Title: GLOMERULOPATHY clinical categories
1GLOMERULOPATHYclinical categories
- Acute nephritic syndrome
haematuria, red blood cell casts,
proteinuria, oliguria, hypertension, edema,
circulatory congestion - Rapidly progressive nephritic syndrome
relentlessly progressive glomerulonephritis
resulting in ESRF within weeks - Recurrent gross haematuria
2GLOMERULOPATHYclinical categories
- Asymptomatic glomerulopathy
proteinuria, haematuria, or both without
clinical symptoms - Chronic nephritic (glomerular) syndrome
glomerular disease that progress in chronic renal
failure - Nephrotic syndrome
3GLOMERULOPATHYstructural characteristics
- Acute damage (diffuse or segmental)
- proliferation of epithelial, endothelial and
mesangial cells
- exudation of
polymorphonuclear leukocytes in the
glomerulus
- necrosis of glomerular capillaries
4GLOMERULOPATHYstructural characteristics
- Chronic damage
- proliferation of cellular elements
(epithelium, endothelium,
mesangium) - membranous involvement with
thickening of glomerular basement membrane
(GBM)
- sclerosis of the
glomerulus - tubular
atrophy, nephrosclerosis,
interstitial scarring (in ESRF)
5GLOMERULOPATHYpathogenesis
- Immunologic reactions
- Vascular diseases
- Abnormalities in coagulation
- Metabolic defects
- Hereditary factors
- Unknown factors
6GLOMERULOPATHYimmunologic mechanism
- Circulating immune complex mediated disease
- Antitissue antibody mediated disease
- Cell- mediated disease
- Disease associated with activation of
alternative complement pathway
7Physiology of protein excretion
- Protein filtration through the glomerulus is
dependent on the protein size, shape and
electrical charge
8Physiology of protein excretion
- Protein charge
- At physiological pH, most proteins are negatively
charged - Since the basement membranes are also negatively
charged, most proteins are retained
9Physiology of protein excretion
- Protein size
- Proteins greater than 40kDa are almost completely
retained - Thus, only small proteins, e.g. retinol-binding
protein, ß2 microglobulin, passes into the
ultrafiltrate
10Physiology of protein excretion
- However, most of the filtered proteins are
reabsorbed by the proximal tubules. - Consequently, very little plasma protein appears
in the urine - Normally lt 150mg/24hours
11Physiological proteinuria
- In some non-pathological situations, a higher
than normal urine protein level is found - A concentrated spot urine
- Exercise
- Orthostatic proteinuria
- Contamination e.g. from vagina
12Classification
- Tubular proteinuria
- Tubular dysfunction
- Overflow proteinuria
- Glomerular proteinuria
- Selective proteinuria
- Non-selective proteinuria
- microalbuminuria
13Tubular proteinuria
- This occurs when glomerular function is intact,
but protein is lost to the urine either because
of - Tubular dysfunction
- Overflow
14Tubular proteinuria
- Tubular dysfunction
- The tubules are damaged and cannot function
properly - Therefore, the small MW proteins that are
normally filtered are not reabsorbed by the
tubules - The small MW proteins include retinol-binding
protein, ß2 microglobulin, lysozyme, light
chains, haemoglobin, myoglobin
15Tubular proteinuria
- Tubular dysfunction
- Pyelonephritis
- Acute tubular necrosis
- Papillary necrosis e.g. analgesic nephropathy
- Heavy metal poisoning
- SLE
- Fanconis syndrome
16Tubular proteinuria
