| Literature DB >> 35734176 |
Precil Diego Miranda de Menezes Neves1,2, Monique Pereira Rêgo Muniz3, Giuliano Ferreira Morgantetti4, Érico Murilo Monteiro Cutrim5, Carlos de Andrade Macieira3, Natalino Salgado-Filho3, Joyce Santos Lages5, Dyego José de Araújo Brito3, Kaile de Araújo Cunha5, Giuseppe Cesare Gatto6, Gyl Eanes Barros Silva4,5.
Abstract
Membranous nephropathy (MN) is a form of kidney disease that is idiopathic in 70%-80% of cases. Glomerular involvement in autoimmune thyroiditis can occur in 10%-30% of patients, and MN manifests in association with Hashimoto thyroiditis in up to 20% of the cases with glomerular involvement. Reports of MN associated with Graves' disease (GD) are extremely rare in the current literature. Herein, we report the case of a 46-year-old man admitted to the hospital with nephrotic syndrome and symptomatic hyperthyroidism due to GD. Kidney biopsy revealed a secondary MN pattern. Immunohistochemical staining for PLA2R was negative, and thyroglobulin showed weak and segmental staining along the glomerular capillary. Anti-thyroid peroxidase (TPO) antibody test was not performed. The patient was treated for GD with methimazole and prednisone, and despite reaching clinical improvement after 8 months, proteinuria remained close to nephrotic levels. In this scenario, the patient was submitted to radioactive iodine, and there was a dramatic reduction in proteinuria levels after treatment. In conclusion, GD association with MN is rare, and when present, diagnosis using PLA2R and immunohistochemistry can be useful in determining association. In addition, radioactive iodine therapy can be an effective treatment modality when preceded with immunosuppressive corticosteroid therapy.Entities:
Keywords: Graves’ disease; auto-immune thyroiditis; kidney biopsy; membranous nephropathy; renal pathology
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35734176 PMCID: PMC9207503 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2022.824124
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 8.786
Figure 1Kidney biopsy findings: (A) Global glomerular basement membrane thickening (Masson’s Trichrome, 400×). (B) Glomerular characteristic deposits forming “spikes” and “chain links” figures (periodic acid methenamine, 1,000×). (C) PLA2R immunohistochemical stain revealing no immunoreactivity (400×). (D) Some glomeruli show weak and segmental staining for thyroglobulin along the glomerular capillary (200×).
Follow-up of patient’s laboratory tests.
| Admission | Pre-ablation | Follow-up | Follow-up | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (after 8 months ) | (after 14 months) | (after 48 months) | ||
| Creatinine (md/dl) | 1.09 | 1.1 | 1.4 | 1.1 |
| Albumin (g/dl) | 1.3 | 3.3 | 4.2 | |
| TSH (mIU/L) | <0.005 | 0.01 | – | – |
| Free-T4 (ng/dl) | – | 13.23 | – | – |
| Proteinuria (mg/24 h) | 11,131 | 2,977 | 456 | 243 |
Literature review of cases with association of membranous nephropathy and Graves’ disease.
