A 39-year-old male kidney transplant recipient with Down syndrome (DS) was admitted to our hospital for biopsy. He had proteinuria at age 9, was diagnosed with immunoglobulin A nephropathy (IgAN) at age 22, had a tonsillectomy at age 35, and underwent ABO-compatible kidney transplantation (from his mother) at age 36. His serum creatinine was stable at 2.21 mg/dL 3 months after the kidney transplant, and his urine protein was 0.11 g/day. A protocol biopsy was performed 7 months after the kidney transplant, and there was suspicion of early recurrence of IgAN. One year after the transplant, urine erythrocytes were elevated and proteinuria was 0.41 g/day; at 3 years and 5 months after the kidney transplant, hematuria was evident along with proteinuria (0.74 g/day). Therefore, an episode biopsy was performed. A total of 23 glomeruli were obtained, four of which exhibited global sclerosis; three others showed intra- and extracapillary proliferative glomerulonephritis compatible with IgAN recurrence. Here, we report a rare case of early recurrence of IgAN with disease progression despite tonsillectomy in a patient with DS.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000530915 | DOI Listing |
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