- Overflow proteinuria
- Occurs when the concentration of one of the small
MW proteins is so high that the filtered load
exceeds the tubular reabsorptive capacity - Thus, the excess filtered load appears in the
urine
17Tubular proteinuria
- Overflow proteinuria
- Bence Jones proteinuria
- Myoglobinuria
- Haemoglobinuria
18Glomerular proteinuria
- When there is glomerular dysfunction, proteins gt
40kDa can escape into the urine - The most common form of proteinuria
19Glomerular proteinuria
- Causes
- Glomerulonephritis
- Diabetes mellitus
- Multiple myeloma
- Amyloidosis
- SLE
- Pre-eclampsia
- Penicillamine, gold
20Definitions
- Proteinuria
- Urine protein excretion gt 150mg/day
- Microalbuminuria
- Urine albumin gt 30mg/day but not detectable by
urine dipstick - Nephrotic syndrome
- Urine protein excretion gt 3.5g/day (with
hypoalbuminaemia, oedema and hyperlipidaemia)
21Nephrotic Syndrome (NS)
- Is not a disease but a group of signs and
symptoms seen in patients with heavy proteinuria - presents with oedema
- proteinuria usually gt 3.5g / 24hrs (gt0.05g / kg /
24hrs in children) - serum albumin lt 30g/l
- other features hyperlipidaemia, and
hypercoaguable state
22NS pathophysiology
- proteinuria due to an increase in glomerular
permeability - hypoalbuminuria occurs when liver synthesis
cannot keep up with urine losses - oedema mechanism is complex and still in dispute
primary salt and water retention associated with
reduced renal function as well as reduced plasma
oncotic pressure are primary factors (overfill
and underfill) - hyperlipidaemia increased liver synthesis
- hypercoagulation increased fibrinogen and loss
of antithrombin III
23Clinical Features in NS - Thrombosis
- Serious risk of thrombosis
- Increased fibrinogen concentration
- Antithrombin III concentration reduced
- NS patients resistant to heparin
- Platelets hyperaggregable
- Increased blood viscosity
24NS - laboratory Features
- Hct may be elevated
- Hyponatremia is common
- Plasma creatinine is elevated in 33 of patients
25NS laboratory- Plasma Protein
- Albumin
- Hypoalbuminemia due to loss via the kidney
- Urinary excretion
- Proximal tubular cells catabolism
- Immunoglobulins
- IgG levels reduced
- IgM levels elevated
- IgM-IgG-Switching
26NS laboratory- Hyperlipidemia
- Increased synthesis of cholesterol, triglycerides
and lipoproteins - Decreased catabolism of lipoproteins
- Decreased activity of lipoprotein lipase
- Decreased LDL receptor activity
- Increased urinary loss of HDL
- Lp(a) levels are elevated
27Primary glomerular diseases commonly causing the
nephrotic syndrome
- minimal change disease
- focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis
- membranous glomerulonephritis
- proliferative glomerulonephritis (various
histology and less common cause) - membranoproliferative (mesangiocapillary)
- focal proliferative
- diffuse proliferative
- mesangial proliferative
28Other causes of the nephrotic syndrome 1
- Systemic diseases
- diabetes mellitus
- amyloidosis
- SLE and other connective tissue diseases
- HIV/AIDS
- nephrotoxins
- nsaids
- mercury poisoning
- penicillamine
- gold salts
29Other causes of the nephrotic syndrome 2
- Allergies
- bee sting
- pollens
- poison ivy
- Circulatory effects
- congestive cardiac failure
- constrictive pericarditis
- renal vein thrombosis (cause or result?)
