| Literature DB >> 35308512 |
Érico Murilo Monteiro Cutrim1, Precil Diego Miranda de Meneses Neves2, Marcos Adriano Garcia Campos3, Davi Campos Wanderley4, Antonio Augusto Lima Teixeira-Júnior5, Monique Pereira Rêgo Muniz1, Francisco Rasiah Ladchumananandasivam6, Orlando Vieira Gomes7, Rafael Fernandes Vanderlei Vasco8, Dyego José de Araújo Brito1, Joyce Santos Lages1, Natalino Salgado-Filho1, Felipe Leite Guedes9, José Bruno de Almeida9, Marcelo Magalhães10, Stanley de Almeida Araújo4, Gyl Eanes Barros Silva1.
Abstract
Collapsing glomerulopathy (CG) is a clinicopathologic entity characterized by segmentar or global collapse of the glomerulus and hypertrophy and hyperplasia of podocytes. The Columbia classification of 2004 classified CG as a histological subtype of focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS). A growing number of studies have demonstrated a high prevalence of CG in many countries, especially among populations with a higher proportion of people with African descent. The present study is a narrative review of articles extracted from PubMed, Medline, and Scielo databases from September 1, 2020 to December 31, 2021. We have focused on populational studies (specially cross-sectional and cohort articles). CG is defined as a podocytopathy with a distinct pathogenesis characterized by strong podocyte proliferative activity. The most significant risk factors for CG include APOL1 gene mutations and infections with human immunodeficiency virus and severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2. CG typically presents with more severe symptoms and greater renal damage. The prognosis is notably worse than that of other FSGS subtypes.Entities:
Keywords: glomerulopathy; nephrotic syndrome (NS); podocytes; renal biopsy; segmental and focal glomerulosclerosis
Year: 2022 PMID: 35308512 PMCID: PMC8927620 DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2022.846173
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Med (Lausanne) ISSN: 2296-858X
CG prevalence in populational studies.
| Study | Country | Population | CG/FSGS | CG/PG | HIV+ |
| De Abreu Testagrossa ( | Brazil | 48 | 48/131 | 48/525 | 0 |
| Detwiller ( | United States | 16 | – | 16/849 | 0 |
| Haas ( | United States | 21 | 21/450 | 21/7420 | 0 |
| Valeri ( | United States | 43 | 43/394 | 43/4073 | 0 |
| Grcevska ( | Makedonia | 16 | – | 16/893 | 0 |
| Laurinavicius ( | United States | 60 | – | – | 18 |
| Ferreira ( | Portugal | 18 | 18/413 | 18/6130 | 10 |
| Mubarak ( | Pakistan | 10 | – | 10/2160 | 0 |
| Ahuja ( | India | 30 | – | 30/3314 | 0 |
| Laurin ( | United States | 61 | – | – | 0 |
| Kanodia ( | India | 25 | – | 25/3335 | 0 |
| Husain ( | Saudi Arabia | 31 | 31/173 | – | 0 |
| Kukkul ( | United States | 41 | – | – | – |
GC, collapsing glomerulopathy; FSGS, focal segmentar glomerulosclerosis; PG, primary glomerulopathies. *HIV+ and HIV- patients were compared to each other, without global results. **There were avalieted only patients from six months of 2015. **In this paper, there were included solely patients with 65 years old or older.
FIGURE 1Glomerular pattern and podocytes morphological changes in human podocytopathies (bar = 10 μm).
FIGURE 2Collapsing glomerulopathy etiologies.
FIGURE 3Kidney biopsies of collapsing glomerulopathy. (A,B) Periodic Acid Schiff (PAS) and Jones Methenamine Silver (JMS) (40×), respectively show intense podocyte hyperplasia and glomerular tuft collapse. (C) JMS (20×) exhibits microcytic transformation of distal convoluted tubules with accumulations of hyaline material inside of those. (D,E) Fluorescence microscopy (40×) shows, respectively, IgM and C3 trapping in areas of collapse/sclerosis. (F) Semi-fine stained in Toluidine Blue (63×) with collapse of the entire glomerular tuft and hyperplasia of podocytes and dilated Bowman’s space. (G,H) Transmission electron microscopy contrasted with Osmium Tetroxide, Lead Citrate and Uranyl in block shows capillary loop collapse with hyalinosis in addition to diffuse fusion and flattening of the pedicels associated with microvillous transformation. (I) Electron microscopy tubes contrasted with osmium tetroxide, lead citrate, and uranyl in block with detail of disorganization of the cytoskeleton in the podocyte cytoplasm, with extensive effacement of the pedicels.
CG patients’ treatment and follow-up data.
| Authors | Total | Treated patients | Treatment | Renal Outcome | Need for RRT (%) |
| Valeri et al. ( | 43 | 35 | 26 CS | No remission | 51 |
| 6 CP | 1 TR | ||||
| 3 CI | 1 PR, 1 PR | ||||
| Laurinavicius et al. ( | 42 | 37 | 23 CS | 2 TR, 7 PR | 73.33 |
| 3 CP | No remission | ||||
| Raja et al. ( | 22 | 22 | 1 AR | No remission | 36.4 |
| 16 CS | No remission | ||||
| 4 CS + TAC | 3TR, 1 PR | ||||
| 1 CS + CP | No remission | ||||
| Grcevska et al. ( | 16 | 15 | 7 CS | No remission | 100 |
| 8 CS + CP | No remission | ||||
| Detwiler et al. ( | 16 | 5 | 4 CS | 1 TR | 35.71 |
| 1 CS + CP | No remission | ||||
| Chun et al. ( | 40 | 25 | 40 CS | 6 TR, 10 PR | 43 |
| Singh et al. ( | 6 | 6 | 6 CS | No remission | 66.7 |
| 2 CP after CS | 2 TR |
ARC, angiotensina receptor II blocker; CS, corticosteroids; CI, calcineurin inhibitors; CP, cyclophosphamide; RRT, renal replacement therapy; TR, total remission; PR, partial remission; TAC, tacrolimus.