Aim: C3 glomerulonephritis (C3GN) is a recently described disease that is related to membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis (MPGN). We retrospectively compared the frequencies, clinical characteristics, treatment modalities, and outcomes of C3GN and MPGN in a cohort of Japanese children.
Methods: Children who were pathologically diagnosed with MPGN (type I or III) in our hospital were divided into two groups based on immunofluorescence imaging of renal biopsies: children with MPGN induced by classical complement pathway activation (classical MPGN) and children with C3GN.
Results: Of 14 children with MPGN (five boys), four had classical MPGN, eight had C3GN, and two had unclassifiable glomerulonephritis. Four children with classical MPGN and seven with C3GN received methylprednisolone pulse therapy followed by oral prednisolone for 2 years (MPT+PSL therapy). Subsequently, six of seven children with C3GN received combined therapy (prednisolone, azathioprine, and anticoagulants) for 2 years because they responded poorly to MPT+PSL therapy. At the last follow-up visit, two children with classical MPGN and seven with C3GN had not achieved remission. One child with classical MPGN and five with C3GN had hypocomplementaemia at the last follow-up. None of the children had renal impairment.
Conclusion: More than half of the patients previously diagnosed with MPGN fulfilled the criteria for C3GN in children. C3GN may be more refractory than classical MPGN to immunosuppressant therapy.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/nep.12382 | DOI Listing |
BMC Nephrol
September 2024
Department of Internal Medicine and Nephrology, Herz-Jesu-Krankenhaus Münster-Hiltrup, Münster-Hiltrup, Germany.
Background: Membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis is a rare entity which can be a result from autoimmune diseases, caused by various medications and infections.
Case Presentation: We herein present the case of a 62-year-old male patient who presented with fatigue and was found to have severe anemia, impaired renal function, and nephrotic syndrome. A renal biopsy revealed membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis (MPGN) of the immune complex type with activation of the classical complement pathway.
C4d, a split product of C4 activation in classical and lectin pathways of the complement system activation, has been regarded as a footprint of tissue damage in antibody-mediated rejection in transplantology. The introduction of C4d staining into daily clinical practice aroused an ever-increasing interest in the role of antibody-mediated mechanisms in kidney allograft rejection. However, this marker of complement activation is also important in other various kidney glomerular pathologies such as immunoglobulin A nephropathy, membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis, lupus nephritis, and others.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIndian J Pathol Microbiol
February 2024
Department of Patholgy, Srirama Chandra Bhanja Medical College, Cuttack, Odisha, India.
Background: Membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis has in the recent past been regrouped into immune complex-mediated (ICM MPGN) disease (driven by the classical complement pathway) and complement-mediated (C3GN) disease (driven by the alternative complement pathway) based on pathogenetic role of alternative complement pathway and immunofluorescence deposits. The proposed regrouping lent therapeutic and prognostic support in managing the disease of MPGN.
Aims And Objectives: The present study is undertaken to study the patterns of MPGN based on histopathological and DIF examination and sub-categorize the cases into mainly complement dominant and immune complex-mediated diseases for better prognostic and therapeutic utility.
Pediatr Nephrol
May 2024
Division of Nephrology, Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital IRCCS, Rome, Italy.
G Ital Nefrol
April 2023
UOC Nefrologia e Dialisi, ospedale di Eboli, Salerno, Italia.
Anti-glomerular basement membrane (anti-GBM) antibody disease is a rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis characterized by (i) positivity to anti-GBM in serum reacting with a specific antigen present in type IV collagen at both the glomerular and alveolar levels (ii) presence of crescent on light microscopy and positivity to linear deposits of IgG and C3 on immunofluorescence. In the classic variant, the clinic is that of a nephro-pneumological syndrome but there are variants. Rarely, the glomerular damage is pauci-immune.
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