- Neoplastic
- leukaemia
- solid tumours
30NS epidemiology
31NS treatment- Diet
- Low protein
- Decreases albuminuria
- Malnutrition
- Salt restriction (Nalt 60 mmol/24 hrs)
- During edema
- Calorie control
- Steroids
32NS treatment
- water restriction
- diuretics (if not volume depleted)
- reduced protein diet (controversial)
- treat infections
- prophylaxis for thrombosis
- specific therapy
- corticosteroids
- immunosuppression
33NS treatment- Albumin
- Controversial
- Indication- Hypovolemia
- Abdominal pain
- Hypotension
- Oliguria
- Renal insufficiency
34NS complications
- Mortality
- 1940s- 40 1 year mortality
- Now 1-2
- Main cause of death
- Infection
- Thrombosis
35Corticosteroids Initiation in NS
- High dose steroids
- 2 mg/kg/day (max 80 mg)
- 60 mg/m2 (max 80 mg)
- 3 accepted protocols
- 80 respond within 2 weeks
36Steroid Toxicity
- Cushingoid habitus
- Obesity
- Striae
- Hirsutism
- Acne
- Growth failure
- Avascular necrosis
- Osteoporosis
37Steroid Toxicity
- Peptic ulceration
- Pancreatitis
- Posterior lens opacities
- Myopathy
- Increased ICP
- Susceptibility to infection
38Options for Alternative Therapy in NS
- Alkylating Agents
- Nitrogen mustard
- Cyclophosphamide
- Chlorambucil
- Levamisole
- Cyclosporine
39Indications for Alternative Therapy in NS
- Relapse on Prednisone Dosage gt0.5 mg/kg/alt day
plus - Severe steroid side effects
- High risk of toxicity- diabetes
- Unusually severe relapses
- Relapses on Prednisone Dosage gt1.0 mg/kg/alt day
40Acute Nephritic Syndrome
- Syndrome characterised in typical cases by
- haematuria
- oliguria
- oedema
- hypertension
- reduced GFR
- proteinuria
- fluid overload
41Clinical Features of the Acute Nephritic Syndrome
- haematuria is usually macroscopic with pink or
brown urine (like coca cola) - oliguria may be overlooked or absent in milder
cases - oedema is usually mild and is often just
peri-orbital- weight gain may be detected - hypertension common and associated with raised
urea and creatinine - proteinuria is variable but usually less than in
the nephrotic syndrome
42Etiology of the Nephritic Syndrome
- Most common cause is acute post infectious
glomerulonephritis - group A beta haemolytic streptococci of certain
serotypes important in NZ - IgA disease and Henoch-Schonlein purpura,
crescentic glomerulonephritis and SLE can also
present in this way
43Complications of the Nephritic Syndrome
- Hypertensive encephalopathy (seizures, coma)
- Heart Failure (pulmonary oedema)
- Uraemia requiring dialysis
44Acute poststreptococcal GN
- Archetype of acute nephritic syndrome
- Proliferative character
- Only certain varietes of beta-hemolytic
streptococci (nephritogenic strains) induce
abnormalities in kidneys - Production of nonspecific evidence of
streptococcal exposure (elevated antistreptolisin
titers) - Antibody production and immune complexes
45Acute poststreptococcal GN
- Kidneys are enlarged, edematosus, pale
- Electron-dense deposits on the epithelial side of
GBM - Reduced GFR
- Elevation of urea and creatinine is
characteristic - Urine reduced in volume, concentrated, reddish
brown contains as much as 2 to 4 mg/day of
protein
46Acute poststreptococcal GN
- More common in males than females and most
frequent between the ages of 3 and 7 years - Classically, 10 days after sore throat
- Acute nephritic syndrome
- Gross hematuria and fever
- Worse prognosis in adults
47Definition of glomerulonephritis
- Glomerulonephritides are supposedly
immunologically mediated glomerular diseases, - often, but not always,
- inflammatory in nature
48Glomerular inflammation
- Exsudation of neutrophils and/or macrophages
- 2. Proliferation of mesangial and/or
endothelial cells -
49Ultrastructural changes in non-proliferative vs.