| Author | n | Gender | Age | Serum Ab | LM | IM | Atg | Treatment | Diseases associated | Proteinuria follow-up (time) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ploth et al. ( | 1 | M | 26 | – | MN/MPGN | IgG, IgM, C3 | TG | PTU, ¹³¹I | After ¹³¹I | 16.5 g/day→0.45 g/day (9 months) |
| Horvath et al. ( | 1 | F | 60 | ANTI-TG, ANTI-TPO | MN | IgG, IgM, C3 | TG | MTZ, Thyroidectomy | – | 32 g/day→10 g/day (11 months) |
| Weetman et al. ( | 5 | N/A | 23 | TRAB | MN | NA | NA | CBZ, Thyroidectomy | GD after MN | 14 g/day→3 g/day (15 years) |
| NA | 19 | ANTI-TG, ANTI-TPO | MN | IgG, C3 | NA | CBZ, I¹³¹ | GD after MN | 8.2 g/day→6.4 g/day (11 years) | ||
| NA | 23 | ANTI-TG | MN | IgG, C3 | NA | NA | GD after MN | 7.0 g/day→5.8 g/day (15 years) | ||
| NA | 33 | ANTI-TG, ANTI-TPO, TRAB | MN | IgG, C3 | NA | CBZ, TDX, AIE, AZA | GD after MN | 8.0 g/day→0.7 g/day (9 years) | ||
| NA | 49 | ANTI-TPO, TRAB | MN | NA | NA | CBZ | GD after MN | 2.2 g/day→2.6 g/day (9 years) | ||
| Jordan et al. ( | 1 | F | 8 | ANA, ANTI-TG | MN/MPGN | IgG, IgM, C3 | TG | PTU→MTZ→ Partial thyroidectomy, T4→ PRED | – | 6.0 g/day→1.1 g/day (NA) |
| Sato et al. ( | 1 | M | 58 | ANTI-TPO, ANTI-TG, TRAB | MN | IgG, C3 | TG | MTZ | – | 3.69 g→0.2–2.5 g/day (16 days) |
| Becker et al. ( | 1 | M | 26 | ANTI-TPO | MN | IgG, IgM, C3, C4, κ, λ, Fbr. | – | ¹³¹I, DTP | After ¹³¹I | 7.2 g/day→NR (NA) |
| Grcevska et al. ( | 1 | M | 25 | ANTI-TG | MN | IgG, C3 | NA | PTU | – | 8.4 g/day→NR (NA) |
| Shima et al. ( | 1 | F | 6 | ANTI-TPO, ANTI-TG, TRAB | MN | IgG, C3, C1q | TPO | MTZ, ACE | – | 4.32 g/day→0.3 g/day (3 months) |
| Vakrani et al. ( | 1 | M | 50 | ANTI-TPO | MN | IgG, C3 | NA | MTZ, ¹³¹I → PRED, DTP, ACE, STN | After ¹³¹I | 3.6 g/day→0.25 g/day (3 weeks) |
| Sasaki et al. ( | 1 | F | 40 | ANTI-TPO, ANTI-TG | MN | IgG, IgM, IgA, C3, Fib | TPO | PTU, MTZ → ¹³¹I | – | 4.2 g/gCr→1.24 g/gCr (3 months) |
| Vanacker et al. ( | 1 | F | 42 | ANA | MN | IgG, IgM, C3, C1q | NA | MTZ→ACE | IgA Deficiency | 3,85 g/day→0.58 g/day (NA) |
| Moniwa et al. ( | 1 | F | 16 | ANTI-TPO, ANTI-TG, TRAB, TSAB | MN | IgG, IgA, C3, κ, λ | TPO | TMZ + ACE | – | 3g/g → 0.83g/g (12 months after startinf MTZ) |
| Cakir et al. ( | 1 | F | 15 | ANTI-TPO, ANTI-TG, TRAB, ANA | MN | IgG, IgM, C3, κ, λ | NA | MTZ → RTX (4 doses with 4 weeks interval) | – | 1.9g/m2/day → 0.15 g/m2/day 3 months after RTX therapy |
| Presented case | 1 | M | 46 | ANTI-TPO, ANTI-TG | MN | IgG, IgM, IgA, C3, C1q, κ, λ | TG | PRED, MTZ → ¹³¹I | – | 11.131 g/day→0.243 g/day (48 months) |
Ab, antibody; ACEi, angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor; Atg, serum antigens; CBZ, carbimazole; F, female; GD, Graves’ disease; ¹³¹I, radioiodine; IF, immunofluorescence microscopy; LM, light microscopy; M, male; MN, membranous nephropathy; MPGN, membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis; MTZ, methimazole; n, number of cases; NA, not available; PRED, prednisone; PTU, propylthiouracil; RTX: Rituximab; STN, statin; T4, levothyroxine; TG, thyroglobulin; TMZ, thiamazol; TPO, thyroperoxidase, TRAB, thyroid-stimulating hormone receptor antibody; TSAB, thyroid-stimulating antibody.