Primary focal segmental glomerular sclerosis (FSGS) is a clinicopathologic syndrome in which variable amounts of proteinuria are associated with the renal biopsy finding of segmental glomerular scarring in some, but not all, of the glomeruli. Additional histologic features have been described in FSGS, including the position of the scar relative to the vascular and tubular pole of the glomerulus, foam cells, hyalinosis, mesangial deposits of immunoglobulin M, diffuse mesangial hypercellularity, glomerular visceral epithelial cell hyperplasia and hypertrophy, and the extent of associated interstitial fibrosis and tubular atrophy. We performed a retrospective study on 81 patients with biopsy-proven, primary FSGS to determine whether any of the histologic features of FSGS correlated with renal function at the time of biopsy and the incidence of end-stage renal disease at follow-up. Sixty patients were nephrotic and 21 had nonnephrotic proteinuria. Only the degree of interstitial fibrosis correlated with the initial serum creatinine (r = 0.536) and none of the histologic features predicted the presence of nephrotic-range proteinuria at the time of biopsy. Segmental scars involved 21% +/- 14% of the glomeruli per biopsy specimen, but their position within the glomerulus was uniform in only 13% of the cases. Diffuse mesangial hypercellularity was present in 17% of the biopsy specimens, and glomerular epithelial cell lesions were present in 57% of the biopsy specimens. Multivariate analysis showed that only the degree of interstitial fibrosis predicted end-stage renal disease in all 81 patients and in the 60 patients with nephrotic-range proteinuria. The current data do not support different therapeutic approaches in primary FSGS based on histologic subtypes.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0272-6386(95)90566-9DOI Listing

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