proliferative glomerulonephritides
50Mechanisms of glomerular damage
51Simplified classification of primary
glomerulonephritides
- 1. Nonproliferative
- - minimal change disease
- - focal segmental glomerulosclerosis
- - membranous nephropathy
-
- 2. Proliferative
- - IgA nephropathy
- - membranoproliferative GN
52Ultrastructural changes in glomerular capillaries
in different glomerular diseases
53Podocytes and slit diaphragms
54Major causes of podocyte effacement
- Slit diaphragm and its lipid raft
- nephrin, podocin
- Podocyte cytoskeleton
- ?-actinin
- Adhesion of podocyte to GBM
- ? -dystroglycan, ?1-integrins
- 4. Loss of podocyte electronegative charge
- podocalyxin
55Non-proliferative glomerulopathies
- Damage to the glomerular capillary wall resulting
in - 1. nephrotic selective proteinuria
- - minimal change disease
- 2. nephrotic non-selective proteinuria with
microscopic hematuria - - focal segmental glomerulosclerosis
- - idiopathic membranous nephropathy
56Primary glomerulonephritides as a cause of
nephrotic syndrome Korbet et al., Am. J. Kidney
Dis., 1996, 27 647 - 651
57Role of renal biopsy in glomerular disease
- 1. Diagnosis of glomerulopathy
- 2. Assessment of activity intention to treat
- 3. Assesment of chronicity outcome of the
disease -
58Indications for Biopsy
- Pretreatment
- Recommended
- Onset age lt 6 months
- Macroscopic hematuria
- Microscopic hematuria and HTN
- Low C3
- Renal failure
- Discretionary
- Onset between 6-12 months or gt 12 years
- Persistent HTN of hematuria
59Indications for Biopsy
- Post treatment
- Steroid resistance
- Frequent relapsers
60Minimal change disease
61Minimal change disease
62Pathogenesis of minimal change disease
- circulating permeability factor
- (hemopexin?)
- decreased synthesis of glomerular polyanions
(heparan sulfate) by podocytes - impaired adhesion of podocytes to GBM
- (? -dystroglycan, ?1-integrins?)
- 4. expression of TGF?1 detectable almost only
in steroid resistant MCD and FSGS
63Minimal change disease
- full-blown nephrotic syndrome with selective
proteinuria - hematuria, hypertension and reduced renal
function uncommon - absence of glomerular abnormalities on LM and IF
- fusion of epithelial cells foot processes on
electron microscopy
64Minimal change disease-prevalence among
nephrotic patients
- Children - 85 95
- Young adults - 50
- Adults gt 40 years - 20 25
-
65Classification of patients with minimal change
disease based on response to corticosteroids
- Steroid responsive (sensitive)
- develop complete remission of proteinuria
- within 8 12 weeks of treatment
- (in adults remission should develop within 16
weeks) - 2. Steroid dependent
- develop relapse during tapering of steroids or
within 2 weeks after cessation of therapy - 3. Steroid resistant
- fail to respond to steroid treatment at all
66Definitions
- Steroid Dependence- Two consecutive relapses
occurring during corticosteroid treatment or
within 14 days of its cessation - Steroid Resistance- Failure to achieve response
in spite of 4 weeks of prednisone 60 mg/m2day
67Clinical course of MCD in children
- Remission - 90
- a. no relapses - 20
- b. infrequent relapses - 40
- c. frequent relapses and
- steroid dependent - 30
- 2. Resistance to steroids - 10
- a. response to alternative treatment - 8
- b. refractory to any kind of treatment - 2
- In adults, initial response rate is lower,
relapses and steroid dependence are less frequent
68Therapy of MCD in children current
recommendations
- Initially course of prednisone 60 mg/m2 for 4-6
weeks with 40 mg/m2 every alternate day for
another 4-6 weeks - Relapses treated in a similar way, but tapering
of prednisone starts when urine becomes protein
free - Frequent relapsers and steroid dependent patients
treated either by cyclophosphamide - 2 mg/kg/day for 8 weeks or by cyclosporine
