AI Article Synopsis

  • ANCA-associated vasculitis is rare in children, and this study focuses on a large group of pediatric patients to analyze their clinicopathologic features, long-term outcomes, and factors that influence prognosis.
  • The study included 85 pediatric patients from Italy and Canada, categorizing their kidney biopsy results based on the Berden classification, and looked at different clinical factors to determine links to kidney failure.
  • Results showed a significant number of patients presented with rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis, and those with sclerotic biopsy findings had much worse kidney survival rates compared to other classifications, highlighting key prognostic indicators.

Article Abstract

Background And Objectives: ANCA-associated vasculitis is extremely rare in children. We report the clinicopathologic features, long-term outcomes, and prognostic factors of a large pediatric cohort of patients with ANCA-associated kidney vasculitis.

Design, Setting, Participants, & Measurements: This retrospective study included 85 consecutive patients with kidney biopsy specimen-proven ANCA-associated vasculitis from tertiary referral centers in Italy and Canada. Kidney biopsy specimens were categorized as focal, crescentic, sclerotic, or mixed, according to the Berden classification. The prognostic significance of baseline clinical, laboratory, and histologic findings was analyzed with respect to kidney failure or CKD stage 3-5/kidney failure.

Results: A total of 53 patients had microscopic polyangiitis (62%), and 32 had granulomatosis with polyangiitis (38%). Rapidly progressive GN was the most frequent presentation (39%); a third of the patients also had nephrotic-range proteinuria. Kidney biopsy specimens were classified as focal in 21% of the patients, crescentic in 51%, sclerotic in 15%, and mixed in 13%. Remission-induction therapies included cyclophosphamide in 78% of patients. A total of 25 patients (29%) reached kidney failure. The median (interquartile range) time to kidney failure or last follow-up was 35 (6-89) months in the whole cohort, and 73 (24-109) months among the patients who did not reach this outcome. Patients whose biopsy specimens showed sclerotic histology had significantly shorter kidney survival (hazard ratio, 11.80; 95% confidence interval, 2.49 to 55.99) and survival free of CKD stage 3-5 (hazard ratio, 8.88; 95% confidence interval, 2.43 to 32.48), as compared with those with focal/mixed histology. Baseline eGFR, low serum albumin, hypertension, central nervous system complications, and sclerotic histology, which reflected severe kidney involvement, were associated with both kidney failure and CKD stage 3-5/kidney failure at unadjusted analysis; no independent prognostic factors emerged at multivariable analysis.

Conclusions: Children with ANCA-associated kidney vasculitis often have aggressive presentation; a third of such children progress to kidney failure and this usually occurs early during follow-up. A severe clinical presentation is associated with the development of CKD or kidney failure.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8425616PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.2215/CJN.19181220DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

kidney failure
24
kidney
14
prognostic factors
12
anca-associated kidney
12
kidney biopsy
12
biopsy specimens
12
ckd stage
12
patients
9
kidney vasculitis
8
anca-associated vasculitis
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!