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Glomerular lipidosis as a feature of renal-limited macrophage activation syndrome in a transplanted kidney: a case report. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Glomerular lipidosis is a rare kidney condition characterized by lipid buildup in the glomeruli and can be associated with macrophage activation syndrome (MAS).
  • A 42-year-old patient who underwent kidney transplantation developed proteinuria and high serum triglycerides, leading to a biopsy showing CD68 foam cells and CD3 T-cells, suggesting histiocytic involvement.
  • The patient was diagnosed with renal-limited MAS and treated with lipid-lowering therapy, successfully normalizing triglyceride levels, while the effectiveness of immunosuppressants remained unchanged.

Article Abstract

Background: Glomerular lipidosis is a rare histological feature presenting the extensive glomerular accumulation of lipids with or without histiocytic infiltration, which develops under various conditions. Among its various etiologies, macrophage activation syndrome (MAS) is a condition reported to be associated with histiocytic glomerular lipidosis. Here we describe the first case of glomerular lipidosis observed in a renal allograft that histologically mimicked histiocytic glomerulopathy owing to MAS.

Case Presentation: A 42-year-old man underwent successful living-donor kidney transplantation. However, middle-grade proteinuria and increased serum triglyceride levels indicative of type V hyperlipidemia developed rapidly thereafter. An allograft biopsy performed 6 months after the transplantation showed extensive glomerular infiltration of CD68 foam cells (histiocytes) intermingled with many CD3 T-cells (predominantly CD8 cells). Furthermore, frequent contact between glomerular T-cells and histiocytes, and the existence of activated CD8 cells (CD8, HLA-DR cells) were observed by double immunostaining. There was no clinicopathological data suggesting lipoprotein glomerulopathy or lecithin cholesterol acyltransferase deficiency, both of which are well-known causes of glomerular lipidosis. The histological findings were relatively similar to those of histiocytic glomerulopathy caused by MAS. As systemic manifestations of MAS, such as fever, pancytopenia, coagulation abnormalities, hyperferritinemia, increased liver enzyme levels, hepatosplenomegaly, and lymphadenopathy were minimal, this patient was clinicopathologically diagnosed as having renal-limited MAS. Although optimal treatment strategies for MAS in kidney transplant patients remains unclear, we strengthened lipid-lowering therapy using pemafibrate, without modifying the amount of immunosuppressants. Serum triglyceride levels were normalized with this treatment; however, the patient's extensive proteinuria and renal dysfunction did not improve. Biopsy analysis at 1 year after the transplantation demonstrated the disappearance of glomerular foamy changes, but the number of glomerular infiltrating cells remained similar.

Conclusion: To our knowledge, this is the first reported case of glomerular lipidosis in a transplanted kidney. Increased interaction-activation of histiocytes (macrophages) and CD8 T-cells, the key pathogenic feature of MAS, was observed in the glomeruli of this patient, who did not demonstrate overt systemic manifestations, suggesting a pathological condition of renal-limited MAS. The clinical effects of triglyceride-lowering therapy were limited, suggesting that hypertriglyceridemia was not the cause of but rather may be a consequence of renal-limited MAS.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10631159PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12882-023-03380-2DOI Listing

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