- 5 mg/kg/day for 6-12 months
- 4. Treatment of steroid resistant patients is
usually unsatisfactory
69Therapy of MCD modifications in adults
- Initially course of prednisone 1mg/kg for 8-16
weeks or for one week after remission is
achieved, then several weeks (one month) 1 mg/kg
on alternate days, thereafter corticosteroids are
slowly tapered during several months - Relapses treated in a similar way
- Frequent relapsers and steroid dependent patients
treated either by CPH 2 mg/kg/day for 8 weeks or
by CyA 5 mg/kg/day for 6-12 months - 4. Treatment of steroid resistant patients is
usually unsatisfactory
70Mild FSGS
71Moderate FSGS
72Tip lesion in early FSGS
73Collapsing FSGS
74Etiology of FSGS
- Primary FSGS
- a. glomerular tip lesion
- b. collapsing glomerulopathy
- 2. Secondary FSGS
- a. healing focal lesions (FSGN)
- b. hyperfiltration in residual nephrons
- - agenesis of one kidney
- - vesicoureteral reflux
- - morbid obesity
- c. damage to epithelial cells
- - HIV nephropathy
- - heroin nephropathy
75Classification of FSGS
- Genetic FSGS
- a. podocin
- b. ?-actinin
- 2. Immunologic
- mechanisms not yet identified
- 3. Viral FSGS
- a. HIV
- b. hepatitis C
- 4. Toxic FSGS
- a. heroin
- b. pamidronate
76Pathogenesis of primary FSGS
- Late onset congenital FSGS
- deficiency of podocyte proteins
- (podocin, ?-actinin, CD2AP, et al.)
- Circulating permeability factors
- a. imunoglobulin, or Ig-like molecule
- b. protein of MW about 30-50 kDa
- c. factor inhibiting inducible NO
synthase in mesangial cells (hemopexin) - 3. Deficient inhibitors of permeability factors
lost in urine - apolipoproteins of HDL complex
- (e.g. apo J, apo E2 and apo E4)
-
77Permeability factors in MCD and FSGSGlassock, J
Am Soc Nephrol, 2003, 14 541 - 543
- Permeability factors in MCD and FSGS may be
different - Among PF described in MCD (e.g. heparanase, VEGF)
hemopexin is best characterized (Cheung et al.,
Kidney Int, 2000, 57 1512 1520) - In FSGS 30-50 kD weakly anionic, heat labile,
protease-sensitive factor inhibiting NO
production in mesangial cells was identified with
the Palb assay (Sharma et al., Kidney Int, 2000,
58 1073 - 1079). - This PF is increased also in pts with genetic
mutation of podocin (Carraro et al., JASN, 2002,
13 1946 - 1952).
78Serial estimates of permeability factors in
FSGSCattran et al., J Am Soc Nephrol, 2003, 14
448 - 453
- Serum permeability activity assessed in 27 pts
with FSGS treated either by cyclosporine or
placebo before and after 26 weeks of treatment
(Cattran et al., Kidney Int., 1999, 56 2220
2226) - Proteinuria decreased in cyclosporine treated
patients from 7.2 to 3.1 g/day and did not change
in pts on placebo (from 9.5 to 7.4 g/day) - Serum permeability activity changed neither in
cyclosporine (from 0.31 to 0.46), nor in placebo
(from 0.41 to 0.36) treated pts - Antiproteinuric effect of cyclosporine seemed to
be independent on changes of Palb
79Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis
- Asymptomatic proteinuria or full blown nephrotic
syndrome - Hypertension, microscopic hematuria and decreased
renal function common - Slowly progressive disease
- 50 10-year renal survival
- 4. Sclerosis of segments of glomerular tuft
80Cumulative renal survival in FSGS Korbet, NDT,
1999, 14 (Suppl. 3) 68 - 73
81Cumulative renal survival in FSGS Korbet, NDT,
1999, 14 (Suppl. 3) 68 - 73
82Treatment of primary FSGS current
recommendations
- Response to corticosteroids may increase from
only 10-30 up to 60 with longer treatment with
higher dose (60 mg/m2 at least 3 months, patients
should be considered steroid resistant after 6
months) - Cyclosporine may reduce proteinuria and lower the
risk of progression to ESRD even in steroid
resistant patients, treatment should be long (at
least 6 months), relapses after cyclosporine
withdrawal common - Cytotoxics remain only second-line therapy, the
