary cast. (c) Indinavir crystals within the tubular lumens of the kidney are found. (d) Triamterene crystals are noted within the tubular lumens of the kidney on routine H&E staining for light microscopy. Image (d) provided courtesy of Dr. Samih Nasr of the Mayo Clinic. 2D, 2-dimensional; H&E, hematoxylin and eosin.
Crystalline nephropathies associated with dysproteinemias
| Dysproteinemia | Urinary crystal morphology | Renal syndromes | Histologic findings | Therapy |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| LC crystalline proximal tubulopathy | Crystals with needle shape and varying geometric shapes; negative/weakly birefringent on polarization | Proximal tubulopathy or full-blown Fanconi syndrome, monoclonal proteinuria, AKI, and CKD | Needle-shaped and various shaped crystals within PT cells that stain eosinophilic with H&E and JS, red with trichrome, and pale with PAS; negatively birefringent on polarization; kappa- or lambda-LC restricted on IF which may require protease/pronase digestion to allow antibody binding on IF; intracytoplasmic geometric and/or needle-shaped crystals within PT cells with some incorporated into lysosomes forming phagolysosomes on EM | Clone-directed therapy but plasma exchange is not recommended; correct metabolic disturbances (hypokalemia, metabolic acidosis, etc.) of Fanconi syndrome/proximal tubulopathy; IVFs if volume depleted; avoid nephrotoxins; supportive care |
| LC crystalline cast nephropathy | Crystals of varying shapes and sizes (geometric, rods, rhomboids); negative/weakly birefringent on polarization | High-grade monoclonal proteinuria, AKI, CKD, and ESKD | Geometric crystals within tubular lumens that stain eosinophilic with H&E, red with trichrome, and negative with JS; giant-cell reaction and tubulointerstitial inflammation occurs; negatively birefringent on polarization; kappa- or lambda-LC restricted on IF; crystals with geometric shapes and sharp edges on EM | Clone-directed therapy but plasma exchange and high-cutoff HD are not recommended; administer IVFs if volume depleted; avoid nephrotoxins; supportive care |
| Crystalglobulinemia | Crystal morphology not described | Albuminuria, hematuria, AKI, and CKD | Fractured crystals with geometric and needle shapes within vessels and glomeruli with rare intratubular crystals that stain eosinophilic with H&E, red with trichrome, pink with JS, and pale with PAS; proliferative glomeruli may occur; IgG kappa- or lambda-LC restricted on IF; dense crystals with parallel linear array substructure on EM | Clone-directed therapy, plasma exchange is recommended; IVFs if volume depleted; avoid nephrotoxins, supportive care |
| Crystal-storing histiocytosis | Crystal morphology not described | Fanconi syndrome, proteinuria, and AKI | Crystals with needle shapes within histiocytes and rarely within tubules that stain eosinophilic with H&E and JS, red with trichrome, and pale with PAS; chronic tubulointerstitial nephritis is present with numerous histiocytes; negative birefringence on polarization; kappa-LC restricted on IF; dense crystals with parallel linear array substructure on EM | Clone-directed therapy but plasma exchange is not recommended; avoid nephrotoxins; supportive care |
AKI, acute kidney injury; CKD, chronic kidney disease; EM, electron microscopy; ESKD, end-stage kidney disease; H&E, hematoxylin and eosin; HD, hemodialysis; IF, immunofluorescence; IVF, i.v. fluid; JS, Jones methenamine silver; LC, light chain; PAS, periodic acid–Schiff; PT, proximal tubular.
Figure 3Various crystals found in the urine sediment results and kidney biopsy findings in patients with dysproteinemia-related crystalline nephropathies. (a) Light chain crystals with geometric shapes are noted within the proximal tubular cells on electron microscopy in a patient with light chain proximal tubulopathy. (b) Light chain crystals of varying sizes and shapes are observed within a urinary cast. (c) Light chain crystals exhibit red staining with H&E by routine light microscopy in a patient with light chain crystalline cast nephropathy. (d) Light chain crystals within the glomerular capillaries are observed on routine light microscopy in a patient with crystalglobulinemia (periodic acid–Schiff staining, ×400). H&E, hematoxylin and eosin.
Crystalline nephropathies associated with inherited disorders
| Inherited disorder (inheritance and defect) | Urinary crystal morphology | Kidney syndromes | Histologic findings | Therapy |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cystinosis (autosomal recessive; lysosomal storage disease) | Translucent needles, rods, or geometric shapes; | Fanconi syndrome, AKI, CKD, and ESKD | Needle- or geometric-shaped crystal footprints in podocytes, mesangial cells, and interstitial macrophages; less common in tubular cells and tubules; positively birefringent on polarization | Oral cysteamine; treat metabolic abnormalities (hypokalemia, metabolic acidosis, etc.) of Fanconi syndrome; supportive care including dialysis and kidney transplantation |
| 2,8-Dihydroxyadeninuria or APRT deficiency (autosomal recessive; deficiency of adenine phosphoribosyltransferase) | Round with central spicules, reddish-brown color and dark outline; positively birefringent on polarization | Crystalluria, cylinduria, nephrolithiasis, AKI, CKD, and ESKD | Crystals that are brown to green color on H&E and PAS, light blue on trichrome, black on JS; irregular or fan-shaped crystals within tubules; positively birefringent on polarization | Xanthine oxidase inhibition (allopurinol or febuxostat) therapy early in the course; supportive care including dialysis and kidney transplantation |
| Primary hyperoxalurias 1, 2, and 3 (autosomal recessive; hepatic deficiency of glyoxylate metabolism) | Calcium oxalate | Crystalluria, cylinduria, nephrolithiasis, AKI, CKD, and ESKD | Crystals that are translucent to pale blue crystals with fan-like or sunburst shapes within tubular lumens, tubular cells, and interstitium; interstitial inflammation near crystals also noted; positively birefringent on polarization | Administer IVFs if hypovolemic; oral citrate and pyridoxine; supportive care with dialysis, kidney ± liver transplantation; lumasiran approved by FDA and EU; stiripentol being studied in clinical trials |
| Dent disease type 1 (X-linked recessive; mutation in CLCN5 gene) | Calcium oxalate, calcium phosphate, mixed | Type 1: crystalluria, proximal tubulopathy/Fanconi syndrome, hypercalciuria, nephrocalcinosis, nephrolithiasis, CKD, and ESKD | Rare calcium phosphate crystals in corticomedullary junction; focal global glomerulosclerosis; nonspecific findings with tubular atrophy, interstitial inflammation, and fibrosis | Reduction in hypercalciuria with thiazide diuretics; oral citrate: oral potassium, phosphate, and vitamin D; supportive care with dialysis/transplantation for ESKD |
| Lowe syndrome (X-linked recessive; mutation in OCRL1 gene) | Calcium oxalate, calcium phosphate, mixed | Crystalluria, proximal tubulopathy/Fanconi syndrome, distal RTA, hypercalciuria, nephrocalcinosis, nephrolithiasis, CKD, and ESKD | Rare calcium-phosphate crystals are found; focal glomerulosclerosis; nonspecific findings with tubular atrophy, interstitial inflammation, and fibrosis | Oral bicarbonate, potassium, phosphate and vitamin D; supportive care with dialysis/transplantation for ESKD |
AKI, acute kidney injury; APRT, adenine phosphoribosyltransferase; CKD, chronic kidney disease; ESKD, end-stage kidney disease, EU, European Union; FDA, US Food and Drug Administration; H&E, hematoxylin and eosin; IVF, i.v. fluid; JS, Jones methenamine silver; PAS, periodic acid–Schiff; RTA, renal tubular acidosis.