| Literature DB >> 35759125 |
Xuxia He1, Yubing Wen2, Rongrong Hu2, Haiting Wu2, Wei Ye2, Cai Yue2, Yan Qin2,3, Peng Xia4,5, Limeng Chen6,7.
Abstract
The typical nephrological presentation of antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody (ANCA)-associated vasculitis (AAV) is rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis. AAV-associated interstitial nephritis without apparent glomerular lesions was rare. We reported three local cases of AAV-associated interstitial nephritis without glomerulonephritis confirmed by renal biopsy. Then, a literature search was conducted in PubMed using free text words and MeSH terms related to "AAV and interstitial nephritis". Fifteen cases were included, and their demographics, clinical manifestations, laboratory data, renal pathological features, and treatment response were summarized. AAV-associated interstitial nephritis usually affects elderly patients. The common symptoms include fever, arthralgias, and edema. These patients were mostly MPO-ANCA positive. Pathological lesions in the kidney showed diffuse infiltration of inflammatory cells, edema, tubulitis, and fibrosis in the interstitial area. Various immunosuppressive treatments, including glucocorticoids, immunosuppressants, and rituximab, were used, and most of the patients achieved clinical remission. AAV-associated interstitial nephritis is rare but shows a characteristic clinical phenotype, serological results, and pathogenic lesions. Immunosuppressive therapy showed good efficacy in these patients.Entities:
Keywords: ANCA-associated vasculitis; Case reports; Interstitial nephritis; Literature review
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35759125 PMCID: PMC9568481 DOI: 10.1007/s10067-022-06264-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Rheumatol ISSN: 0770-3198 Impact factor: 3.650
Fig. 1Flow chart of the research process incorporating three local cases (A) and thirteen cases at PubMed (B). AAV, antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody–associated vasculitis
Summary of 3 local cases and 15 reported cases with ANCA-associated vasculitis causing interstitial nephritis without glomerulonephritis
| No | Age/gender | Clinical manifestations | Elevated sCr (μmol/L)a | Proteinuria (g/day)a | Hematuria (/μL)a | Anemia (g/L)a | ANCA (AU/mL)a | Tubulointerstitial lesions | Glomerular lesions | Treatmentb | Outcome | Author (year) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Case 1 | 78/M | Fever, abdominal distension, anorexia, oliguria, edema, dyspnea, hypertension | 481 | 0.38 | 2.3 | 71 | MPO 184 | Interstitial edema and fibrosis, intense inflammatory infiltrates, TBM thickening, tubular atrophy | Global or segmental sclerosis | CS, CTX, Rtx | Remitted | Local case |
| Case 2 | 64/M | Fever, fatigue, myalgia, arthralgia, edema, myasthenia, interstitial lung lesions | 159 | 0.34 | 54.4 | 113 | MPO 239 | Diffuse inflammatory cell infiltration in the interstitium, destructed tubules | Normal | CS, CTX | Remitted | Local case |
| Case 3 | 67/F | Hypertension | 113 | 0.12 | 2.3 | 142 | MPO 39.4 | Interstitial edema and fibrosis, intense inflammatory infiltrates, TBM thickening, tubular atrophy, strong staining of IgA, κ-chain and λ-chain in tubular areas | Slight proliferation | CS, CTX | Remitted | Local case |
| 1 | 83/F | Fever, anorexia | + | - | - | + | MPO | Peritubular capillaritis, TBMd lysis, tubulitis | Neutrophils in glomerular capillary loops | NA | NA | Nakabayashi (2009) [ |
| 2 | 73/M | Fever, cough, sputum, myalgia, arthralgia, anorexia, weight loss | - | - | - | - | MPO | Peritubular capillaritis, TBM lysis, tubulitis | Neutrophils in glomerular capillary loops | CS | NA | Nakabayashi (2009) [ |
| 3 | 62/F | Fever, cough, myalgia, arthralgia, peripheral neuropathy, edema, anorexia, weight loss | - | - | - | + | MPO | Peritubular capillaritis, TBM lysis, tubulitis | Neutrophils in glomerular capillary loops, global sclerosis | NA | NA | Nakabayashi (2009) [ |
| 4 | 74/F | Fever, edema, purpura | + | 0.3 g/day | 1–4/HPF | + | MPO | Tubulitis, peritubular capillaritis, fibrinoid vasculitis, diffuse infiltration of inflammatory cells | Collapsing capillary loops | CS, CTX | Remitted | Kasahara (2014) [ |
| 5 | 45/F | Arthralgia; recurrent sinusitis | + | 3.3 g/day | Microscopic | - | MPO | Acute interstitial nephritis, mild interstitial fibrosis, tubular atrophy, mild focal hyaline arteriosclerosis | Normal | CS, AZA, CsA, MMF, Rtx | Noneffective | Plafkin (2019) [ |
| 6 | 77/F | Lethargy | + | 2.3 g/day | Microscopic | - | PR3 | Acute tubulointerstitial nephritis with an interstitial granuloma | Minor glomerular abnormalities | CS | Relapse 1 year later | Guo (2020) [ |
| 7 | 17/M | Edema, fatigue, anuria; allergic rhinitis, allergic asthma | + | 1 + | 228/HPF | - | MPO | Granulomatous inflammation, massive destruction of tubules, extensive interstitial infiltration of inflammatory cells | Diffuse destruction of glomerular structure with crescents and severely ruptured Bowman’s capsules | PE, CS, Rtx | ANCA negative, but hemodialysis | Lin (2019) [ |