evidence for their effect in steroid resistant
patients is not conclusive
83Membranous nephropathy
84Membranous nephropathy
85Membranous nephropathy
86Membranous nephropathy
- Secondary
- - infections
- (hepatitis B, syphilis, malaria)
- - drugs
- (organic gold, penicillamine,
- NSAID)
- - neoplasms
- (carcinomas, e.g. Colon, lung, or stomach,
and lymphomas) - - systemic lupus erythematosus
- 2. Idiopathic
87Idiopathic membranous nephropathy
- Membranous nephropathy represents 15-25 of
adult nephrotic syndrome - Nephrotic proteinuria is present in about 80 of
patients, remaining patients have asymptomatic
proteinuria - Microscopic hematuria is common
- Hypertension and chronic renal failure are
uncommon at presentation, but may develop during
follow-up - Histology subepithelial deposits along often
thickened GBM
88Natural course of idiopathic membranous
nephropathy
- Spontaneous remission may develop in about one
third of patients - Nephrotic syndrome persists in another third of
patients - Only 20-30 of patients progress to ESRD during
20-30 years of follow up
89Cyclosporine in membranous nephropathyGuasch et
al., Am. J. Kidney Dis., 1992, 20 472 - 481
- 14 previously untreated patients with MN were
treated for 12 weeks with CyA and compared with
similarly treated pts with MCD - proteinuria decreased below 3.5 g/day in 10 out
of 14 pts, fractional clearance of albumin
decreased by 59, fractional clearance of IgG by
73 (in MCD albuminuria decreased by 99) - glomerular filtration rate did not change
significantly - antiproteinuric effect of CyA in MN is less
pronounced than in MCD, but cannot be explained
only by hemodynamic changes
90Cyclosporine in steroid-resistant MNCattran et
al., Kidney Int., 2001, 59 1484 - 1490
- complete or partial remission developed after 26
weeks in 75 of pts treated by CyA vs. in 22 of
pts treated by placebo - during 52 weeks relapse developed in 43 of pts
treated by CyA and 40 of pts treated by placebo - at the end of follow-up in remission was 39 of
pts treated by CyA and 13 of pts treated by
placebo
91Treatment of idiopathic membranous nephropathy
current recommendations
- Corticosteroids should not be used a sole therapy
- Azathioprine is not effective in reversing or
stabilizing progressive renal insufficiency - Cytotoxics induce prolonged remission of
nephrotic syndrome and improve renal survival,
their use should be reserved for patients with
progressive disease - Cyclosporine seems to be effective in progressive
renal insufficiency
92Guidelines for the treatment of IMN Cattran,
Kidney Int., 2001, 59 1983 - 1994
93Proliferative glomerulonephritides
- Microscopic hematuria and/or bouts of macroscopic
hematuria - - mesangial proliferation
- (IgA nephropathy)
- 2. Microscopic hematuria with proteinuria
- - mesangial proliferation with peripheral
expansion of mesangium - (membranoproliferative GN)
94Ultrastructural changes in glomerular capillaries
in mesangio- and membranoproliferative GN
95IgA nephropathy mesangioproliferative
glomerulonephritis
96IgA nephropathy
97Pathogenesis of IgA nephropathyGómez-Guerrero et
al., Kidney Int, 2002, 62 715 - 717
- Aberrantly O-glycosylated IgA1 with exposed
GalNAc may be recognized as antigens by IgG - Circulating immune complexes of IgA1 and IgG
and/or IgA1 and soluble Fc?RI (CD89) were
identified in pts with IgA nephropathy - Except from ASGP-R, CD89, Fc?/?R and TfR
mesangial cells may express further, not yet
described IgA receptors - Patients with IgA nephropathy have increased
expression of megsin (serine protease inhibitor
serpin). Overexpression of megsin leads to
progressive mesangial matrix expansion
98IgA nephropathy
- Commonest glomerulonephritis in Europe (20-40 of
primary glomerulonephritides) - Typical clinical presentation asymptomatic
microscopic hematuria or episodes of
