| Literature DB >> 35211301 |
Andrés Ribas1, Adrián Puche2, Javier Gimeno2, Laia Sans1, Clara Barrios1, Eva Márquez1, Dolores Naranjo2, Belén Lloveras2, Joan Lop2, Natàlia Ramos3, Maria José Soler3, Alejandra Gabaldon4, Marta Crespo1, Eva Rodríguez1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Renal manifestations of monoclonal gammopathies are of increasing interest among nephrologists. Typical manifestations include light chain cast nephropathy, amyloidosis or renal damage mediated by monoclonal immunoglobulin deposition. Podocytopathies in the setting of an underlying monoclonal gammopathy constitute a rare manifestation of these diseases and, although being described in the literature, remain a challenge since most data derive from case reports.Entities:
Keywords: MGRS; Wäldestrom disease; focal segmental glomerulosclerosis; minimal change disease; multiple myeloma; podocytopathy
Year: 2021 PMID: 35211301 PMCID: PMC8862048 DOI: 10.1093/ckj/sfab176
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Kidney J ISSN: 2048-8505
Figure 1:Patient 1. Optical morphology of the glomeruli. H&E: hematoxylin and eosin stain; PAS: periodic acid-Schiff stain; JMS: Jones methenamine stain; TRIM: Masson's trichrome. Magnification ×600.
Figure 2:Patient 1. Cortical tubules showing a diffuse increase in protein reabsorption. Absence of abnormal casts. Jones methenamine stain; magnification ×400.
Figure 3:Patient 1. Electron microscopy findings showing podocyte foot process effacement (black arrows) and microvillus transformation (white arrows).
Figure 4:Patient 2. Electron microscopy showing podocyte foot process effacement (black arrows), microvillus transformation (white arrows) and occasional cytoplasmic pseudocysts (red arrow).
Review of reported cases in the literature since 2000
| Year [Ref.] | Age-sex | Hematological disease | Nephrotic syndrome (yes/no) | Proteinuria (g/24 h)/ | Bence–Jones protenuria | Serum albumine diagnose (g/dL) | M-onoclonal protein (mg/dL) | Serum creatinine at diagnose (mg/dL) | Renal disease | Renal disease treatment | Remission (CR/NR/PR) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2012 [ | 67-M | WM | Yes | 9.4 | No | 1.4 | IgM ĸ (2460) | 1.8 | MCD | DXM[ | CR |
| 2020 [ | 68-F | WM | Yes | 16.2[ | No | 3.9 | IgM ĸ (1693) | 0.6 | FSGS | PDN | PR |
| 2013 [ | 67-M | WM | Yes | 12.7 | No | – | IgM ĸ | 0.9 | MCD | PDN | CR |
| 2019 [ | 52-M | WM | Yes | – | No | 1.99 | IgM (4190) | 2.38 | MCD | DXM[ | CR |
| 2014 [ | 62-M | MM | Yes | 4.3 | No | 3.2 | IgG ĸ (1500) | 0.8 | FSGS | PDN/CP | PR |
| 2018 [ | 48-M | MM | No | 8 | No | 3.1 | – | 2.71 | FSGS | PDN | PR |
| 2010 [ | 72-M | MGUS[ | No | 4.8[ | – | – | IgM | 5 | FSGS[ | – | – |
| 2004 [ | 51-F | MM | No | 32.6 | Yes | 2.5 | IgA ĸ (4400) | 3.5 | FSGS[ | DXM[ | CR |
| 2001[ | 36-M | MM | No | 9.5 | Yes | – | IgG ĸ | 1.7 | FSGS | DXM[ | NR |
CP: cyclophosphamide; CR: complete remission; DXM: dexamethasone; NR: no remission; PDN: prednisone; PR: partial remission.
Proteinuria was obtained by urinary protein:creatinine ratio.
Dexamethasone was part of the chemotherapy for hematological dyscrasia.
FSGS collapsing variant was found on kidney biopsy.
Diagnosis of cell dyscrasia was made 2 years prior to renal disease.
Clinical and analytical characteristics of three reported cases
| Patient 1 | Patient 2 | Patient 3 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hematological disease | IgM Κ WM | IgG Κ MM | IgG λ MM |
| Age at diagnosis (years) | 67 | 86 | 72 |
| Renal disease onset after hematological diagnosis (months) | 52 | 0 | 312 |
| Renal function at diagnosis [GFR (MDRD; mL/min/1.72 m2)] | 55 | 60 | 83 |
| Protein:creatinine ratio (mg/g) | 26 350 | 3565 | 1849 |
| Urine monoclonal component (%) | 2.81 | 64.8 | 0 |
| Serum monoclonal component (%) | 50.9 | 4 | – |
| Serum albumin at renal disease diagnosis (g/dL) | 2.1 | 3.2 | 4.1 |
| Nephrotic syndrome (yes/no) | Yes | Yes | No |
| Renal pathology diagnosis | Podocytopathy | MCD | FSGS |
| Renal replacement therapy | No | No | No |
| Hematological remission | UT | UT | UT |
| Renal remission | CR | PR | PR |
| Renal replacement therapy | No | No | No |
| Renal disease's specific treatment | Steroids | Steroids | No |
| Other treatments | PEX | – | – |
CR: complete remission; PEX: plasmapheresis; PR: partial remission; UT: under treatment.