| 8 | 59/F | Fever, fatigue; bronchial asthma | + | 1.1 g/day | Numerous | + | MPO | Slight fibrosis and marked infiltration of eosinophils, hyalinized arteries and arterioles | Segmental necrotizing lesions (2/19 glomeruli), intraluminal eosinophils and neutrophils | CS, CTX | Remitted | Hirohama (2012) [ |
| 9 | 78/M | Lethargy, cough, breathlessness, purpuric rash, arthropathy | + | - | 2 + | - | + | Pronounced interstitial edema, prominent aggregates of neutrophils, capillary endothelial cell damage with extravasation of RBCs | Normal | CS, CTX | Improved, but anuric | Banerjee (2001) [ |
| 10 | 70/F | Fatigue, anorexia | + | 1.32 g/day | 1–4/HPF | - | MPO | Tubulointerstitial injury, diffuse infiltration of inflammatory cells, mild to moderate fibrosis, peritubular capillaritis and leukocyte casts | Global sclerosis (3/30 glomeruli) | CS | Remitted | Morimoto (2021) [ |
| 11 | 27/M | Anasarca, sensory neuropathy, recurrent upper airway congestion, epistaxis | + | 4.2 g/day | 3 + | + | - | Granulomatous interstitial nephritis, expansion of the interstitium, inflammatory infiltrates, edema with granulomas | Normal | CS, CTX | Remitted | Tiewsoh (2020) [ |
| 12 | 44/M | Malaise, edema, hypertension | + | 4 + | 20–25/HPF | _ | MPO | Diffuse infiltrate of mononuclear cells in the interstitium and tubular epithelium | Normal | CS, CTX | Remitted | Wen (2006) [ |
| 13 | 70/F | Fever, backache, arthralgia, foot drop; interstitial lung disease | + | PCRe 907.4 mg/g | 10–19/HPF | + | MPO and PR3 | Segmental mesangial cell proliferation, focal atrophy and loss of tubules, mononuclear cell infiltration with fibrosis, widely effaced foot processes | Normal | CS, AZA | Remitted | Kim (2020) [ |
| 14 | 63/F | Arthralgia, solid mass in the thorax, Raynaud’s phenomenon, amyotrophy | - | 25 mg/dL | Numerous | - | PR3 | Tubular atrophy, foci of fibrosis, and dense inflammation | Minimal nonspecific proliferation | CS, CTX | Remitted | Ernam (2003) [ |
| 15 | 75/M | Asthenia, anorexia, weight loss | + | 1.4 g/day | 1 + | + | MPO | Interstitium fibro-edema, diffuse inflammatory infiltrate, epithelial necrosis and atrophy of tubules, significant tubulitis | Slight mesangial expansion | CS | Remitted | Hassani (2013) [ |
aThe varied descriptions for the proteinuria or hematuria were due to various standards of local cases and the cited studies
bAbbreviations: NA, not applicable; CS, corticosteroids; CTX, cyclophosphamide; AZA, azathioprine; CsA, cyclosporine; MMF, mycophenolic acid; Rtx, rituximab; PE, plasma exchange; TBM, tubular basement membrane; PCR, spot urine protein/creatinine ratio; sCr, serum creatine; MPO, myeloperoxidase-antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody; PR3, proteinase 3-antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody
Summary of 6 local cases with ANCA-associated vasculitis causing typical glomerulonephritis
| No | Age/gender | Clinical manifestations | Serum creatine (μmol/L) | 24hUPa | Hematuriab | Hemoglobin (g/L) | ANCA | Treatmentc | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 75/M | Anorexia | 258 | 0.63 | 445.4 | 101 | 232 | CS, CTX | Remitted |
| 2 | 72/M | Fever, dyspnea, headache, and fatigue | 571 | 0.15 | 3 | 62 | 229 | CS, CTX, PE | ESRD |
| 3 | 61/M | Asthenia, anorexia | 211 | 1.66 | 280.8 | 108 | 224 | CS, CTX | Remitted |
| 4 | 61/M | Fever, dyspnea, edema | 514 | 0.96 | 192.4 | 111 | 239 | CS, CTX | Remitted |
| 5 | 67/F | Urination discomfort | 164 | 4.42 | 351.1 | 113 | 171 | CS, CTX, PE, Rtx | Remitted |
| 6 | 76/F | Oliguria, edema | 123 | 0.04 | 194.2 | 114 | 166 | CS, CTX | Remitted |
Abbreviations: CS, corticosteroids; CTX, cyclophosphamide; PE, plasma exchange; Rtx, rituximab; TBM, tubular basement membrane; GBM, anti-glomerular basement membrane; sCr, serum creatine; 24hUP, 24-h urinary protein; Hgb, hemoglobin; MPO, myeloperoxidase-antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody; ESRD, end-stage renal disease
Fig. 2Treatment response of the local case 1. The 78-year-old patient received intravenous methylprednisolone infusion (80 mg/day for three days), followed by oral prednisone (60 mg/day, 1.0 mg/kg/day). Rituximab infusions were at an interval of 6 months (1 g and 0.5 g, separately). Two months after the initial treatment, ANCA turned negative, and at the six months follow-up, serum creatine decreased to 223 μmol/L. Rtx, rituximab; CS, corticosteroids; MP, methylprednisolone; Pred, prednisone; MPO-ANCA, antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody specific for myeloperoxidase; sCr, serum creatine
Fig. 3Pathologic findings in kidney tissues from local cases of AAV with interstitial nephritis. (A) An overall sight showed intense inflammatory infiltrates and mild fibrosis in the interstitial area (MASSON 100 ×). (B) Inflammatory infiltrates in the interstitium without evident glomerulonephritis was noted (PAS 200 ×). (C) Diffuse infiltration of inflammatory cells was present in the interstitium (HE 200 ×). (D) IgG4 staining showed negative results (IgG4 staining 50 ×). AAV, antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody–associated vasculitis; HE, hematoxylin and eosin staining; MASSON: Masson’s trichrome staining; PAS: periodic acid-Schiff staining