parainfectious macroscopic hematuria - Natural history is not benign at least 20 of
patients develop ESRD during 20 years
99IgA nephropathy negative prognostic factors
- a. clinical
- hypertension
- proteinuria (gt 1 g/24 hrs)
- decreased renal function at presentation
- b. histologic
- glomerulosclerosis
- interstitial fibrosis
- vascular sclerosis
-
100IgA nephropathy - treatment
- Strict control of hypertension with ACE
inhibitors - Fish oil in patients with slowly progressive
course of renal insufficiency - Corticosteroids in proteinuric patients with
preserved renal function - Cytotoxics in patients with progressive renal
insufficiency -
101Corticosteroids in IgA nephropathy long-term
resultsPozzi et al., J Am Soc Nephrol, 2004, 15
157 - 163
- Secondary analysis of a multicenter, randomized,
controlled trial of 86 adult IgAN treated for 6
months either with intravenous methylprednisolone
followed by oral steroids of supportive therapy - Ten-year renal survival was significantly better
in the steroid than in the control group (97 vs.
53, p0.0003) - Proteinuria decreased in patients who did not
double baseline serum creatinine and increased in
progressive patients
102Evidence-based recommendations for IST in IgAN
handle with cautionFloege, Nephrol Dial
Transplant, 2003, 18 241 - 245
- In low risk pts with Pu lt 1.5 g/day and normal
GFR, steroid therapy may reduce proteinuria, but
its effect on long-term outcome is uncertain - In pts with Pu 1 3.5 g/day and preserved renal
function 6 month steroid course is indicated - In pts with progressive renal failure as long as
serum creatinine does not exceed 250 ?mol/l
steroids plus cytotoxics are recommended
103Membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis
104Membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis
- Type I
- Secondary
- infection
- (visceral abscesses, endocardisis,
infected ventriculoatrial shunts,
malaria) - - systemic diseases
- (type III-IV of lupus nephritis)
- - paraproteinemias
- ( LCDD, cryoglobulinemia)
- - thrombotic microangiopathies
- ( HUS/TTP, APS)
- b. Idiopathic
- Type II dense deposit disease
105Membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis type I
106Membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis type
II (dense deposit disease)
107Idiopathic MPGN type I
- relatively rare in developed countries
- occurs in younger adults
- presents with nephrotic syndrome and microscopic
hematuria - slowly progressive disease 50 10-year renal
survival - treatment of nephrotic adults is controversial
(corticosteroids, or antiplatelet agents?)
108MPGN type II (dense deposit disease)
- very rare disease
- nephritic factor with hypocomplementemia
- more expressed nephritic features and more
aggressive course - no effective therapy
-
109Therapy of glomerular diseases
- Drugs and procedures with relatively well defined
indications - corticosteroids
- cytotoxics (CPH, chlorambucil)
- cyclosporine
- symptomatic treatment
- (ACEI, AIIA, and other antihypertensives,
- NSAIDS
- lipid lowering drugs)
110Therapy of glomerular diseases
- 2. Drugs and procedures with limited experience
and not well defined indications - mycophenolate mofetil
- tacrolimus
- rapamycin
- intravenous immunoglobulins
- monoclonal antibodies (e.g. infliximab,
rituximab) - soluble cytokine receptors (e.g. etanercept)
- plasma exchange
- immunoadsorption
111Conclusions
- Patients suffering from primary GN are endangered
by - a. complications of nephrotic syndrome
- b. progression to ESRF
- 2. Urinary findings are important, but renal
biopsy remains essential for diagnosis, treatment
and assesment of outcome - primary GN are treatable diseases, patients
should be treated according to available evidence - further progress in treatment depends on better
understanding of their pathogenesis